Texas MacHinery & Supply Co. v. Ayers Ice Cream Co.

150 S.W. 750, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1274
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 26, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 150 S.W. 750 (Texas MacHinery & Supply Co. v. Ayers Ice Cream Co.) 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
Texas MacHinery & Supply Co. v. Ayers Ice Cream Co., 150 S.W. 750, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1274 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This suit was instituted by the appellant, a corporation domiciled in the city of Dallas, Dallas county, Tex., against the appellee, a corporation domiciled in Amarillo, Potter county, Tex., on a written contract entered into March 16, 1910, by the parties, to the effect that the appellee purchased from appellant one 50 horse power Fairbanks-Morse engine and attachments complete, and one generator F. M. frame, No. 20 T. R. type direct current, all of which is fully described in the petition and exhibits thereto. Appellant sued to recover on said contract three deferred payments of $731.75 each, with interest and attorney’s fees. The contract provided for the method of installing the engine, that it was to be a 50 horse power Fairbanks-Morse, horizontal, throttling governor fuel engine, speed 190 revolutions per minute. It further provided as follows: “Erection: Purchaser agrees to have preparations for erection of machinery complete on its arrival at destination, and will then notify the company at its office'in Dallas. The company will then send a competent erecting engineer at the company’s expense, who will superintend the erection of the ma *751 chinery and do all work requiring skilled labor, purchaser to furnish any common labor, hauling, build foundations and necessary buildings. * * * Guarantee of Duty: When the machinery is properly installed, Texas Machinery & Supply Company will operate it five days, demonstrating that it will operate successfully as follows: First, that the engine will deliver the actual horse power as specified in this contract; second, that the engine will operate successfully and furnish good reliable power without other attention than keeping it clean, starting and stopping it, and supplying fuel and lubricating oil; third, that the engine will operate successfully upon gasoline, naphtha, kerosene, distillate or solar oil, and will produce one horse power per hour of one-half cent, basing cost of said fuel at four and one-half cents per gallon.” There were further provisions in the contract to the effect that as soon as the machinery was ready to test, and until accepted and settled for, the purchaser agreed to furnish a competent engineer and other help, also fuel, water, oil, waste, lights, and other incidentals needed to operate the same, and at all times to render friendly and needed assistance to facilitate the erection and testing of the machinery; that, if at the expiration of the five days employed in demonstrating that the engine would operate successfully the machinery performed according to contract, the purchaser agreed to give the engineer of the appellant an unconditional written acceptance of the same; that, if at the end of test or such time as the appellant claimed to have fulfilled the contract, the purchaser failed or refused to give such acceptance, he would immediately notify the appellant at its office in Dallas in what particulars he claimed the machinery defective or deficient, and that the appellant should then have a reasonable time to remedy such defects or deficiencies as might exist, but that, in case it should appear to be beyond the power of appellant to make the machinery perform according to contract within a reasonable time, then the appellant should have the privilege of removing the machinery after 30 days’ notice, it having refunded to appellee all money paid by it on same; that the use of the machinery for 10 days after the time specified for said notice of defects without giving such notice should constitute an acceptance of the machinery by appellee as a fulfillment of the contract. The ’contract further provided that the Texas Machinery & Supply Company did not relinquish its title to the property sold until the same was fully paid for, and, upon default of the appellee in the performance of any of the terms of the contract, the appellant or its agents might, without process of law, také possession of and remove the property and sell the same as under execution.

On April 3, 1911, appellee filed its first amended answer and a cross-bill, and, after demurrers and a general denial, alleged, in substance, that it entered into a contract set out as Exhibit A to appellant’s petition, for the purchase of machinery therein described, and relied upon the representations and guaranties therein contained; that appellant, through its employés, attempted to install said machinery, but that such installation was defective, and that the appellant had failed and refused to comply with its representations and guaranties of duty to test said engine, and to demonstrate that said engine would deliver 50 horse power, as represented, and would operate successfully as set forth in said contract; that said engine and the appliances furnished therewith were defective; that said engine was weak, and would not deliver exceeding about 35 horse power, and would not operate on solar oil, and alleging other defects in said engine, and further alleged that appellant had wholly failed to comply with its contract, and furnish machinery as described, represented, and guaranteed in its said contract, and that the ap-pellee had never accepted the said machinery delivered to it, but notified the appellant of the defects aforesaid and requested that said machinery be removed and that it be refunded the amount paid thereon.

Appellee sought by its cross-action to recover of appellant damages by reason of the use of said machinery in the purchase of a more expensive grade of oil and for the expense of water for the running of said engine, and for further expense for electric current to operate its said plant, and for belts, fuel, etc., in the aggregate amount of $1,128.82, and asked for a rescission of said contract, and judgment for the $731.75 paid on said machinery and damages in the sum of $1,128.82. The appellee in the event it should be held that it accepted the machinery described in said contract, which it did not admit, but denied, further alleged that said machinery was wholly worthless to the appellee for the purposes for which it needed an engine, and alleged that the consideration mentioned for the purchase of said machinery had wholly failed, and prayed for the recovery of the advance payment thereon in the sum of $731.75.

The appellant in its supplemental petition filed April 3, 1911, after several special exceptions and a general denial, specially denied that it was liable to the appellee for any of said damages set forth in its said answer, and alleged that the appellee changed the installation of said machinery, and failed to keep said engine adjusted, and failed to furnish the proper foundation for the erection of same, and that the said appellee failed to keep its covenants and agreements in said proposal and contract, and failed to furnish a competent and efficient engineer to operate said engine, as it had agreed to do under its said contract, bfetween the time of *752 tlie installation of said machinery and the acceptance by the appellee, and that if said engine failed to operate successfully, as provided in said contract, that it was the fault of the appellee in failing to furnish a competent and efficient engineer to operate same; that the pump and the manner of furnishing said engine with water in the operation thereof had been changed from that made by the appellant at the time of the installation without notice to appellant; that said engine had been changed in its installation without notice to appellant, had been damaged and injured by the running thereof under 'the direction of appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.W. 750, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-machinery-supply-co-v-ayers-ice-cream-co-texapp-1912.