Bernard Gloekler Co. v. Westbrook Hotel Co.

258 S.W. 870
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1923
DocketNo. 10442.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 870 (Bernard Gloekler Co. v. Westbrook Hotel 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
Bernard Gloekler Co. v. Westbrook Hotel Co., 258 S.W. 870 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

During the year 1917 the Bernard Gloekler Company was engaged in manufacturing and installing cooking apparatus, kitchen equipment, and refrigerators to be used in restaurants and hotels, and the Hygro Company, of Dallas, was one of its sales agents. On June 4, 1917, the former company submitted a proposition in writing to the Westbrook Hotel Company, which was engaged in the operation of a hotel in the city of Fort Worth, Tex., to furnish and install in said hotel certain kitchen equipment according to specifications accompanying the offer, all for the contract price of $5,256.20. That proposition was duly accepted by the Westbrook Hotel Company. Later an additional contract was made, by the terms of which the manufacturing company agreed to furnish a canopy, to be used in connection with the kitchen equipment, for the sum of $410, which the hotel company agreed to pay, making a total which the hotel company agreed to pay $5,666.20. The equipment so ordered was installed in accordance with the terms of the contract, and this suit was instituted against the individuals composing the partnership firm of the Westbrook Hotel Company to recover $2,226.60, the sum which plaintiff alleged to be due it as the unpaid balance of said contract price. Judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant company, and the plaintiff company has appealed.

The evidence shows without dispute that the Hygro Company, of Dallas, Tex., was handling articles manufactured by the plaintiff company, and that the contract between the plaintiff and defendant resulted from negotiations conducted by the Hygro Company as a sales agent for plaintiff company. The evidence further shows that one Mr. Grosman, who resided in Dallas and had charge of the business of the Hygro Company, acted for plaintiff company in the installation of the kitchen equipment in the Westbrook Hotel; that he employed, paid for, and superintended the doing of all the work required to accomplish that result; and that the defendant company had no other representative in that matter, but intrusted the same to the Hygro Company and its representatives. The evidence further showed that the Hygro Company, upon its own account and under a separate contract with the defendant, installed some additional equipment at the same time, which was not furnished by the plaintiff company. The defendant company carried plaintiff's account on its books in the name of the Hygro Company. During the progress of the work funds were required to pay workmen employed and to defray other expenses necessarily incident to the installation of the kitchen equipment. In order to meet those demands Grosman repeatedly called upon Mr. Huckins, representing the defendant company, for necessary funds, which were advanced and used for that purpose. No testimony was introduced to show that the plaintiff company furnished any money for that purpose, or made any arrangements with any one to furnish it within the knowledge of defendant, although the contract price charged by it included the cost of the installation, as well as the cost of furnishing the kitchen equipment.

Several months intervened between the date of the contract sued on between the plaintiff and defendant and the date when the installation of the equipment was finished. During that period, and while the work was in progress, the defendant made to the Hygro Company several payments, aggregating $4,875, one payment of $1,250 being made July 6, 1917, another for $1,500 July 12, another for $1,000 July 21, another for $2,500 August 2, another for $500 August 8, and another for $500 September 14, and according to the testimony of defendant Huckins those payments were intended and understood by him as payments on plaintiff's account, and no evidence was introduced to show that the Hygro Company had a contrary intention or understanding. The defendant also paid freight on the shipments made by the plaintiff aggregating $435.58. On October 31, 1917, the plaintiff company wired to the defendant company as follows:

"Pay no moneys for our account to Hygro Company. Make all payments direct to this company."

On November 5th plaintiff sent another telegram reading as follows:

"Hygro Company not authorized to collect moneys our contract is with you. Will hold you responsible for all payments." *Page 872

On the same day the second telegram was sent, plaintiff by letter to the defendant company confirmed both telegrams and concluded that letter with the following:

"We do not know whether the Hygro Company collected any more moneys or not; we never authorized them to do so — only what our man reported to us. Did the Hygro Company represent themselves as our representatives?"

After receipt of that correspondence, the defendant made no further payments to the Hygro Company on plaintiff's account, and later paid to plaintiff company the sum of $900. The amount so paid, plus the amount already paid to the Hygro Company, with freight charges added, was in excess of the full contract price which the defendant agreed to pay plaintiff for furnishing and installing the kitchen equipment contracted. In addition to the amount so paid, the defendant made further payments, which, together with those mentioned above, aggregated the full sums owing on plaintiff's contract and the separate contract made with the Hygro Company, amounting in all to more than $6,500.

Following are two issues submitted to the jury, with their findings thereon:

"(1) Did the Hygro Company have authority from the plaintiff, Bernard Gloekler Company, to collect or accept payment from the Westbrook Hotel Company for goods furnished or work performed under the contract between the Bernard Gloekler Company and the Westbrook Hotel Company introduced in evidence before you? Answer. No.

"(2) If you have answered the above question in the affirmative, you need not answer the remaining question; but, if you have answered the same in the negative, then you will further state whether or not the act or acts or omissions comprising the dealings and transactions had by the defendant Westbrook Hotel Company with the plaintiff Bernard Gloekler Company and the Hygro Company were such as that a man exercising ordinary care and prudence would have been led to believe that the Hygro Company had the authority from the Bernard Gloekler Company to receive payment for goods furnished and labor performed under the contract between the Bernard Gloekler Company and the Westbrook Hotel Company which has been introduced in evidence before you ? Answer. Yes."

It thus appears that the jury found that the Hygro Company had no express authority from the plaintiff to make collections for it, but that it had implied authority so to do, or that it was in the apparent scope of its authority to make such collection. Assignments have been presented to the second issue so submitted as an improper presentation of the question whether or not it was in the apparent scope of the authority of the Hygro Company to make collections on plaintiff's account from the defendant company. It is insisted, further, that it is not within the scope of authority of a sales agent to collect for the articles sold by him, and that the evidence fails to establish implied authority on the part of the Hygro company to make collections for the plaintiff. In plaintiff's pleadings two credits on its accounts are admitted, one of which payments was made of $1,500, and another of $1,000. The evidence showed that those two payments were made by defendant by checks given to the Hygro Company, to whom they were made payable, and that the Hygro Company cashed the same and sent its own checks to plaintiff in lieu thereof, stating to plaintiff that they had been made by the defendant on plaintiff's account.

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernard-gloekler-co-v-westbrook-hotel-co-texapp-1923.