Tully v. Excelsior Iron Works

5 N.E. 83, 115 Ill. 544
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 N.E. 83 (Tully v. Excelsior Iron Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tully v. Excelsior Iron Works, 5 N.E. 83, 115 Ill. 544 (Ill. 1886).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Mulkey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The Excelsior Iron Works, the appellee, recovered a judgment in the Superior Court of Cook county, against the appellants, Thomas Tully and John D. Tully, for $944.04, which was affirmed by the Appellate Court, and the case is certified, under the statute, to this court for review.

The recovery was had on account of certain machinery, consisting of shafts, pulleys, belting, etc., furnished by the plaintiff to the defendants, to be used by them in operating a machine known as “Cockell’s Clay Crusher and Stone Extractor, ” which they had lately bought from Harvey Cockell, the inventor. It appears that the Tullys and Cockell were all by occupation manufacturers of brick, and that the latter had invented and was the patentee of the above mentioned machine, which is indifferently called by the witnesses “the crusher,” “the pulverizer,” etc. This invention of Cockell was used in the manufacture of brick to pulverize the dirt and extract the gravel or stone therefrom preparatory to putting it in the brick machines. A few days before the 28th of March, 1883, negotiations were commenced between Cockell and Thomas Tully for the purchase by the latter of one of Cockell’s machines. It was wanted for one of Tully’s yards in which he was running four brick machines, it being the intention to supply them all with one pulverizer. Upon talking the matter over it was found that the four brick machines would require to run them per day from one hundred and eighty to two hundred yards of pulverized dirt. Cockell told Tully that he feared his machine did not have capacity to furnish that amount of dirt, but expressed the opinion he could make one with the necessary capacity by enlarging the dimensions of the machine. The size of the machines which he had been putting up was three feet in diameter, and the cost $800. It was finally determined that Cockell was to put up one of his machines four feet in diameter, which it was supposed would cost $1000 or $1100. The Tullys were to have it at cost, whatever that might be. When the negotiations were fully concluded, in pursuance of the understanding between them Cockell delivered to the Tullys the following guaranty, which was prepared by Thomas Tully:

“Chicago, III., March 28, 1888.
“Mr. Thomas Tully:
■ “Dear Sir—I hereby agree to make and erect one of my clay crushers and.stone extractors, which I hereby guarantee will crush clay and extract stone from clay sufficient to run your four brick machines, which is on your canal yard at present, and will have same in running order in twenty days from date.
Harvey • Cockell. ”

It further appears that Cockell was having his machines manufactured by the Excelsior Iron Works. At the instance of Cockell, Morand, the mechanical engineer and draughtsman of appellee, prepared plans and drawings for the machine, and it was put up in conformity therewith. The machine itself, when completed, had a pulley constructed on the top of it, and all that was necessary to operate it was to place a belt or band over it, connected with the shaft of the engine. This, of course, would have been a-very simple and inexpensive affair. When, however, the draughtsman came to draw the plans for connecting the machine with the motive power, it was found, upon consultation with Tully, a simple and direct connection could not be had without interfering with his system or plan of running the yard. To meet this difficulty, it was suggested it might be overcome by the construction and erection of a counter-shaft, with its necessary appendages. To this suggestion the draughtsman interposed, as he testifies, that Cockell, whom he was then representing, had nothing to do with the proposed counter-shafting and the additional machinery it would require. Tully, as is further testified, thereupon stated, in substance, that that would make no difference,—for the draughtsman to go ahead and get up the plans embracing the counter-shafting, etc.,—and gave airorder to the plaintiff, through Morand, to furnish the same, which was done, and the machinery was subsequently hauled away from the plaintiff’s factory by Tully’s team. The amount of this order seems to have been $411.54. This amount, as we understand it, was the cost of connecting the machine proper with the power. When this was done the machine did not give satisfaction, and a number of slight changes in its internal arrangements were made, but still it failed to do good work. While these matters were in progress, as testified to by Morand, Tully concluded to have an elevator constructed in connection with the machine, for the purpose of lifting the dirt into his carts, and ordered the draughtsman to prepare plans for the same, which he did, and on being submitted to Tully they were pronounced satisfactory, and the material for the elevator was gotten up at the plaintiff’s factory according to the plans, and was put up in the same manner by Tally’s workmen, under the general supervision of the draughtsman. The cost of getting it up at the factory, exclusive of the labor of. superintending the setting of it up, was $532.50. The present suit was brought to recover for the items covered by the two sums last above mentioned, which, in the aggregate, amount to $944.04, the exact sum-for which judgment was recovered.

The declaration was in assumpsit, containing the common counts only, and was accompanied with an affidavit of amount due. The defendants filed the general issue, with an affidavit annexed, setting forth that they verily believed they had a meritorious defence to the plaintiff’s claim, except $532.50, which, it will be observed, is the exact amount of the plaintiff’s claim for the elevator, leaving the conclusion irresistible that the action is, in effect, confessed so far as the elevator is concerned. Indeed, the appellants could scarcely have done' otherwise, for there is no pretence that the elevator constituted any part of the machine contracted to be put up by Cockell, nor of its connections; and we think there is just about as little foundation for the claim that the counter-shafting and its appendages, which were put up in furtherance of Tally’s interest and convenience in operating his brick yard, was any part of Cockell’s undertaking, and so the jury and the courts below found.

The whole controversy, it will be perceived, relates to the $411.54,—amount of counter-shafting, etc. Whether this material was furnished by the plaintiff to the defendants upon their order, and uras delivered to them in their ow7n wagons, were facts which have been settled by the lower courts, and are not reviewable here. The only questions of law presented for determination arise upon the refusal of the court to give the following instructions:

“1. If the jury further believe, from the evidence in this ease, that the defendants entered into a contract with Harvey Cockell, by which he was to furnish and erect for them one of his clay crushers and stone extractors, and that the plaintiff undertook and assumed to construct and erect the same for and on account of the said Cockell, then the jury are instructed that the said plaintiff can not, by bringing suit against the said defendants for the work and materials so furnished in the erection and construction of the said machine, escape the obligations and duties imposed by the guaranty and undertaking of the said Cockell, if he made any such guaranty.

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5 N.E. 83, 115 Ill. 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tully-v-excelsior-iron-works-ill-1886.