C. I. T. Corp. v. Waltrip

48 S.W.2d 340, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 263
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1932
DocketNo. 12643.
StatusPublished

This text of 48 S.W.2d 340 (C. I. T. Corp. v. Waltrip) 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
C. I. T. Corp. v. Waltrip, 48 S.W.2d 340, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 263 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

The Smith-Waltrip Motor Company, a corporation, was engaged in the purchase and sale of automobiles in the city of Port Worth. In sales made of cars as such dealer it was customary to take from the purchasers promissory notes secured by mortgage liens on the cars for a part of the purchase price. There would be an accumulation of such notes, and, in order to realize thereon before maturity, the dealer entered into a contract with the C. I. T. Corporation, whose principal office was in the city of Chicago, Ill., but who had a branch office in Dallas, Tex., where it had a permit to do business under the laws of this state, whereby that corporation took over the purchase-money notes and mortgages securing the same. By the terms of that contract the Smith-Waltrip Motor Company, hereinafter referred to as the dealer, promised and agreed to repurchase all cars which the C. I. T. Corporation might repossess for nonpayment of the notes and liens outstanding against them, and to pay over to the O. I. T. Corporation any unpaid balance on such notes. The dealings between the contracting parties extended over a considerable period of time and included a large number 0⅜ purchase-money notes and mortgage liens on cars which had been sold by the dealer to customers.

The contract between the parties stipulated that, out of the funds realized from the notes taken over by the C. I. T. Corporation, it would set aside for the protection of the dealer against his responsibility certain sums on different cars and the dealer would be given credit for the amount so reserved as against any demand of the C. I. T. Corporation against the dealer for unpaid balances on the notes taken over.

On or about August 13, 1929, the Smith-Waltrip Motor Company -sold and assigned to P. M. Waltrip all rights of every kind and character which that company owned arising out of the contract with the C. I. T. Corporation.

This suit was instituted by P. M. Waltrip against the C. I. T. Corporation to recover $5,268, with interest thereon, claimed as reserve credits held by the defendant under its contract above noted; and upon a trial of the case defendant admitted in open court that it was indebted to plaintiff for those reserve credits. In other words, defendant admitted the full amount of indebtedness sued for •by the plaintiff.

The controverted issues in the trial of the case arose from the cross-action of the.G. I. T. Corporation against the plaintiff as the successor in liability of the Smith-Waltrip Motor Company. The cross-action was for the amount claimed by the C. I. T. Corporation as the aggregate unpaid balances due on the purchase-money notes for 43 automobiles which were not included in plaintiff’s suit. The record shows that the defendant had been unable to collect those notes and had repossessed the cars for which they were given, and the aggregate of the unpaid balances due on those notes amounted to approximately $6,500. The defendant alleged that it had repossessed the cars covered by the mortgages given to secure those notes, *341 and after so doing it had tendered the same to the dealer, Smith-Waltrip Motor Company, who had refused to accept them. And by reason of such refusal the defendant had been forced to sell them, and, having made such sales for the best price obtainable and credited the amount so realized against the amount that the plaintiff was owing, there was a balance remaining of $6,500, and upon the trial it was shown without controversy that those calculations were correct if the defendant sustained its allegation that the ears covered by the mortgages were in fact repossessed by the defendant and tendered to the dealer within tha period of time specified in the contract, to wit, 90 days after default in payment of the respective notes.

The case was tried before a jury, to whom only one special issue was submitted. That issue, with the jury’s finding thereon, is' as follows: “Did the defendant, C. I. T. Corporation, tender to the Smith-Waltrip Motor Company and deliver to the Smith-Waltrip .Motor Company at its place óf business at Port Worth, Texas, the cars listed in ‘Exhibit C’ of defendant’s second amended original answer and thereupon demand of Smith-Waltrip Motor Company the balance due on the notes representing deferred payments on said cars? Answer: No.”

Judgment was rendered in plaintiff’s favor for the sum of $5,733.14, being the aggregate of the reserve credits admitted by the defendant as above noted, with interest thereon, and denying the defendant a recovery on its crossi-action. Prom a denial of its cross-action the defendant has prosecuted this appeal.

The suit was instituted by the plaintiff on April 16, 1930, and the trial occurred- on February 9, 1931. The defendant moved for a new trial, and one of the grounds relied on was newly discovered testimony of M. J. Lindsey, who was manager in charge of defendant’s business in the city of Port Worth during the months of May, June, July, and August, 1929. Attached to the motion was the affidavit of Lindsey in which he stated that the cars mentioned in the special issue after being repossessed by the- defendant corporation were tendered and delivered to the Smith-Waltrip Motor Company upon its used car lot, and repeated demands were made of the motor company for the unpaid balance due on those cars; that the officers and agents of that company made repeated promises to pay such balances, but failed to do so. That thereafter affiant then removed the cars from the motor company’s used car lot and sold them for the best obtainable cash price. According to his further testimony, such tender so made was within the time required for such tender in the contract between such company and the defendant corporation. There was also attached to the motion for new trial the affidavit "of R. W. Bom, who was the regional manager of the defendant corporation and stationed at Dallas. His affidavit was to the effect that immediately after plaintiff’s suit was filed he undertook to locate M. J. Lindsey, with-the view of using him as a witness upon the trial of the case in ■support of defendant’s cross-action, although he did not then know what his testimony would be. - The affiant stated that long before the trial of the case he was directed by the defendant to ascertain the whereabouts of Lindsey, who had moved from Port Worth after he had severed his relations with the defendant corporation in August, 1929, some eight months prior to the institution of the suit, and that in obedience to that request affiant instructed certain agents and employees of defendant to make diligent inquiry from the acquaintances and friends of Lindsey residing in Port Worth; that affiant telephoned to Wichita Palls to one Williams who affiant was advised could probably give Lindsey’s address, but Williams was unable to furnish that information; that he was later told that Lindsey had located at Slioam Springs, Ark., and affiant put in a long-distance telephone call at that place, but was unable to locate him; that affiant gave instructions to certain of defendant’s employees, Goodall and Buckley, to get in touch with Lindsey, but they were unable to do so; that some days after the rendition of the judgment affiant learned for the first time that M. J. Lindsey’s father lived in Winnsboro, Tex.; that thereupon he made a trip to Winnsboro, and there learned for the first time that M. J. Lindsey was then in the vicinity of Longview or Kil-gore, Tex.; that affiant then made a trip to Longview and Kilgore, but he was still unable to find Lindsey and never found him until March 5, 1931.

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48 S.W.2d 340, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-i-t-corp-v-waltrip-texapp-1932.