Bixler v. Dolieve

220 S.W. 148, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 15, 1920
DocketNo. 559.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 220 S.W. 148 (Bixler v. Dolieve) 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
Bixler v. Dolieve, 220 S.W. 148, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 260 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

The appellant, Miles F. Bixler, a resident of Cleveland, Ohio, doing business under the trade name of Miles F. Bixler & Co., on May 12, 1910, sold and shipped to appellee, J. M. Dolieve, who was engaged in the mercantile business at Oak-hurst, San Jacinto county, Tex., a bill of goods, consisting of k number of articles of cheap jewelry, for a total agreed price of $198. The terms of this sale and purchase were evidenced by a written contract, showing that this jewelry was to be paid for in four equal installments of three, six, nine, and twelve months from date of sale. This jewelry was never paid for by appellee, and on January 27, 1912, appellant filed suit in the justice court of San Jacinto county to recover the contract price of this jewelry, together with interest thereon from date of sale. An itemized statement of this bill of jewelry was attached to appellant’s petition, and was duly verified, as provided by Revised Statutes, art. 3712, relative to suits upon open accounts.

Appellee answered by general demurrer and general denial, and then specially alleged that his contract of purchase was induced by fraud on the part of appellant as to the kind and character of this jewelry; and then appellee reconvened for damages to his trade as a merchant in the sum of $175.

A trial in the justice’s court resulted in a judgment denying plaintiff any recovery on his account and also denying defendant anything on his plea of reconvention. From this judgment the plaintiff, Bixler, prosecuted an appeal to the county court of San Ja-cinto county, but the defendant, Dolieve, did not appeal from the judgment against him. After the case reached the county court, Bix-ler filed a supplemental petition, consisting of a general demurrer and several special exceptions, the ruling on which is not made the basis of any assignment here. The supplemental petition also contained a general denial, and then the written contract between the parties was specially pleaded by Bixler, as follows:

•‘Plaintiff further says that the goods sold defendant was based upon a written contract that provided as follows:
“ ‘Terms of payment: Twelve months, payable in four equal payments, due three, six, nine, and twelve months from date of invoice, or 6 per cent, discount if paid in full on arrival of jewelry.
“ ‘Advertising: We will write and mail letters to seventy-five people, names and addresses to *149 be furnished by purchaser; purchaser to redeem the letters at fifty cents each in jewelry at retail; we to redeem them in like manner when returned to us.
“‘Exchange privilege: At any time within eighteen months, we will, upon receipt of any goods purchased of us, exchange them dollar for dollar for any other goodá in our store.
“ ‘Warranty: If at any time, for any cause, an article purchased of us proves unsatisfactory, it must be promptly returned, and we will replace it with a new one free of charge.
“ ‘Sales insurance: Should the retail sales from these goods in twelve months’ time total less than the whole amount of this order, we will repurchase at the wholesale prices the goods remaining unsold, on condition that purchaser will keep the goods displayed twelve months, and use reasonable effort to sell them, and send us within the first five days of each alternate month, an invoice of the goods then on hand. Customers not desiring this protection may omit these requirements.’ ”

Plaintiff then alleged further that no payments whatever had been made by defendant, and that the plaintiff had at all times held himself ready to comply with his part of the contract in every particular, but that the defendant has never complied with any part of the contract. In short, the plaintiff in this supplemental petition alleged, substantially, that since the defendant had failed in all respects to comply with the terms of the written contract under which the articles of jewelry were sold to him, he (defendant) was in no position to allege and rely upon fraud on the part of plaintiff in inducing defendant to make and enter into the contract; in other words, it was the contention, in effect, of plaintiff that before defendant could be permitted to plead and rely upon the fraud of plaintiff in inducing the contract he (defendant) would have to show that he complied with its written terms.

The suit in the county court resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Bixler, for one-third of the amount sued for by him, that is to say, $66, with interest on that amount, and costs of suit, and from this judgment he prosecutes an appeal to this court.

There are several assignments of error found in appellant’s brief, but we shall not take them up in the order found. What we shall say will, in effect, dispose of them all.

It is first contended, in effect, that the trial court was in error in permitting appellee, over objection, to introduce testimony in keeping with the allegations in his answer showing, in, effect, that appellant perpetrated a fraud upon him and induced the contract on his part by fraudulent representations and statements as to the quality and character of this jewelry; the contention of appellant in this connection being that, as his suit was based upon an open account, duly verified under the statute, which had not been denied under oath by appellee, either in whole or in part, no testimony on the part of appellee disputing or denying the justness of the account could be properly admitted. It is true, as claimed by appellant in this connection, that- appellee did not deny, under oath, the account sued on by appellant, either in whole or in part, and if appellant’s suit were in contemplation of article 3712, Revised Statutes, based upon an open account, then his contention would be correct. We have concluded, however, that appellant’s suit is not based upon an open account in contemplation of the articles mentioned, but rather upon an isolated single transaction, by which a bill of goods was sold under a special written contract to appellee. The statute invoked by appellant applies only to transactions between persons in which, by sale upon the one side and purchase upon the other, the title to personal property is passed from one to the’ other, and the relation of debtor and creditor is thereby created by general course of dealing; and it does not mean one or more isolated transactions resting upon a special contract. McCamant v. Batsell, 59 Tex. 363. The assignment is overruled.

It is next contended that the trial court should have rendered judgment in favor of appellant for the full amount sued for; the contention in this connection being, in effect, that it having been shown by all the evidence that appellee failed to comply with any of the terms of the written contract, and especially with reference to the exchange clause and the warranty clause and sales insurance clause, as above shown, he could not defend the action upon the ground of fraud in procuring the contract, as attempted by him. ■

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Bluebook (online)
220 S.W. 148, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bixler-v-dolieve-texapp-1920.