283 P. 493 | Kan. | 1930
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action to recover the balance of $2,383 claimed to be due on the contract price for the installation of a refrigeration system. There is no controversy about the original
On December 2,1921, the Trapp-Gohr-Donovan Company, a corporation of Omaha, Neb. (later adjudged a bankrupt, and whose trustee in bankruptcy brought this action), entered into a written contract by which it sold to the Kaw Packing Company, of Topeka, then a partnership, but later incorporated, and the defendant in this action—
“One ten-ton Armstrong compressor complete with high-pressure side all valves and fittings to properly connect to cooling coils located in building. Meat coolers to be equipped with approximately 3,000 feet of 1%-inch welded coil, each cooler to have a hold-over tank suitable to submerge one set of coils in brine, cellars to be piped with coils sufficient to maintain a temperature of 36 degrees to 40 degrees, all piping to be of special ammonia piping. All the above machinery and equipment to be installed complete in buyers’ building by the seller.”
The contract' contained this provision:
“The seller warrants that the articles contracted for are capable, with proper care, of producing refrigerating as specified — any material proving defective under capable and proper operation within one year from shipment will be replaced free of charge, subject to the return of the damaged portion — the seller will not be responsible for subsequent defects or damages arising through improper handling, or where work is done, material furnished, or repairs or alterations made by others.”
The contract price was $4,870, to be paid 10 per cent cash with order, 25 per cent on completion of installation, and 25 per cent each 30 days thereafter. The work of installing the refrigeration system was begun in December, 1921, and completed in May, 1922. Defendant paid $487'December 19, 1921, and $2,000 February 9, 1922. By the terms of the contract defendant was to pay freight on the material to Topeka and was to be credited the amount so paid upon the contract price. Defendant had paid the freight, but the amount so paid had in fact not been credited by plaintiff at the time this action was brought.
The building for the defendant company was being constructed, or, perhaps more accurately, an old building was being extensively reconstructed and rebuilt, at the time of the installation of the
Defendant pleaded damages in the sum of $775.54 for loss of meat resulting from imperfect refrigeration. The jury allowed $100 ■ for this item. This was approved by the trial court. Appellant complains of this. There was evidence that defendant had purchased meat, at a cost more than the damages claimed, to resell to its customers, and that this was made necessary because of meat spoiled by imperfect refrigeration. There was also evidence that no meat was lost, or spoiled so that it had to be thrown away, because of imperfect refrigeration. There was evidence that at times there was imperfect refrigeration of the meat in the coolers; that this caused the meat to look slimy, and the government inspectors complained that there were streaks on the meat; and that some meat was sent to the sausage room for that reason, but the amount of it so sent, or the loss to defendant by reason thereof, was not shown. There was also evidence that such imperfect refrigeration of the meat in the coolers as there was at times resulted from overcrowding the cooler and not from an imperfect refrigeration system; that the coolers were of a capacity for eight or ten head of beef, while twenty-five or more were put in them. As a whole, no serious complaint of the jury’s finding on this item is justified.
The judgment of the court below is modified by giving to defendant an additional allowance of $160.69 as of the date of the. verdict of the jury, and as so modified is affirmed.