Samuel Wymond Cooperage Co. v. Thompson

8 Ohio N.P. 347
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedJuly 1, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ohio N.P. 347 (Samuel Wymond Cooperage Co. v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samuel Wymond Cooperage Co. v. Thompson, 8 Ohio N.P. 347 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Wright, J.,

Jackson and Dempsey, JJ., concur.

The facts found at special term are in all respects sustained by the evidence: the court was right therefore, in its finding of a warranty, in its assessment of the amount of the damages, as well as in its determination that Thompson, defendant in error, had not in his treatment of | the barrels been negligent,

j Whiskey barrels manufactured by The Wymond Cooperage Company had, to the number of several thousand, been sold and delivered to John B. Thompson, a distiller, under a warranty that they were “of first class white oak timber thoroughly seasoned and charred, free from worm holes, seed holes, knots, dottings and other imperfections, and all of first class ’ workmanship; and guaranteed to hold the whiskey as well as any first class barrels that could be made.” At the trial it was in issue that the barrels were deficient in respect to material and workmanship, so that much whiskey was lost through leakage.

By way of establishing the goodness and soundness of the barrels in question the Cooperage Company undertook to prove the goodness and soundness of other barrels manufactured and sold during the same season, to other distillers; supplementing this by offer of proof that this other cooperage “was made out of the same character and kind of timber that was furnished to Thompson and the wood was cut at the same time and that it was made by the same character of machine and that the entire manufacture and supervision in the inspection of the staves as originally cut and before being put into the barrels and after put into the barrels was exactly the same as in Mr. Thompson’s case; and to show further that the barrels that were sent to Squibb & Co. were made and billed out and shipped without reference to the time, that they were put into the cars, and shipped without discrimination in the choice of barrels that were sent to Mr. Squibb or Mr. Thompson.” (Offer of proof, bill of exceptions p. 506.)

In the abstract the proposition may savor of a certain attractiveness, though it seems to me to carry along with it an innate lack of proving power upon the point of whether there were leaks in Thompson’s barrels, or whether they had been properly cared for.

It was in issue whether the barrels delivered to Thompson were defective; whether other barrels delivered to other distillers were good and sound, is in the main collateral, and of itself is devoid of probative force upon the point of the Thompson barrels; there is not yer shown any such homogenity between the Thompson barrels and the other barrels as that the abilities of the one are in any way indicative of the abilities of the other. These barrels, both the Thompson and the others, are shown to have been composite things made not [348]*348of one part, but of many; the several parts shaped, moulded and prepared by mechanical contrivance, to be joined into the composite whole by manual labor; if the defects complained of by Thompson were such as could have been occasioned or obviated or in any way affected by the mechanical contrivances through which the parts were put, the evidence might have been proper to he heard because of the scientific fact, chat as a machine works once, so will it work a second time; as a certain result is occasioned to material supplied to a machine, so will a like result follow to other material supplied under ' similar conditions. But che defects complained of in no respect concerned the workings of machines, being originally inherent in the material used and in the workmanship employed after the work of machines was over with.

To the extent that a mechanical device is shown to have produced in one instance an effecc upon material supplied it, the character of the concrete article produced is of' probative tendency upon the. point of how other similar material was affected when submitted to the machine;'but at bar no such proposición is presented by the evidence tendered; the mechanical contrivances could not, according to the natureof things, havehadan effect upon the presence or absence of the alleged defeccs; defects of material an of manual workmanship. The fact that all staves and heads of the Thompson barrels and of the other barrels had been subjected to£ven thesamemachin'e,!had no¡(tendency in so far as the defects alleged are concerned, to show correspondence or homogenity between the Thompson barrels and the others.

A likelihood of misconceiving the question lies in according prominence to the proposition that materials were submitted to machines; if it be not forgotten that machines and their work had no effect concerning the defects alleged, it seems to me to be plain enough. For all that mechanical appliances had to do, if the defects .were present in the material used, they were present as well after the machine work was done, for the machines were not calculated to and could not have removed them; the mechanical part of the process of manufacturing barrels bore neither one way nor the other upon the points in issue, and thus far the offer of proof makes out in regard to the other barrels nothing which tends to show them alike the Thompson barrels in respect of the issue made; that is to say in respect of the condition and quality of material used in Thompson’s barrels.

In respect of the other particulars put forth in the offer of proof, they can be accorded no probative tendency upon the presence or absence of seed holes, worm holes,' knots, etc., in the Thompson barrel. One particular was this: it was proposed to prove that all timber after having been riven, passed an inspection; there appears to have been about this inspection nothing which assured or even indicated soundness and goodness for the staves which passed it; indeed the inspector gave evidence (Weedmann’s deposition pp. 23 & 24) that seed holes and cat-faces were not visible in the rough and that it was possible for all the timber to have been unmerchantable although it had passed inspection; the inspection discovered only visible defects, and the evidence is that the alleged defects may have been invisible- Such so-called inspections ought not to be accorded that probative effect which is fit to be given to mechanical processes; imperfect staves passed it as readily as did perfect ones; when the process of manufacture is examined in detail there appears to have been no part of it which would have excluded defective material; it is therefore out of reason that the Thompson barrels were sound because the Squibb barrels turned out to be sound.

Neither is inference to be drawn that the timber of all trees taken out of a 'forest is sound because sound timber is found to have come out of that forest during the same season ; there is no such likelihood; insects may molest certain trees and suffer others to remain unhurt; may indeed, and do infest a part of one tree without assailing other parts.

The authorities presented by the counsel for plaintiff in error fail of bearing out the admissibility of this evidence; reliance is placed upon City of Findlay v. Pertz 74 Fed. Rep., 685, “An action against the city fop the purchase price of certain automatic separators adapted to be attached to the orifice of a natural gas well to separate the oil and water from the gas. There was evidence for defendant that the machines had not worked automatically, and were incapable of doing the work for which they were purchased.”

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Bluebook (online)
8 Ohio N.P. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-wymond-cooperage-co-v-thompson-ohsuperctcinci-1900.