Beaumont Rice Mills v. Port Arthur Rice Milling Co.

141 S.W. 349, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 436
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 141 S.W. 349 (Beaumont Rice Mills v. Port Arthur Rice Milling 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
Beaumont Rice Mills v. Port Arthur Rice Milling Co., 141 S.W. 349, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 436 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

The Port Arthur Rice Milling Company, a corporation, brought this suit against the Beaumont Rice Mills, a partnership composed of J. E. Broussard, J. M. Hebert, L. M. Hampshire, M. S. Hampshire, E. J. Le Blanc, and B. C. Hebert, and against said individuals as partners, to recover the value of a rice crop alleged to have been grown by R. T. Burge on that part of the Stivers league, in Jefferson county, which lies south of the Gulf & Interstate Railway track. Plaintiff alleged that the crop was covered by two mortgage liens in its favor under two contracts of date February, 1905, and June, 1905, respectively, and that same was planted and cultivated with seed and supplies furnished by plaintiff to said Burge; that 150 acres farmed by Burge south of the railroad track was excepted from the mortgage as well as was all crops south of the railroad farmed by ‘‘other than Burge”; that the crop in question was about 500 acres; that the same was really farmed by Burge, though its ownership was concealed by a succession of transfers designed to conceal the fact that it was farmed by Burge and therefore included in plaintiff’s mortgages; and that finally defendants, in confederacy with those who were parties to said fraudulent transfers, received the proceeds of the sale of the rice crop and by affirmative rep- *350 reservations of their managing partner concealed from plaintiff the fact of having received the same, so that the cause of action was not discovered by plaintiff until the year 1907, the suit having been filed November 27, 1907. The petition does not show when the alleged conversion occurred. Plaintiff’s petition involved other crops besides that grown south of the railway track; but all these are eliminated on this appeal. The defendants, partners, answered both as partners and as individuals, urged many exceptions to the petition, pleaded the general denial and the two years’ statute of limitations. The case was tried before a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $11,360.98 against the Beaumont Rice Mills “as a partnership and against no individual thereof.” The judgment of the court was for said sum against the partnership and each individual member thereof. From this judgment the defendants, after their motion for new trial had been overruled, have prosecuted this appeal.

The description contained in the two contracts or mortgages in question from Burge to plaintiff are practically identical. That in the mortgage of February 11, 1905, is as follows: “In consideration of such advances * * * the said J. F. Burge has granted, sold and conveyed * * * unto the Port Arthur Rice Milling Company * * * the following described personal property, to wit: Being all of the rice crop and all other crops of every kind and nature to be raised during the year 1905, which is to be grown and made upon * * * 2,500 acres of land in Jefferson county, Texas, being part of, the same land that is leased to J. F. Burge, under contract dated January 1, 1904, which lease is to run for three years from that date, from W. C. Tyrrell, of Beaumont, Texas, land described in lease being 3,540 acres, for more particular description of which land reference is made to deed from John H. Broocks to W. C. Tyrrell, of record, in deed records of Jefferson county; also S. % of T. & N. O. school section 14 and all land in Stivers league that is at date of lease under lease to W. C. Tyrrell, all of said land being in Jefferson county, Texas. This is not to include any portion of the above-described land that is now farmed by other than the said Burge; neither does this mortgage cover about 150 acres that the said Burge is farming south of the G. & I. R. R. It being the intention to include in this mortgage all rice grown on land situated north and west of the G. & I. R. R. and leased from W. C. Tyrrell, except about 250 acres now farmed by A. Hamilton.”

The description in the lease referred to is: “All the land owned by first party (W. C. Tyrrell) in what is known as the Stivers league in Jefferson county, Texas, being 3,540 acres, for a more particular description of which land reference is made to a deed from John H. Broocks to said first party, now of record in the deed records of Jefferson county, Texas; also the south one-half of what is known as the Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company’s school section No. 14, in Jefferson county, Texas; also all the land in the above-mentioned Stivers league that is at this date under lease to said first party.”

No deed, from Broocks to Tyrrell for 3,540 acres was introduced; but the plaintiff did introduce the description in a deed from Broocks to Tyrrell of 1,878.8 acres of the Stivers league, which is as follows: “All that certain lot, tract or parcel of land lying and being situated in Jefferson county, Texas, about five or six miles in a southwesterly direction from the city of Beaumont, and described as follows: Being a portion of the Samuel Stivers league survey, and containing one thousand eight hundred and seventy-eight and eight-tenths acres, same beginning .at a point on the south boundary line of said Samuel Stivers league survey where the east boundary line of the right of way of the G. & I. R. R. of Texas crosses said line. Thence east with the south boundary line of said league to the southeast corner thereof. Thence north with the east boundary line of said league to where said east boundary line strikes Double-Point bayou. Thence up said bayou with its meanders to the east boundary line of the right of way of the said G. & I. Ry. of Texas. Thence southwesterly following the said east boundary line of the said right of way of said railway to the place of beginning, containing as aforesaid one thousand eight hundred seventy-eight and eight-tenths acres.”

, The Stivers league is rectangular in form, practically equilateral, and its lines run with the cardinal points of the compass. The Gulf & Interstate Railway traverses same from its northeast to its southwest corner, intersecting its north boundary line a short distance west of its northeast corner, and intersecting its south boundary line a short distance east of its southwest corner, thus dividing the league into two tracks about equal size and form and being almost triangles. One of the triangles lies north and west of the railway, and the other' lies south and east thereof. All of the latter triangular half of the league lying south and east of the railway track is described in the deed from Broocks to Tyrrell except a very small tract cut off the upper or north corner thereof by Double-Point bayou.

In the execution of the mortgages herein referred to, and in other transactions, R. T. Burge pretended to be acting as agent and attorney for his father, J. F. Burge; but it was shown by the testimony and admitted by the parties that in all such transactions R. T. Burge was acting for himself. We will treat him in this opinion as the real principal in all his transactions that we may have occasion to mention.

*351 On February 16, 1905, Burge, In returning to plaintiff the mortgage dated February 11, 1905, wrote to George M. Oraig, plaintiff’s general manager, in effect that he had changed the mortgage prepared for his signature so as to make it read that it did not cover about 200 acres farmed by Hamilton, nor a field south of the railway which he intended planting with about 50 bags of imported seed; and on tbis letter is a notation of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.W. 349, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaumont-rice-mills-v-port-arthur-rice-milling-co-texapp-1911.