American Cotton Co. v. Collier

69 S.W. 1021, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 105, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 459
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 1021 (American Cotton Co. v. Collier) 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. v. Collier, 69 S.W. 1021, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 105, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 459 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

BOOKHOUT, Associate Justice.

W. A. Collier, appellee, as plaintiff below, filed his bill on the 7th day of July, 1896, in the District Court of Hill County, against the American Cotton Company as the real party defendant, joining the American Cotton Bale Improvement Company, the Hubbard City Gin and Compress Company, D. C. Ball, and C. H. Botsford, as codefendants, charging all of the defendants with conspiracy, and alleging that on August 22, 1895, Botsford, as *107 the agent of the American Cotton Bale Improvement Company, entered into an agreement with appellee under which the Hubbard City Gin and Compress Company was afterwards organized as a junior corporation, and to which junior corporation were conveyed certain lots situated at Hubbard City, Hill County, a portion of the land being that upon which was located a gin plant operated by appellee previous to August 22, 1895, as a square-bale gin plant, the remainder of the land described in the petition being a part of block 86, hereinafter to be especially noted, upon which was located the tank furnishing water to the gin plant.

Appellee in his bill charges that at various times previous to August 22, 1895, the defendants represented that they had made an important discovery in the process of pressing cotton, which was destined to revolutionize the entire business and system of'handling and compressing cotton for the market; that by means of said Bessonette system of pressing cotton a saving would be made of about five or six dollars per bale on every bale of cotton that was ginned and compressed by said system; that said 'system would supplant and destroy in a short time the method of ginning and pressing cotton then employed by plaintiff (meaning the square-bale process), and that by adopting the Bessonette system and changing plaintiff’s plant thereto plaintiff would be greatly profited and benefited; that they had thoroughly tested the Bessonette system and experimented with it, and that it could be successfully adopted, and that it had passed beyond the experimental stage and was a known fact to them; that by adopting said system and placing one of their Bessonette presses with plaintiff’s plant, it would be able to successfully press all the cotton that would be ginned by the eight gin stands established and operated by plaintiff, and that the cotton when compressed by said system would be more valuable in the market than when compressed according to the old method of compressing employed by plaintiff; that plaintiff would be saved the expense of having to compress cotton after the same had been put up in bales; that great saving would be made in not having to insure said cotton compressed by said Bessonette system; that said cotton would sell for more money in the market per pound than cotton compressed in the customary way employed by plaintiff, and that a sample of said cotton so compressed would excel that of cotton compressed by the method employed by plaintiff.

That by means of said representations, alleged to be false and fraudulent, defendants induced appellee to execute said agreement of August 22, 1895, wherein appellee and. said improvement company agreed that the latter would secure a charter organizing the Hubbard City Gin and Compress Company, to be styled the local company, with a capital stock of $10,000, in shares of $100 each, and it was agreed that $4900 of said stock should be subscribed by appellee and paid for by a conveyance to the local company of the said real estate, being the gin plant of appellee, the said $4900 of stock issued to appellee to be held by trustee as collateral security for the payment of a $3000 indebtedness of appellee, *108 constituting a lien on the Hubbard City gin plant, said stock to be delivered to appellee upon' payment of the indebtedness and discharge of all liens against the property; that said Botsford agreed to subscribe for one-fourth of the capital stock of said company.

That said contract of August 22, 1895, further provided that the said improvement company warranted the material in the presses to be furnished by it to be good, and that with proper gin plant and management it would work successfully and pack a cylindrical, merchantable bale of cotton, and that said improvement company would furnish all capital for the purchase at market prices of cotton in the seed to keep the plant running at its full capacity, interest and exchange to be paid by said local company, and all capital so furnished to be charged to said local company.

That in pursuance of said contract he conveyed said property, that his old square-bale presses were disconnected from his gin, that appellee was employed by the local company to assist in managing and running the same, that the new presses were furnished and connected with the gin, and operations were begun about November 1, 1895, and continued until December 23, 1895.

That notwithstanding the representations and contract aforesaid, the press so furnished by said improvement company was a total failure, and would not work successfully, in this: that plaintiff’s gins were capable of ginning seventy-five bales of cotton per day, and that said presses would not press exceeding one-half of their capacity; and did not work successfully, for the further reason that it was continually breaking and getting out of repair, necessitating loss of time and expense in its operation at greatly reduced capacity, and that the cotton compressed by it was injured in quality by reason of burning and packing at the center of the bale, and was unmerchantable and could not be sold except at.a great loss, and that the press, material, and attachments and condenser furnished by the defendant did not work successfully, for the further reason that there was a great loss and waste in the cotton ginned; that the press and condenser so furnished were not of the standard type of the Bessonette press, as was agreed to be furnished by said improvement company, but were of a different character than that contracted for, and were failures and defective so far as a practical cotton press was concerned, and were not in any respect in compliance with the contract with plaintiff, and did not pack a cylindrical, merchantable bale of cotton, and were useless and worthless 'machinery.

That he relied implicitly upon all the representations and statements charged to have been made by the defendants and especially those made by the said improvement company, Botsford and Ball, who were officers, promoters and prime movers in the enterprise; that said statements and representations and warranties provided for in the contract were false and fraudulent and made for the purpose of obtaining appellee’s property, and that it was solely by said means that appellee was induced to part with title to his property, and that he had received no *109 consideration whatever for his property, by reason of which certain deeds and conveyances should be canceled and annulled and the contract rescinded, and that he be reinvested with the title and possession of his property.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 1021, 30 Tex. Civ. App. 105, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-cotton-co-v-collier-texapp-1902.