Bridges Early v. Williams, Administrator

66 S.W. 120, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 38
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 120 (Bridges Early v. Williams, Administrator) 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
Bridges Early v. Williams, Administrator, 66 S.W. 120, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 38 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinions

COLLARD, Associate Justice.

Suit by Lud Williams, administrator of the estate of A. B. Thomas, deceased, against Bridges & Early, to recover for certain goods, or their value, alleged to have been wrongfully taken from Thomas while yet living, though unconscious,—the goods alleged to be worth $327.30.

Defendants set up that the Lewis Grocery Company was the owner of the merchandise, which owed them $240.96, and that the goods taken by them from the company was in payment of .that debt, and were substantially the same goods sold by them to the company, the value of which was not more than sufficient to pay said debt.

The goods were not found and plaintiff had judgment for $291.30, from which this appeal is prosecuted by defendants.

The principal facts are clearly stated in the testimony of John Vivrett, as follows: “I knew A. B. Thomas in his lifetime. He died the 4th day of December, 1899. At the time of his death he was engaged in a grocery store on South Third street, in Waco. I do not know who owned the business. It was known as the Lewis Grocery Company, a retail grocery company. Mr. Thomas employed me to work in the store. He gave me directions as to my duty. He managed the business. The stationery, bill heads, etc., bore the name of the Lewis Grocery Company. Mr. Thomas’s name did not appear on any of the signs, paper or bill heads. I do not know who composed the Lewis Grocery Company. Never did ask. The business was run under the name of the Lewis Grocery Company for. five or six years prior to Mr. Thomas’s death, and I never knew of anybody being connected with it.

“On the 4th day of December, 1899, about 6 o’clock in the morning, I found Mr. Thomas in the back end of the store in an unconscious state, and went out and called for help. We sent for Dr. Curtis, who arrived shortly afterwards, when he was taken to his boarding house, about four blocks away. I do not know whether he ever regained consciousness. If he did, I did not know it. He died that night about II or 12 o’clock. I was with him when he died. The Lewis Grocery Company owed Bridges & Early. During the day before Mr. Thomas died, Mr. Bridges came to me and asked me to let him have the goods to the amount of their account. I was uncertain what to do, and put him off. We met several times during the day, and finally, about 7 o’clock, we met and I told him that I would go to the store and get the goods. We, Mr. Bridges and" Mr. Penry, his attorney and I, went to the store and went in and put up a wagon sheet to keep the curious passers by from gathering about the front. Mr. Bridges knew of Mr. Thomas’s illness and his likelihood to die, and that was discussed as one of the reasons he wanted his bill settled.

*40 “Mr. Bridges collected such goods as had been bought from Bridges & Early, with a few exceptions. The prices were agreed on at cost or wholesale price, or perhaps a little more, and measured and counted and weighed, and all laid aside in a pile to themselves. We made no bill at the time. The amount of goods I let Bridges have about paid his debt. We got through about 9 o’clock arid next morning came back and I opened the store, and they took the goods out which had been delivered to them the evening before. The goods sold to Bridges, Early & Co. consisted of nearly all the staple goods in the store. The bill amounted to about the sum due Bridges & Early by the Lewis Grocery Company. In discussing about selling them the goods, something was said about an attachment against the stock, and I thought I had- better let them have the goods. I never settled any bills before. Mr. Thomas had never told me to do so. I did not keep the books, and did not know the state of the accounts with those from whom he purchased goods. I never sold such a bill before as this one to the defendants, or anyone else. Mr. Thomas never told- me to sell at wholesale. I did not sell any other goods during the day that Mr. Thomas was ill. I did not agree to let them have the goods until they threatened to attach the stock, which I was satisfied would be injurious to the business. Mr. Thomas never told me that the business was his, or who the Lewis Grocery Company was. .My general duties were to sell goods or take orders, etc., and I bought some goods. I took full control of the business in Mr. Thomas’s absence. When Mr. Thomas was in jail on a charge of murder, the plaintiff, Mr. Williams, took charge of the business and put me and a relative of his in charge. I don’t know how he got the keys. I did not have any. This was in 1897, about two years before Mr. Thomas’s death. The business was then on Eleventh and Webster streets, and after Mr. Thomas got out of jail, he took charge again and later on moved to South Third street. I always carried the keys to the Third street store. The morning I found Mr. Thomas I also found two letters from him on his desk, one addressed to me and one addressed to Mr. W. E. Owens. [The witness was shown two letters addressed as stated, which he identified as the same letters, and said the same were written by A. B. Thomas, being the same letters introduced in evidence by defendants.] In talking about selling them the goods, something was said about running an attachment for the debt, and I thought I had better let them have the goods and settle their bill. I never settled any bills before, unless Mr. Thomas told me to do so. I did not keep the books, and did not therefore know the state of the accounts with persons from whom he purchased goods. I never sold such a bill before to Bridges, Early & Co. or anyone else. Mr. Thomas never told me to sell at wholesale. I did not sell any other goods during the day Mr. Thomas was ill.”

Thomas was unconscious from the effects of the poison he had taken— morphine and opium—at the time the goods were set aside for Bridges & Early, and was in that condition until he died. The testimony shows *41 thát he was in possession of the goods and was carrying on the business in the name of the Lewis Grocery Company, and he had been doing business under that name for five or six years prior to his death. He knew nothing about the delivery of the goods taken by Bridges & Early, and was unconscious at the time the goods were taken by them. Bridges & Early carried the goods away and appropriated them.

Thomas was charged with murder in 1897, and he told his counsel that the little store was, all he had in the world, and told the counsel that it belonged to him; this was about one year before he died. At Waco, December 3rd, he wrote Mr. W. E. Owens the following letter:

“W. E. Owens: Dear Bro.—What I am about to do I will not attempt to justify, for to one who has not passed through what I have there could be no clear conception. The inhumanity of some of Waco’s people is beyond belief save to those who have borne its burdens. This is the last tíme I will be able to defend myself, so I wish to reiterate my evidence. I did not seek the difficulty with Penn & Stewart. It was forced on me. They were full of bad whiskey (was there ever any good whiskey) that, coupled with their evil motives, made my appeals to reason unheeded. The fight was pushed on me. It was slay or be slain. I want you to see that I am buried. The business owes me ($50.00) fifty dollars. It is all I have. It will buy a cheap coffin and pay for a coach. This business belongs to Dr. J. L. Goree of Pine Bluff Ark. I have no interest in it.

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259 S.W. 270 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 120, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bridges-early-v-williams-administrator-texapp-1902.