Wilson v. Avery Co. of Texas

182 S.W. 884, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 68
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1916
DocketNo. 894.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 182 S.W. 884 (Wilson v. Avery Co. of Texas) 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
Wilson v. Avery Co. of Texas, 182 S.W. 884, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 68 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HUFF, C. J.

The appellant, Wilson, instituted suit against the Avery Company and G. L. Roberts to recover certain money paid and to cancel two certain notes, which he alleges were paid and executed to the Avery Company for a certain engine purchased from that company. He alleges that certain representations were made with reference to its capacity for ploughing, thrashing, and other matters, and that the representations were not true, and the engine would not do the work represented, and that it was of inferior material and workmanship, etc. He also set up and sought a recovery upon a written warranty because of the failure of the eDgine to do the work which it was warranted to do; and, in addition thereto, he set up certain special damages.

The appellees answered this, denying specifically the several allegations, and in addition thereto set up the conditions of the warranty and a failure to comply with the conditions with reference to giving notice, etc., and that appellant had purchased the engine after having it thoroughly tried and tested for the *885 length of time agreed upon, and refused to accept it upon mere representations and required a written warranty of guaranty ; that he kept it for some seven or eight months, without giving notice of the defects as required by the warranty.

The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and upon their findings judgment was rendered for the appellee company and for Robert?, from which appellant appeals.

The first assignment presents the action of the court in admitting, over the appellant’s objections, the testimony of one E. Dillon to the effect that he had seen the engine of appellant, and that he (witness) had purchased an engine from appellee like the one purchased by appellant; that he had been operating his engine more than a year, plowing and thrashing grain with it; that he ploughed about 1,500 acres of land, and had thrashed between 60,000 and 70,000 bushels of small grain during the summer of 1914; that said engine had strength enough to pull the plows he had been pulling on it; that he had never had any difficulty as to the strength of the engine in thrashing; that it had operated successfully in plowing and thrashing.

By the second assignment complaint is made of the testimony of G-. L. Roberts to the effect that several parties, naming them, had purchased engines similar to the one in question, and that he had seen them in operation, and stated that the bearings on those engines were of the same size and material as the bearings on appellant’s engine, and that in none of the engines had there been trouble with the bearings, and that the capacity of the oil pipes in said engines was ample to furnish sufficient supply.

By the third assignment complaint is made of J. H. Bogee’s evidence, wherein he testified that he had an engine similar to appellant’s; that his engine could thrash from 1,200 to 1,500 bushels of wheat per day; and that he had never had any trouble with his engine, and no part had proven weak or defective.

The fourth assignment is to the testimony of one Brinkman to the effect that he had purchased an engine like appellant’s; that he had used his engine for thrashing and ploughing; that he had ploughed about 800 acres, and thrashed something like 40,000 bushels of small grain; that his engine operated successfully, and had sufficient power, and that he had never had trouble with it; that he was pulling 27 disc plows, and could cut from 15 to 16 feet in sod, and had power to pull them 8 inches deep, and no part of the engine had proven defective or insufficient.

The appellant objected to the above testimony, on the ground that what other engines had done, etc., was incompetent and irrelevant, and the comparison of other engines was insufficient to show that appellant’s engine was of the character or kind to do the work, or to show that his engine had met warranty. The appellant sought to recover the money he had paid on the machine and to cancel the notes executed by him therefor, on the ground: (1) He was induced to purchase the same by false representations; (2) upon the warranty executed by appellee. He alleged' that the engine was made of inferior material, and “that it is not properly constructed ; that it is wholly worthless and of no value as an engine, and continually got out of repair.” The- appellant, in proving Ms case, introduced the testimony of G-. E. Drane, who qualified as an expert in the construction of engines, and who testified that, according to mechanical principles, the engine in question was not properly constructed; that the oiling system used T-joints, which were abrupt turns, causing the pipes to clog so that oil could not be properly distributed to the working parts of the engine, and part of the bearings did not get oil, and would heat and melt out, and that plain joints with low-grade curve should have been used; that the crank and shaft bearings were too light, and not the proper size for the size of the engine, where they were joined to the main shaft; that for an engine of that size the cylinder should be constructed of chilled cast. The engine was not properly fastened down, etc. Some other witnesses indicated by their testimony that the engine was constructed on incorrect mechanical principles. By this testimony it was the evident purpose of appellant to show that the engine was not according to the warranty; that is, that it would not “do well the work for which it was intended,” because of its plan or method of construction, and was not constructed according to correct mechanical principles. There were two methods of showing that the engine did not comply with the warranty: (1) That it was in a bad or disabled condition, and because thereof would not do the work for which it was intended; or (2) because of the particular -method or principle upon which it was constructed, which was such as to render it unfit to do the work well for which it was intended. The issue therefore presented by appellant was that the engine was constructed on a wrong mechanical principle, and hence would not do the work well, and that thereby it was valueless and useless for the work intended. Any fact relevant to that issue was admissible. Appellant would have been authorized to show that appellee’s engines made upon the principle of this one would not do the work. This fact would have been a relevant fact. Why may not the appellee show that its other engines constructed upon the same theory or principle as the one in question would do the work in rebuttal of an assault upon the meehaniaal principles under which it was constructed? This would not be a relevant fact to show that the particular machine was defectively built or had faulty or bad material in it, and the workmanship in this particular engine was bad or defective, and for that reason would not do *886 the work. Where the issue is alone as to the faulty construction of a' particular engine, and not an attack upon the mechanical principles upon which it was constructed, we think the rule is generally recognized that the manner in which ■ other engines worked would not be relevant or admissible, under the excluding rule of res inter alios acta, and should be excluded. Our courts have recognized this rule, and the rule is also recognized by other courts. Fetzer v. Haralson, 147 S. W. 290; Haynes v. Plano Mfg. Co., 36 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 82 S. W. 532; Hill v. Hanan, 131 S. W. 245.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W. 884, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-avery-co-of-texas-texapp-1916.