Southern Tractor Co. v. Brown Constructing Co.

98 S.W.2d 1082, 20 Tenn. App. 332, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 5, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 98 S.W.2d 1082 (Southern Tractor Co. v. Brown Constructing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Tractor Co. v. Brown Constructing Co., 98 S.W.2d 1082, 20 Tenn. App. 332, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 14 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

KETCHUM, J.

This is a suit by the Tractor Company to recover on a series of notes, aggregating $3,924, executed by the Constructing Company for deferred payments on the purchase of a used Caterpillar Diesel tractor purchased from complainant and also on open account for parts for said tractor amounting to $904.37. The defenses are (1) a breach of warranty of fitness of the tractor for the purpose for which it was purchased, and (2) false and fraudulent misrepresentations as to the condition of the tractor made as an inducement to defendant to purchase it, entitling the defendant to a rescission of the contract.

The defendant in its answer demanded a jury. At the trial the complainant introduced its treasurer as a witness, and by him proved the signed order for the purchase of the tractor, the conditional sales contract, and the notes sued on, all bearing the signature of the defendant. It also proved the open account for parts furnished, and the reasonable compensation of complainant’s solicitor as provided for in the face of the notes sued on.

The signed order recites that the tractor was furnished “only in accordance with the manufacturer’s standard warranty;” and that “no warranty is made, or authorized to be made by the manufacturer, other than that herein set forth;” and that “no representative or agent has any power to make any additions to, or to vary the terms and conditions hereof.” And the conditional sales contract provides:

“Seller agrees to sell all ‘Caterpillar’ products described herein, and buyer agrees to buy the same, without warranty of any kind except the manufacturer’s standard warranty printed on the reverse hereof, which warranty the buyer hereby accepts in lieu of any warranty by the seller, whether express or implied.”

The manufacturer’s standard warranty provides:

“The manufacturer warrants all machines sold by the manufacturer . . . for six months after date of shipment; this warranty being limited to the replacing (without charge except for transportation) ... of such parts as shall appear to the manufacturer to have been defective in material or workmanship. The manufacturer’s warranty does not obligate it to bear the cost of labor in replacement of defective parts. No warranty is made or *334 authorized to be made by the manufacturer other than that herein set forth. . . .”

This tractor had previously been sold by complainant to one George C. Weathers, doing business as the Greenville Construction Company, and had been used by him for 31 days on levee work at Friar’s Point, Miss. It had been repossessed from him, and had been overhauled by complainant, and certain new parts added, and was sold to defendants as a used tractor, but with a new tractor warranty; that is, to "replace any defective parts within 6 months from date of sale.

The order was signed at Memphis on October 19, 1933, and tlic tractor was delivered to defendant on the following day. At the request of defendant the complainant had one of its employees drive it across the bridge, and it was turned over to defendant! driver at the end of the viaduct, on the levee on the Arkansas side of the river. It was at once put in use by defendant in regular levee work near Luxora, Ark., and was constantly used in this work, except when laid out for repairs, until April 18, 1934, when it was returned to the levee at the end of the viaduct at West Memphis, and left in care of the S. K. Jones Camp, and complainant was notified that it was there subject to its order.

The conditional sales contract and notes were (signed after the tractor had been in use for the defendant for about a week. The contract provided for an initial payment of $1,000 on November 1st, and the first note for $654 was payable on November 15th. These payments were made on January 1st and January 15, 1934, respectively. No further payments were made. On January 15, 1934, the defendant wrote complainant the following letter:

“AVe will not be able to pay any more tractor notes until after the winter season is over, as we are doing very little work, owing to weather conditions, not taking in enough to pay operating expenses.

“Yours very truly,

“Brown Contracting Co.”

When complainant’s salesman, Davis, took the conditional sales contract and notes over to defendant’s camp to be signed, Brown told him that the tractor had not been working right, and Davis assured him that the service men would be sent over to put-it m order, and this was done. Thereafter, complaints were made from time to time that the tractor was underpowered, and that the street ing gear and clutches did not function properly, and in answer to each complaint service men were sent over promptly to remedy the trouble, and may new parts were installed without charge so as to make it work satisfactorily.

The tractor was in regular use by the defendant on heavy levee» work for 22 hours per day for approximately 6 months, or until *335 April 18, 1934, when the defendant wrote complainant that the condition of the tractor had been “so grossly misrepresented to me by your salesman,” and it was so worn, and so abused before defendant purchased it, that defendant could not afford to spend any more time and money on it in trying to get it in condition to work, and it had therefore returned it “to the end of the viaduct on the levee in West Memphis in care of the S. K. Jones camp there, where it is at your disposal.”

This was the first time any intimation was made that complainant had in any way misrepresented the condition of the tractor.

The defendant being at that time in default in the payment of its notes, all the notes were declared to be due and payable and this bill was filed on April 23, 1934.

The purchase of this tractor was first suggested to defendant by Mr. Davis, a salesman of complainant, and at his suggestion Mr. Brown afterwards came to complainant’s place of business and saw the tractor while it was being overhauled. The subsequent negotiations were with Mr. Mills, the president of complainant. Brown had known Mr. Mills for many years, and had bought many tractors from him while he was president of the Mills-Morris Company. All his dealings with him had been satisfactory, and he had confidence in him.

Brown testified, over the objection of the defendant, that Mills represented that this tractor had been completely overhauled and reconditioned, and that new parts had been installed wherever needed, that the tractor was as good as new, and would be sold with the warranty of a new tractor, and that he would save $1,000 by buying it instead of a new one, and that this was the inducement to him to purchase a used tractor. He testified that he relied upon this representation and purchased the tractor upon the faith of it, and that he subsequently learned that the motor had been burnt out by the use of improper fuel.oil while "Weathers had it, and that the motor had not been,, reconditioned, and that new pistons, rings and sleeves were needed before it would function properly.

The complainant objected to this character of testimony upon the ground that it contradicted the terms of the written contract of warranty; the chancellor overruled the objection, but with the right to complainant to move to exclude the evidence later if it desired to do so.

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Related

Rundle v. Capitol Chevrolet, Inc.
129 S.W.2d 217 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1939)
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129 S.W.2d 217 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 S.W.2d 1082, 20 Tenn. App. 332, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-tractor-co-v-brown-constructing-co-tennctapp-1935.