Sherwin-Williams Co. of Texas v. Offenhauser

42 S.W.2d 859
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 1931
DocketNo. 4060
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 S.W.2d 859 (Sherwin-Williams Co. of Texas v. Offenhauser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherwin-Williams Co. of Texas v. Offenhauser, 42 S.W.2d 859 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

SELLERS, J.

This suit was brought in the district court of Bowie county by John S. Offenhauser Company against the Sherwin-Williams Company of Texas, alleging, among other things, that plaintiff was a merchant in the city of Texarkana engaged in selling farm supplies and equipment, and also engaged in buying for resale, and selling to its customers an article of commerce known and designated as arsenate of calcium. That the defendant is, and was at the time complained of, a manufacturer and seller of arsenate of calcium having its brand of said article known as “Sherwin- ■ Williams Products Arsenate of Calcium.” The petition states, in part, as follows:

. “On the 8th day of July, 1929, the plaintiff and defendant in the city of Texarkana, Texas, entered into an executory .agreement and [860]*860purchase and sale of 650 one-hundred-pound drums of defendant’s Arsenate of Calcium, being two carloads thereof, at and for the price and sum of 6 cents per pound, the plaintiff being the purchaser and the defendant the seller, to be delivered to plaintiff at Texarkana and shipment to be subject to plaintiff’s notification ; one car to be shipped on or before July 31,1929, and the other car to be shipped on or before August 15,1929. Said agreement was and is represented by an order signed by the plaintiff dated July 8, 1929, duly accepted by the defendant, a copy of which order is ■ hereto attached marked ‘Exhibit A” and made a part of this petition. In the said order the said article is designated by its commonly known name as ‘Calcium Arsenate.’
“Thereafter, to-wit, on the 6th day of August, 1929, plaintiff and defendant in the City of Texarkana, Texas, entered into another ex-ecutory agreement for the purchase by the plaintiff and the sale by the defendant, of an additional amount of 150 drums of Arsenate of Calcium, at the price of Eight Dollars ($8.00) per hundred pounds, to be delivered to the plaintiff at Texarkana, to be shipped to plaintiff in the second car of plaintiff’s original order, said agreement being represented by order of this plaintiff of said 6th day of August, 1929, and duly accepted by the defendant, a copy of which order is hereto attached marked ‘Exhibit B,’ and made a part of this petition. The said article is named and described in said order by its common name of Calcium Arsenate.
“Plaintiff also shows that the said defendant, at the times of said sales to plaintiff, agreed to and did sell its said Arsenate of Calcium to plaintiff under the descriptive name of ‘Calcium Arsenate’; that by the use of said descriptive term the defendant covenanted with the plaintiff and obligated itself to him, to furnish to him Arseilate of Calcium of the brand and quality indicated by its descriptive name and of the brand and quality manufactured, sold and dealt in by the defendant and reasonably fit for the purposes for which the defendant sold it and marketable and salable as Arsenate of Calcium.
“Plaintiff states, at the times of the giving of said orders, by representing to the plaintiff that' its said arsenate of calcium was an insecticide, and also by knowing that the said Arsenate was bought by the plaintiff as an insecticide, and by knowing' that it was so bought to be resold by the plaintiff as such insecticide, and by knowing the purposes for which said arsenate was to be used, the said defendant then and thereby warranted to the plaintiff that the said Arsenate of Calcium so sold to him was an insecticide, and would poison, destroy, control, and kill cotton worms, boll worms, boll weevils, army worms, and other insects damaging to farm and garden plants, and that the said arsenate was reasonably fit for the purposes for which it was intended, and for resale by the plaintiff as such, and that it was free from any remarkable defects and was merchantable. And, in selling the said article to the plaintiff under its descriptive name of Calcium Arsenate the defendant thereby warranted to the plaintiff that the said article was Arsenate of Calcium of the defendant’s known brand and quality, and was marketable and salable as such.
“Plaintiff shows that the first car of Arse-nate of Calcium so ordered from the defendant was received by plaintiff, and paid for, on July 29, 1929; that the second ear so ordered from the defendant, and purporting to be the remainder of plaintiff’s said orders, was received by plaintiff on August 8, 1929, and the balance due upon the said orders was on the said date paid by the plaintiff to the defendant.
“Plaintiff alleges and states that the second ear received by plaintiff on August 8, 1929, contained 400 drums labeled ‘Sherwin-Wil-liams Products Arsenate of Calcium.’' But plaintiff shows that either the said drums were mislabeled and did not in fact contain Arsenate of Calcium, or else if the said substance was Arsenate of Calcium, it contained some remarkable defect which rendered it unfit for use and unmerchantable and unsalable as Arsenate of Calcium. Plaintiff shows that upon the receipt of the said second car he sold all of the said shipment except eleven drums to his customers for use by them as an insecticide for the destruction of boll worms, leaf worms, cotton worms, boll weevils, army worms, and other insects damaging to farm and garden plants but that the said substance so received by him from defendant and so sold to his customers, and so represented and labeled as Arsenate of Calcium, was not, in fact, an insecticide, and did not, in fact, when used by his said customers, kill or destroy or poison boll weevils, leaf worms, cotton worms, boll worms, army worms, or other insects damaging to farm and garden plants. That 68 drums of the said substance so sold by the plaintiff to his customers were returned to the plaintiff by his customers, and plaintiff was required to, and did exchange and substitute therefor Arsenate of Calcium of a different brand; that the persons so returning the said 68 drums, and the number of drums returned by each and the date thereof are as follows: (Here follows list.) * * *
“Plaintiff shows that because the said substance so delivered to the plaintiff by the defendant in fulfillment of his said orders was not an insecticide, and because the same was not marketable and was not suitable and fit for the purposes for which intended, and for which it was sold to this plaintiff by the defendant, and for which it was resold by the plaintiff to his customers, the defendant breached its warranty to the plaintiff.”

[861]*861Exhibit A to petition of John S. Offen-hauser, plaintiff, was as follows:

“Order to the Sherwin-Williams Paint Co.
“We hereby order of you the following goods: •
“650 100-Lb. Drums, Calcium Arsenate-price 6(5 per lb. — f. o. b. Texarkana, Shipment subject to our notification. — one car on or before July 31st, Other car on or before August 15th.
“This order cancels all previous orders.
“John Offenhauser Co.
“By J. S. Offenhauser.
“Accepted by
“The Sherwin-Williams Co.
“By H. D. Becker.
“By M. Camerata.”

The defendant’s answer consisted of a general demurrer and certain special exceptions and a general denial.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherwin-williams-co-of-texas-v-offenhauser-texapp-1931.