Bonnett-Brown Sales Service Co. v. Denison Morning Gazette

201 S.W. 1044, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1242
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 1917
DocketNo. 1302.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 1044 (Bonnett-Brown Sales Service Co. v. Denison Morning Gazette) 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
Bonnett-Brown Sales Service Co. v. Denison Morning Gazette, 201 S.W. 1044, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1242 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HALL, J.

[1] The appellee moves this court to order the original contract and a certain postal card described in the motion filed in this court, and supports the motion by the affidavit of the trial judge that both of said papers were introduced in evidence, and the motion is further supported by the affidavit of the county clerk that the original contract was a part of the evidence introduced upon the trial. This motion is resisted by appellant. Rule 8 (142 S. W. xi) for Courts of Civil Appeals provides that all motions relating to informalities and the manner of bringing a case into this court shall be filed here within 30 days after the filing of the transcript, and that such objection shall be considered waived if not filed within 30 days. The transcript and statement of facts were filed in the Court of Civil Appeals at Dallas in July. This motion was filed in this court November 17th. Rule 11 (142 S. W. xi) for the Courts of Civil Appeals provides that motions for cer-tiorari to perfect the record shall be made within the time required by rule 8 (142 S. W. xi), and if made afterwards they will be entertained only upon such terms as the Courts of Appeals may deem just and proper. No reason is shown why the motion was not filed within the time, and in our opinion it should not be considered.

[2] However, we doubt the authority of this court to grant the motion and order original papers sent from the county court. Rule 57 (142 S. W. xvi) for the Courts of Appeals provides that original papers sent up with the transcript by order of the trial court for the inspection of the appellate court will be retained in the office, and will not be allowed to go out of the custody of the clerk, except by order of the justices of the court. As said by Gaines, Justice, in Cunningham v. State, 74 Tex. 511, 12 S. W. 217:

“When it is desired that original papers used upon the trial in the court below shall accompany the transcript, we deem the proper practice to be to obtain an order of the trial court to that effect. * * * To permit the counsel in a case to agree to send up original documents as those ruled upon in the bill of exceptions, without his approval or order, would be to allow them to bring to this court, by agreement, a question not passed upon by the court below. It is against the policy of the law and the spirit of our statutes and rules to permit this.”

The record contains no order of the trial judge that the original papers be sent to this court, and until that has been done we doubt our authority to issue a writ of certiorari to the lower court.

The motion is overruled.

On the Merits.

Appellant instituted this suit in the county court of Grayson county, against W. H. Taylor, J. E. Wall, and W. H. Whitley, a firm doing business in the city of Denison under the name of Denison Morning Gazette. The basis of the suit is a contract entered into between the parties, providing for the purchase of property described in the contract as follows:

“M. W. N. & Fur. O. L. & Coup. Sales Service in Matrix form, to be shipped at our expense on the following terms and to consist of: 4 sheets, Mens and Womens each, monthly, semimonthly, two sheets each newspaper and furniture sent monthly. Stock books, mens and wo-mens, complete to date. 50 coupons, 6 special coupons.”

Although we have searched the record and statement of facts diligently we -are unable to give any idea as to what the subject-matter of this contract is, but we presume the parties know, and that the contract does not relate to any matters illegal or against public policy. We don’t understand why the defendants did not attack it for uncertainty and ambiguity. Appellant sought to recover an alleged balance of $399, alleged to he due under the contract, for the things mentioned above, whatever they may be, furnished to appellees, and for which no payment had been made. The defendants answered by general demurrer and specially that they were not indebted to the plaintiff in any sum except $19, which they tendered *1046 into court. They admitted execution of the contract, but alleged that there was a clause written by one Hurd, the agent or salesman of the plaintiff, on the back of the carbon copy of the contract kept by defendants, as follows:

“In ease of not being able financially to meet conditions of this contract same will be canceled upon notification of the fact to Bonnett-Brown Sales Service, 223 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago.”

They allege that they became financially unable to comply with the contract, and so wrote plaintiff to said address. By supplemental petition plaintiff denied that said in-dorsement was made by its authorized agent or by any one having authority to enter the term above quoted upon the contract; that the said Hurd had no authority to make contracts or to enter into any stipulations or conditions, but was authorized only to solicit and send in orders which were of no effect until accepted by Bonnett-Brown Sales Service, and when this was done and written notice of such acceptance was mailed to the party offering to purchase, it became the contract of the parties, and was not subject to cancellation; that Hurd was not the agent of plaintiff, authorized to write the stipulation on the reverse side of the copy of the contract, as contended by defendants, and had no authority so to do; that if defendants desired to impose such condition, they should have had the same indorsed on the original contract which was sent to and accepted by plaintiff so as not to deceive or mislead plaintiff or enable any one else to do so, and defendants are estopped from claiming that such indorsement became any part of the contract; that the order or offer to purchase received and accepted by plaintiff had no such agreement as that set up by defendants in their said answer, and plaintiff had no notice of such indorsement until after this suit was brought; that salesmen were not authorized to change such order or offer by verbal agreement. There was a verdict and judgment for defendants.

[3] Plaintiff offered the deposition of Arthur Bonnett to prove that the defendants accepted the semimonthly shipments on the contract long after they claimed they notified plaintiff to cancel the agreement. This was objected to because it was irrelevant and immaterial, and we think the objection was properly sustained. Plaintiffs did not plead that deféndants were estopped by accepting under the contract, and the evidence was clearly irrelevant.

[4] That part of the answer of the witness Bonnett to the twelfth interrogatory, as follows:

“They broke their contract by not having allowed us to fulfill our end of same, and by not having remitted each installment as due promptly”

—was excluded upon the same objection. While it may not have been immaterial and irrelevant, and was not, we think, a conclusion of the witness, but was rather the statement of a fact, the error, if any, is harmless, because the facts testified to were admitted in the pleadings and established by other witnesses.

[5] Appellant contends under the third assignment that the court erred in admitting that portion of the contract referred to above, written upon the back of it by Hurd, its agent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 S.W. 1044, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonnett-brown-sales-service-co-v-denison-morning-gazette-texapp-1917.