American Cotton Co-Op. Ass'n v. Plainview Compress & Warehouse Co.

114 S.W.2d 689, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 971
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1938
DocketNo. 4819.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 689 (American Cotton Co-Op. Ass'n v. Plainview Compress & Warehouse 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
American Cotton Co-Op. Ass'n v. Plainview Compress & Warehouse Co., 114 S.W.2d 689, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 971 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

Appellant, a Delaware corporation, filed this suit in the district court against ap-pellees, the Plainview Compress & Ware- • house Company and Panhandle Compress & Warehouse Company, Texas corporations, for alleged negligence of appellees in handling 511 bales of cotton that had been stored in the compress and warehouse building located at Floydada. It was alleged the compress had ceased operation but the building and premises were being used and operated as a state bonded warehouse. The cotton was destroyed by fire on the night of October 31, 1933. The acts of negligence charged by appellant were that appellees stored the cotton in a warehouse that was not properly walled up 'so as to prevent the entrance of transients, ' marauders, and idlers; that no guard was kept on duty to guard the cotton, building, and premises. It alleged negligence of appellees in not keeping barrels of water available and some one in attendance to use the water to extinguish any •fire that may break out, and that they were negligent in not keeping the building lighted at night and in not discovering the fire before it had gained such headway as to. be beyond control. Each act of negligence was alleged to be a proximate cause of the destruction of the cotton by fire.

Further allegations were to the effect that the cotton had been converted by both of the appellees, the conversion consisting of the allegation that the cotton had been deposited and stored- with the Plainview Compress & Warehouse Company in the warehouse by the producers, and that the Plainview Compress & Warehouse Company had issued its negotiable receipts therefor, wherein it agreed that upon return of the receipts, properly indorsed, and the payment of all charges and liabilities due the warehouseman, the respective bales of cotton for which the receipts had been given would be delivered to the depositors or their order. It alleged that, after executing and delivering the receipts for the cotton, the Plainview Company delivered possession of the warehouse and cotton to the Panhandle Compress & Warehouse Company; that after the cotton was deposited in the warehouse and the receipts issued, such receipts were duly indorsed, transferred, assigned, and delivered to appellant ; and that, although it had presented the receipts and demanded that the cotton be delivered to it, appellees had failed and refused to do so and thus to comply with the provisions of the receipts. The charge of conversion was based upon the allega *691 tion that the cotton was originally delivered to, and received by, the Plainview Company and, before its destruction by fire, without the consent of the depositors or appellant, it had delivered possession of the cotton to the Panhandle Company.

Further allegations were to the effect that when the cotton was destroyed by fire it was in the possession of the Panhandle Company, such possession having been delivered to it by the Plainview Company, which was bound under its contract of bailment to keep it stored and deliver it only to such person or persons as might present the warehouse réceipts issued therefor; that, by delivering the cotton to the Panhandle Company, the Plainview Company was guilty of conversion of the cotton, and by taking over possession of the cotton from the Plainview Company, the Panhandle Company was likewise guilty of its conversion.

Appellant alleged that the Texas Cotton Growers Gin Company was a subsidiary of and owned by the Texas Cotton Cooperative Association, and that the latter was a subsidiary of and owned by appellant, and that both of said corporations were agents of appellant in the handling of cotton. It further alleged that it was also engaged in aiding the United States government in making loans up to ten cents per pound on cotton, and that its two subsidiaries were acting as its agents in assisting such producers of cotton as were members of the Texas Cotton Cooperative Association to obtain loans on their cotton or to market the same, and that through its subsidiaries and the facilities of the Commodity Credit Corporation, it had made loans on the cotton. It alleged that through the negotiations for loans, the receipts for the cotton had come into its possession, and that by virtue of these transactions, as well as through assignments, it was the legal owner and holder of all of the receipts and entitled to the return of the cotton. It prayed for judgment for the value of the cotton, which was alleged to be $26,916.20, and for interest and costs of suit.

Appellees answered by general demurrer, a large number of special exceptions, pleas of limitation, and specially denied that at the time the cotton was destroyed by fire the Texas Cotton Co-operative Association had made loans on it. They alleged that subsequent to its destruction by fire, appellant and its subsidiary associations had willfully and fraudulently entered into a conspiracy to make purported loans on the cotton after it was destroyed by fire, and that they made payments of money on such purported loans and on purported purchases made subsequent to the fire, with full knowledge of'the fact that the cotton had been destroyed. They alleged that certain insurance companies enterd into the conspiracy with appellant and its subsidiaries, and that it was agreed between them that any money that could be recovered in this suit by appellant would be paid to the insurance companies.

They further alleged that all of the conditions surrounding the warehouse which are complained of by appellant and alleged as bases of its charges of negligence were known to appellant and its subsidiaries, as well as to the insurance companies, and all parties dealing with the cotton before it was placed in the warehouse and before they became connected with any transactions in which it was involved. They further alleged that the warehouse was operated in the same manner as other warehouses of its class; that it had been inspected and approved by the state inspectors; and denied all charges of negligence and the existence of all facts upon which negligence was based. They further pleaded the fire and destruction of the cotton was the result of an unavoidable accident.

In answer to' the charge of conversion, appellees denied that the Plainview Company ever entered into any contract with reference to the cotton involved or that either of appellants ever in any manner converted the cotton or did any act or thing which would have that effect. The answer was sworn to by the manager of both of the warehouse companies.

Upon exception and motion of appellant, all references in the answer to insurance and insurance companies were by the trial court stricken from the answer, and counsel and witnesses admonished not to mention or discuss the matter of insurance or insurance companies in any manner during the progress of the trial.

The case was submitted to a jury upon seventeen special issues, in answer to which the jury found, in effect, that the cotton was destroyed by fire as alleged; that 40 per cent, of it was middling in class and 60 per cent, strict middling; that the market value of middling cotton was $9.35 and of strict middling $9.75. It found that on Octo *692 ber 31, 1933, when the fire occurred, the Panhandle Company was operating the ■warehouse and exonerated both of the ap-pellees from negligence in any of the manners alleged by appellant and further found that the fire wa,s an unavoidable accident. The verdict was returned on October 29, 1936.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 689, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-cotton-co-op-assn-v-plainview-compress-warehouse-co-texapp-1938.