Belt v. Smith

264 S.W. 1027, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 976
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 1924
DocketNo. 6756.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 1027 (Belt v. Smith) 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
Belt v. Smith, 264 S.W. 1027, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 976 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

McOLENDON, C. J.

Brooke. Smith, Sr., Brooke Smith, Jr., and Lola D. Lester and husband, Jack Lester, as partners under the firm name of Brooke Smith & Co., bankers, brought this suit against O. E. Belt, Ered L. Johnson, E. A. Chastain, C. M. Johnson, J. B. Lacey, and T. R. Lacey, to recover the balance due upon a promissory note for 81,169.80, dated November 13, 1920, due 90 days after date, and bearing 10 per cent, interest from date, and providing for 10 per cent, attorney’s fees. It was alleged that the defendants executed and delivered the note to the S. & H. Auto Company, a partnership composed of D. E. Stanley and Walter H. I-Ielmeck, and that on or about November 16, 1920, the S. & H. Auto Company, for a valuable consideration, sold, indorsed, and delivered the note to plaintiffs.

The defendants Ered L. Johnson, J. B. and T. R. Lacey, and E. B. Chastain answered, admitting that they signed “the note described in plaintiff’s petition,” and setting up the following special defenses:

(1) That, prior to the execution of the note, defendants Belt and F. L. Johnson were partners in operating a garage, and that Stanley made an arrangement with Johnson by which his firm was to take the agency for the Dort automobile, and a Dort ear was turned over to him by Stanley, with the understanding that the car was to be used for demonstration purposes, and sold if a purchaser could be found; that the note was executed with the understanding and agreement that it was not to be an unqualified promise to pay the sum named therein, but merely as a guaranty that the car would either be returned, or, if sold, that the proceeds, less commission, would be paid to the S. & H. Auto Company; that it was agreed that the note should so provide, and that Belt and Johnson signed it under the representation that it did so, and without reading it or knowing its contents, but relying upon the statement of Stanley in that regard. These statements were alleged to have been fraudulently and falsely made as an inducement to them to sign the note. It was further alleged that the same statements were made to the other parties signing the note, except defendant T. R. Lacey, who signed at night and in the dark, under the representation by Stanley that the instrument he was signing was only a guaranty for the return of the machine or its proceeds.

(2) That the car was delivered to Stanley about February 15, 1821, for the account of defendants, which operated as a cancellation and settlement of the note, or in any event entitled defendants to recover of plaintiffs its value, alleged to be $1,250.

They also impleaded Stanley and Helmeck, against whom they prayed for judgment over for any amount that might be rendered against them.

Special exception was filed by the plaintiff to the first defense above set out, upon the ground that it was not alleged that plaintiffs had any knowledge or notice of the alleged infirmities in the note prior to or at the time they purchased it, and that plaintiffs, being holders in due course, would not be bound by any oral agreements entered into with Stanley prior to its execution and delivery. This exception was sustained. By a trial amendment the four answering defendants alleged that, when Stanley made the representations and statements previously alleged, he was acting for and on behalf of plaintiffs, who by accepting the note became chargeable with knowledge of the moans and representations by which it was procured.

O. E. Belt, C. W. Johnson, and D. F. Stanley were not served with citation, and were dismissed from the case.

There was a trial to a jury upon special issues; the court submitting only two questions, the answers to which found the value of the car on May 26, 1923, at $476, and on June 21, 1921, $700. Defendants requested the court to submit the issue whether the car was delivered to George Norwood for the account of Brooke Smith & Co., or at the instance of and for the account of defendants, or either of them, and also objected to the court’s charge because it failed to submit the issue whether the car was sold at *1028 the instance of Brooke Smith & Co., or at the instance of defendants. Upon the above findings of the jury, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs against all the answering defendants for $719.93, specified to be $649.24 principal, $5.41 interest, and $65.28 attorney’s fees. Judgment over was also rendered in favor of defendants upon their cross-action against the S. & H. Auto Company. From this judgment the four answering defendants have appealed.

Appellants’ brief contains four propositions, in which they question the correctness of the trial court’s rulings in the following respects:

(1) The refusal to submit the issue whether the car was delivered to Norwood at the instance of Brooke Smith & Co. (Briefed under appellants’ first proposition.)
(2) T,he alleged refusal of the trial court to permit defendants to show what took place between them and Stanley when the note was signed. (Briefed under appellants’ third pi'oposition.)
(3) The sustaining of the special exception to the third paragraph of defendants’ answer, which embraced the defense numbered 1 above. (Briefed under appellants’ Second and fourth propositions.)

We have reached the conclusion that all of appellants’ propositions should be overruled.

The evidence was not sufficient, in our judgment, to support a finding that the car was turned over to Norwood in satisfaction of the note. The car was sold, and its value credited upon the note. There is no complaint of the judgment in this particular. The circumstances under which the sale was made, as disclosed by the appellants’ evidence, were, in substance, as follows:

Fred L. Johnson, one of the defendants, testified that he received a letter from plaintiffs which stated:

“For me to bring the car back, that they wanted to realize on the car and I brought the oar back and delivered it to Mr. Norwood over at the Highway Auto Company, because I had orders from Mr. McConnell (an employee of plaintiffs) to take it down and put it in his garage; he told me that in the letter and also When I came over. I went to him first when I came here and told him the car was there, and he told me to take it down there and I did. X did see the car afterwards, at Mr. Norwood’s. I never got it afterwards. That ,was on or about June 20, 1921, somewhere along that time.”

On cross-examination he stated;

“In that letter he just stated for me to bring the car back and where to take it to. As to Whether he told me I had received credit on my note for the car when it was brought back — he said he wanted the car back so he could realize on it.”

J. B. Lacey, another defendant, testified to having seen this letter, and described its contents as follows:

“It was something like this: To bring the car back over and leave it with Mr. Norwood. I am not sure where he said to leave it, but he said to leave it over here, that he wanted to sell it to realize on it.”

The evidence of these witnesses presents the case as strongly for the appellants as the record will support.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 1027, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belt-v-smith-texapp-1924.