Case Name: The United Pipe and Supply Company, Appellee, v. Roy Neel, Appellant
Court: Kansas Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Kansas
Decision Date: 1927-11-05
Citations: 124 Kan. 413
Docket Number: No. 27,457
Parties: The United Pipe and Supply Company, Appellee, v. Roy Neel, Appellant.
Judges: 
Reporter: Kansas Reports
Volume: 124
Pages: 413–414

Head Matter:
No. 27,457.
The United Pipe and Supply Company, Appellee, v. Roy Neel, Appellant.
(260 Pac. 622.)
Opinion filed November 5, 1927.
Thomas E. Wagstaff and Jay W. Scovel, both of Independence, for the appellant.
Thurman Hill and S. H. Piper, both of Independence, for the appellee.

Opinion:
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Dawson, J.:
This action arose out of a breach of contract concerning the purchase and sale of a quantity of pipe. It appears that in September, 1925, one Nathan J. Cohen, doing business' under the name of the United Pipe and Supply Company, purchased from the defendant, Roy Neel, a supply of pipe for use in oil and gas wells, which Neel was to deliver f. o. b. Dearing, Kan., within a reasonable time. The agreed price was 16 cents per foot. Cohen made a payment of $300, and settlement was to be made in full when the pipe was loaded on board cars and tallied.
Neel failed to deliver the pipe, and this action followed for the recovery of the $300, and for damages for breach of contract.
On issues joined, the cause was tried before a jury which rendered a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $728, which the trial court reduced to $650 and entered judgment accordingly.
Defendant appeals, contending chiefly that the judgment in plaintiff's favor should not exceed the amount of the down payment, $300, and that there was no evidence on which an award of damages can stand.
It seems to us that even a cursory reading of the record refutes this contention. Cohen showed that on two different occasions he lost a sale of the pipe at 18 cents per foot because of defendant's de linquency, and there was testimony that the reasonable value of the pipe when it should have been delivered was 18 cents per foot. Defendant endeavored to show that these sales were lost because the pipe was not, of the kind or quality the buyers desired. But the pipe which defendant sold and agreed to deliver was good pipe, of a kind and quality plaintiff's buyers would have accepted readily. The fact that plaintiff's prospective customers declined to buy other and inferior pipe which Cohen might have supplied was no defense to this action.
The judgment is affirmed.