Stone v. Molby Boiler Co.

195 A.D. 68, 185 N.Y.S. 651, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4697
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 5, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 195 A.D. 68 (Stone v. Molby Boiler Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. Molby Boiler Co., 195 A.D. 68, 185 N.Y.S. 651, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4697 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Kiley, J.:

Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial should have been granted; it was denied. The verdict for the defendant dismissing plaintiff’s complaint is overwhelmingly against the weight of evidence. The plaintiff, appellant, resides in the town of Niskayuna, Schenectady county. ' In the summer of 1917 he built a new house near his former residence in said town and county. He employed one J. E. Harbison, a plumbing and . heating contractor, of Schenectady, to superintend and oversee the installing of a heating plant in the new house. Appellant selected the Molby Down Draft Boiler ” as the type he wanted; he authorized Harbison to procure such boiler with accessories that made a complete furnace. A heating inspector of Brooklyn prepared the plans for the heating plant. With these plans in his possession, in the month of March, 1917, Harbison went to defendant’s place of business in Brooklyn, N. Y., and told its president that he wanted one of its make of boilers to install in the heating plant of plaintiff in the house that was then being constructed. He dealt with the president of the defendant, informing him that he represented the plaintiff and was acting for him. Defendant sold the boiler and accessories to the plaintiff in accordance with the guaranty set forth in the complaint in this action. That there might not be any mistake about the guaranty and its scope, and. before the boiler was paid for, and at a time' when a test, satisfactory to the plaintiff, could not be made, defendant, through its president, wrote to appellant as follows:

“ New York, 11 /27 /17.
“ W. C. Stone c /o John E. Harbison,
“ Schenectady, N. Y.:
J)ear Sir.— In connection with the S-1031 Molby Boiler installed in your residence in Schenectady. We are pleased to gúarantee the boiler capable of carrying the radiation as specified when the building is furnished and occupied and the apparatus working under normal conditions. We guarantee [70]*70the boiler free from defects in manufacture and will replace any parts so found defective. Our guarantee in the catalogue is to be considered part of this guarantee,
Very truly yours,
“ MOLBY BOILER CO., Inc.
“ E. Molby.” •

Attached to the guaranty and a part of it is a schedule marked Ratings,” and provides “ all our ratings are for direct radiation, figured to heat building to 70° Fahr.” This is important in view of the position taken by the defendant in giving its evidence. This boiler was received in the early fall or late summer of .1917; the first fire was built in September, 1917, and it did not work satisfactorily and the president of the defendant came.to the house in 1917 and a test was made by him. It seems to have been mutually agreed that the conditions prevailing were not such that a fair test could be made of the plant; the house was more or less open, windows not in, and the decision on the test was deferred until a later date; plaintiff kept trying to fire the boiler and get up steam. There was not to exceed 2,500 feet of radiation in the house; the boiler in question was rated to have a steam capacity of 4,050 feet. About November 23, 1917, the defendant’s president, Mr. Molby, came on again for another test; the house was then practically inclosed; the windows, except two or three in the upper part, were covered with sized factory cloth, the boiler was cleaned out, and coal procured, such as was designated for use in this boiler by the specifications in the guaranty; the test, lasting three or four hours, was made; the plant did not heat the building. The family had not moved in at that time; the interior finish was not completed; floors not all laid, much inside work yet to be done, and again it appears from the record that it was mutually agreed that the conditions were not ideal for the test. This test was made by the defendant’s president and without any fault being found by him as to any defect in the heating system or facilities furnished for making it. The defendant taking the position that, when the house was completed and furniture in and family settled down to normal, every day life, the plant would do the work required to heat the house. The workmen [71]*71continued to work in the house during that winter. The record is replete with continued effort to get heat out of the furnace and into the system; forty tons of pea coal were purchased and continual attention, in accordance with the printed and oral instruction furnished by the defendant, was given to the work; while it burned coal it did not force heat into the radiation sufficient to furnish moderate heat and warmth. The boiler continued to loose water, the water line did not hold up; the men were afraid to run it; the water line fluctuated rapidly, sometimes disappearing from view; the water line is what is usually called the “ gauge,” and is the indicator or indicates the correct conditions prevailing or not prevailing, when the boiler is in operation. In the meantime the defendant was calling for payment. It fairly appears from the evidence that in December, 1917, payment was made, with the understanding that such payment should in no way preclude the plaintiff from insisting that the defendant perform on its part according to the terms of the guaranty. The house was not complete until the summer of 1918, when furniture was moved in, and the family commenced occupation. Conditions, both oral and written, were then complete. Fire was started in the boiler and as cold weather came on it did not furnish heat. The evidence, by every reasonable intendment, shows that reasonable, fair and intelligent effort was put forth by the plaintiff to use the boiler .after the fire was lighted in the fall of 1918. He notified the defendant that he had failed; that its boiler would not heat the house, and asked that a representative of the defendant come there and see for himself; that he would have to take the boiler out, and asked for shipping instructions. Defendant replied that it would not accept the boiler, and refused or neglected to give shipping instructions. Plaintiff took the boiler out and installed another and sued defendant for breach of its warranty and for damages with the result, aforesaid. Upon the trial defendant found no fault with the system of radiation furnished by plaintiff to go with this boiler. The defense was that the boiler was sold to Harbison, and not to plaintiff; that if it made a guaranty, which it denies, as interpreted by plaintiff, it was made to Harbison; that the boiler was as guaranteed, as it interprets it, and that faulty operation and [72]*72fuel was the approximate cause of the failure; that plaintiff waived his right to repudiate the contract by continuing the use of the boiler after he had discovered the imperfections; and finally that plaintiff did not give reasonable notice of the breach. The evidence of both plaintiff and defendant proves that Harbison was acting for the plaintiff, the defendant advancing the information and reason why Harbison did not act as agent that by the rules of the trade it could not sell to an individual, but must sell to a dealer or contractor. I know of no law that permits a union or organization of dealers in building supplies to formulate rules that limit or destroy the law of the land; the jury should have been instructed to that effect; there is no evidence that plaintiff had knowledge or consented to be bound by any such rule.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 A.D. 68, 185 N.Y.S. 651, 1921 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-molby-boiler-co-nyappdiv-1921.