Archer v. Ross

262 S.W.2d 213, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2044
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 2, 1953
Docket15403
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 262 S.W.2d 213 (Archer v. Ross) 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
Archer v. Ross, 262 S.W.2d 213, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2044 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

RENFRO, Justice.

On February 23, 1951, Ross and Sensi-baugh agreed to sell to J. E. McLelland a large number of cattle to be delivered at a later date. McLelland paid $40,000 cash as a partial payment and agreed to pay the balance upon delivery of the cattle. Subsequent to the above date, Mc-Lelland showed Fred Archer some cows and calves, known for descriptive purposes as the Kenneth Cook cows. Archer agreed to buy 250 cows with calves and paid McLelland a $10,000 down payment. It was represented by Sensibaugh to Mc-Lelland and by McLelland to Archer that the majority of the Kenneth Cook cattle were four years of age, that there were a few old cows and the balance were of good ages. On June 1st Archer had trucks ready on the Ross ranch, where the cattle were located, to accept delivery. At that time he had at first refused to accept the cattle, saying they were not the same as represented to him by McLelland. Archer asked McLelland for the return of the $10,000 he had paid McLelland but Mc-Lelland answered that he did not have the $10,000. Archer then was of the opinion that Ross and Sensibaugh had the $10,000 but prior to the filing of the hereinafter mentioned law suit he learned that Ross and Sensibaugh had not received any part of same. His purpose in accepting the cattle and stopping payment on the draft was to get back the $10,000. After some discussion, participated in by McLelland, Archer, Sensibaugh and Ross, Archer accepted the cattle and drew a draft for $30,-950, the balance of the agreed contract price, to McLelland, who in turn endorsed same and delivered it to Ross and Sensi-baugh. Only 126 cows and calves were delivered; that number, however, was satisfactory to all concerned. The cattle were moved to Tarrant and Bosque Counties. Archer stopped payment on the draft. Ross and Sensibaugh tried without avail to get Archer to pay the draft.

On June 22, 19'5l, Ross and Sensibaugh sued McLelland, Archer and the A-Bar Cattle Company, Inc., in a district court in Tarrant County, setting out their contract with McLelland, see Ross & Sensibaugh v. McLelland, Tex.Civ.App., 262 S. W.2d 205, and alleging Archer was acting for himself and for the A-Bar Cattle Company, Inc., as a stockholder, director and its duly authorized agent, that defendants *215 McLelland and Archer represented to the plaintiffs that the cattle to he delivered by plaintiffs to McLelland were in turn to be at the same time and place delivered by McLelland to Archer and A-Bar Cattle Company and would be paid for by a draft drawn by Archer against the A-Bar Cattle Company, made payable to McLelland and that McLelland would in turn endorse said draft and deliver same to the plaintiffs as part payment of the cattle and in accordance with said representations made by the defendants that the transaction was carried out as above and that McLelland caused his endorsement on the draft to be canceled and Archer and the A-Bar Cattle Company caused payment of the draft to be stopped when presented to the bank, and alleged that the defendants induced the plaintiffs to deliver said cattle to them in acting together in a common design to defraud the plaintiffs out of their cattle and the value thereof, knowing at the time that the draft was drawn and delivered to plaintiffs that payment of the draft would be stopped. They then set out the removal of the cattle to Tarrant and Bosque Counties ; that the defendants represented to the plaintiffs said draft would be honored when presented to plaintiffs and plaintiffs believed and relied upon such representation and were thereby induced by the defendants to deliver the cattle to the defendants; that the representations were false and fraudulent and known to each of the defendants to be such and were made in order to induce the plaintiffs to deliver the cattle to them. Plaintiffs asked that the purchase of the cattle be set aside and the cattle restored to the plaintiffs’ possession. They prayed for appointment of a receiver to take possession of said cattle and preserve same during the pendency of the suit.

The court, on June 29, 1951, appointed a receiver to take possession of said cows. On September 7, 1951, the court entered an agreed order authorizing the receiver to sell the cattle, the order containing a provision that “the agreement of the parties to the sale of said cattle shall not in any way effect or prejudice the rights of any of the parties hereto, and that their rights in and to said cash money shall be the same as their rights were in and to the said cattle before they were sold.”

On January 19, 1952, the court entered an order approving the final report of the receiver and directing that the proceeds of the cattle be delivered to the district clerk of Tarrant County, Texas.

No appeal was taken from the order appointing the receiver and, as heretofore set out, all parties agreed to a sale of the cattle by the receiver and no objection was made to the receiver’s final report and no exception taken to the order of the court approving the report and ordering the money paid into the registry of the court.

On the 17th of March, 1952, the plaintiffs filed their first amended original petition. The amended petition appears to embrace all the allegations of the original petition down to the application for a receiver. At this point in the amended petition the plaintiffs set out that a receiver had been appointed, that the receiver had sold the cattle and paid the money into the registry of the court less the sum of the expenses of the receivership. The amended petition then goes further into the alleged fraudulent conduct of the defendants, particularly of the defendants Archer and A-Bar Cattle Company, and prays for judgment against all defendants for $30,950, being the amount of the draft in question, or, in the alternative, for judgment for the reasonable cash market value of the cattle, or, further in the alternative, for judgment against the defendants for the contract price of said cattle and exemplary damages against Archer and the A-Bar Cattle Company, and prayed that the clerk of the court be ordered to pay the plaintiffs the balance of the purchase price of said cattle theretofore received by her from the receiver, same to be credited on their judgment.

The case was tried before a jury. Material to this appeal the jury found that Archer acted with malice toward Ross and Sensibaugh in stopping payment on the draft, and awarded $100 exemplary damages; that Ross and Sensibaugh repre *216 sented to McLelland the Kenneth Cook cattle to consist of approximately 200 cows four years of age and the balance of approximately ISO of good ages, with a sprinkle of old cows; that such statements were made as statements of opinions and McLelland knew such statements to be opinions; that McLelland made the same representations to Archer but that such statements were made as statements of opinions and Archer knew they were so made; and further that the cows and calves delivered to Archer did conform to the cows and calves previously shown him by McLelland; that prior to June 1, 1951, Ross and Sensibaugh agreed with McLel-land that if McLelland would permit them to accept checks and drafts direct from purchasers Ross and Sensibaugh would arrange to clear such checks and drafts and accept the same relying solely on the credit of such purchasers and in full payment of McLelland’s obligation to them; and that the Archer draft was accepted in accordance with said agreement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
262 S.W.2d 213, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/archer-v-ross-texapp-1953.