Bonner Oil Co. v. Gaines

179 S.W. 686, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 967
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 16, 1915
DocketNo. 6962. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 686 (Bonner Oil Co. v. Gaines) 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
Bonner Oil Co. v. Gaines, 179 S.W. 686, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 967 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

* Application for writ of error pending in Supreme Court. *Page 687 The Bonner Oil Company brought this suit against the Lake Austin Canal Company, a corporation, and John W. Gaines, on two promissory notes alleged to have been executed to it by the defendants, each for the sum of $445.20, dated February 3, 1914, bearing 8 per cent. per annum interest and maturing 60 and 90 days after date, respectively. The defendant Lake Austin Canal Company failed to appear and answer. The defendant Gaines answered, pleading want of consideration on his part for the execution of the notes which he alleged were given for a debt due by the canal company to plaintiff, and that he was not interested in such debt except as a stockholder in the defendant canal company. Plaintiff, in reply, pleaded that the execution of the notes by defendant Gaines was done for the purpose of securing an extension of, time for the payment of the debt due by the canal company, and that therefore there was a valid consideration. To this the defendant Gaines replied that there was no specific agreement for the extension of time for the payment of the debt due by the canal company at the time he signed the notes, and that the plaintiff never requested him to sign the notes, and that the same were signed by him without request and without consideration. He also pleaded that the purpose of executing the notes was to settle all controversy as to the amount and validity of the debt due plaintiff by the canal company, and not for the purpose of securing an extension of time, or to limit the time within which plaintiff could sue on the debt. The case was tried before the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment by default against the defendant Lake Austin Canal Company for $990.40, together with $49.38 interest and $100.93 attorneys' fees, aggregating $1,143.67, and in favor of defendant John W. Gaines. From the judgment in favor of defendant Gaines, the plaintiff has prosecuted a writ of error to this court.

Appellant by several assignments of error complains, in different ways, of the action of the court in rendering judgment in favor of defendant Gaines; the gravamen of the complaint being that the undisputed evidence shows that the act of said Gaines in signing the notes sued upon was based on a sufficient consideration to render his promise to pay them a binding obligation upon his part.

The following is a statement of the material undisputed facts as shown by the record: The Lake Austin Canal Company was a corporation duly chartered under the laws of Texas, and at the time at which plaintiff's cause of action arose was, and so far as the record shows is now, a going concern. Its capital stock was $18,000, and was owned in equal amounts by defendant John W. Gaines, his son, C. M. Gaines, and Ed Savage. John W. Gaines was its president, and Ed Savage its secretary and general manager. The Bonner Oil Company, plaintiff, was engaged in selling lubricating oils; and in endeavoring to make sales to the Lake Austin Canal Company, its agent, Mr. J. H. Bland, called upon Mr. Savage and solicited him to buy, and was referred by Savage to Mr. Gaines, and after talking the matter over with Mr. Gaines the latter told the agent to go back to Mr. Savage and tell him to order what he wanted. Savage thereafter ordered from time to time oil in such quantities as he desired, the value of which amounted to $890.40, no part of which was ever paid. Afterwards the Bonner Oil Company began trying to collect this sum, and to this end its said agent, Bland, went to Bay City, where the principal office of the corporation was located, and where the defendant Gaines lived, to see Mr. Gaines with *Page 688 reference to payment; but Mr. Gaines was away, and Bland did not then see him. Later he again went to Bay City for the purpose of making a collection, his purpose being to either collect the amount due, or a part of it, or to close the account with notes, and carried with him blank notes to be filled out and executed, in the event the amount was not paid. He called upon Mr. Gaines at his office, and the latter, after Mr. Bland had stated that his purpose in calling was to get some money on the debt, stated to Bland that the corporation had not sold its rice at that time, and that they had had bad luck, whereupon Bland presented the blank notes which were filled out for equal amounts, aggregating the amount of the debt, and were signed by the corporation by Mr. Gaines as its president and also signed by him in his individual capacity, and as thus signed were handed to Mr. Bland. Bland testified that when he handed the notes to Gaines for execution he said to him, in substance:

"Mr. Gaines, we would be glad to have the notes, because they will help us out with the bank; we might be able to handle the notes at the bank, and get the money, and if we can accommodate you, we will do it in that way."

He further testified that, when Gaines returned the notes to him after signing them, he stated:

"Mr. Bland, I am doing this for you, I don't for the company; I don't often do this, or this is something I haven't often done, or something to that effect, and I thanked him for it, and said I appreciated it very much that he did do it."

He further testified:

"If Mr. Gaines had simply given me two notes of the corporation, and had not executed the notes himself, I would not have accepted them."

He did not request Mr. Gaines to sign the notes individually, nor did he tell him that he would not accept the notes of the corporation without his individual signature.

Mr. Gaines, testifying as to the circumstances under which he signed the notes, stated:

"Mr. Bland came into the office and told me, as he stated, that the company needed the notes, or could use the notes, or something to that effect, and they asked to close the account with a note, or two notes, divided into two equal amounts, and make them payable 60 and 90 days after date, and after discussing it a little while we agreed to that. The purpose, as stated by Mr. Bland, was just to enable them to use the paper as collateral at the bank, that they might do it; he didn't say they would do it; he said they might need them, and that if they did they could use them to hypothecate them with the bank to obtain advances. That was the sole reason assigned for wanting the account settled by notes."

"I have been puzzled several times myself just why I did sign the paper at the time, to tell you the honest truth, and I couldn't tell you to this day why I did it. I don't know why I indorsed that paper. * * * It is a mystery to me."

After the note, which matured 60 days after its date, fell due, defendant Gaines wrote to the plaintiff asking for a further extension of time in which to pay the same. In this letter, which is dated April 27, 1914, he says:

"In this connection I wish to say that if you will do so (extend time of payment until fall) the Lake Austin Canal Company will very much appreciate you carrying this account over until fall, as it is practically impossible for them to pay it at this time, and get through this season's work. I will re-indorse this paper, payable in the fall, and if you will do as above suggested, it will be a great accommodation to me and to the canal company."

It is undisputed that the debt was due at the time the notes were executed, and that the time of payment was extended 60 and 90 days by the giving of the notes.

Under the facts as above stated, the court held that the signing of the notes by John W. Gaines was without consideration, and upon this view rendered judgment in his favor; and in so doing, we think, committed error.

When Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 686, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonner-oil-co-v-gaines-texapp-1915.