Commercial Acceptance Trust v. Parmer

241 S.W. 586, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 884
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1922
DocketNo. 9729. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 241 S.W. 586 (Commercial Acceptance Trust v. Parmer) 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
Commercial Acceptance Trust v. Parmer, 241 S.W. 586, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 884 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

T*his suit was filed by the Commercial Acceptance Trust against Earl Par-mer and T. W. Stephens, alleging that Earl Parmer had bought a Dodge motortruck from the Eulwiler. Electric Company, and in part payment thereof had executed his note, providing for monthly payments, and his chattel mortgage on the truck; that the Eul-wiler Electric Company, before the maturity of said note, transferred it and the chattel mortgage, securing the same, to the plaintiff; that subsequently the defendant Earl Parmer, without the consent of plaintiff, sold the said truck to T. W. Stephens, and, in consideration for the sale of the truck to him, said Stephens assumed payment of the aforesaid note, and became liable and bound to pay plaintiff for the amount therein specified. It was further alleged that the defendants, and each of them, had failed to pay the installment due Octqber 4, 1919, and that plaintiff declared said note due.

The defendants answered by way of a general demurrer and a general denial, except as the facts alleged in plaintiff’s petition were admitted, and further pleaded that on September 15, 1919, the defendant Earl Par-mer with the consent of the Eulwiler Electric Company and the plaintiff, acting through said Eulwiler Company, its agent and representative, sold said truck to Stephens, and that the defendants and the plaintiff corporation and the Eulwiler Company all agreed that Stephens should execute and deliver a contract and note of same date and of like tenor and effect as those executed by defendant Parmer at the time he bought the truck, and that plaintiff would cancel the note and contract executed by Parmer and deliver it to him. Stephens further pleaded that, upon the maturity of the first payment on the note, he tendered and offered to pay to plaintiff the amount of said payment, to wit, $184.40, but that plaintiff refused to accept the same, and that Stephens then sent the amount of said installment to the Chicago* office of plaintiff, which was retained by plaintiff in full satisfaction of the installment due. Defendant further pleaded that plaintiff had thereby ratified the agreement made between the two defendants and the Eulwiler Electric Company, and were estopped and precluded from saying that the installment of said note was due and unpaid. Defendant Stephens further pleaded, in way of a cross-action, for damages, by reason of a sequestration writ issued at the instance of plaintiff and the taking of his truck from him. He alleged that he had been damaged thereby in the sum of $2,500 actual damages.

Plaintiff answered in a supplemental petition, specially denying the allegations made by the defendants, and specially pleaded that the defendants approached an employs of the Eulwiler Electric Company and informed him that the defendant Parmer wished to sell and the defendant Stephens wished to buy the truck in controversy; whereupon said employs informed defendants that He did not know whether such a transfer would be satisfactory, nor whether the note of the defendant Stephens would be accepted in lieu of, and as a substitute for, the note of defendant Parmer, but that he requested de *588 fendant Stephens to make a statement showing his financial condition, and among other statements made by said defendant Stephens in compliance with the request was that he owed no past debts, which was untrue, and Was known to be untrue by Stephens at the time he,made the statement, but was not known to be untrue by said employs; that, upon the return of one of the partners of the Fulwiler Electric Company, said statement was submitted- to him, and he thereupon declined and refused to assent to tire sale of said car to the defendant Stephens, or to recommend to plaintiff the acceptance of the note of said defendant Stephens in lieu of the note of Parmer. It was further alleged that the Fulwiler Electric Company was an indorser*of the note of defendant Parmer, and, in case the note of Stephens should be substitued therefor, it would be required to indorse the latter note, and that Stephens at that time was indebted to the Fulwiler Electric Company in the sum of $400 long past due.

The cause was submitted to a jury upon certain issues of fact, in answer to which the jury found:

(1) That the note of Parmer to the Fulwiler Electric Company, on the date of the alleged contract between the Fulwiler Electric Company and the defendants, had been indorsed by the Fulwiler Electric Company to the Commercial Acceptance Trust,, but was in possession of the Fulwiler Electric Company, at Abilene, at said time, and subsequent thereto was delivered to plaintiff.
(2) That the owner of the note sued upon consented to the sale of the truck by defendant Fanner to the defendant Stephens.
(3) That- the owner of the note sued on agreed- to accept the note of defendant Stephens ip lieu of the note previously executed by defendant Parmer.
: (4) That, in making an affidavit on which the sequestration writ was issued in this suit, H. D. Fulwiler did not fear' that 'defendant Stephens woiild injury, ill treat, or remove the truck from Eastland county.
<■ (-5) That H. D. Fulwiler did not have probable- cause for believing at .the time the affidavit in sequestration was made by him that defendant Stephens would injure, ill treat or remove the truck from Eastland county.
(6) That, in making the affidavit and in caus-. ing 'the sequestration writ to be issued, plaintiff was' actuated by malice.
1 (7) That the reasonable value for the- de-' téntion and hire of said truck from the time :of the levy of the writ of sequestration to the •time of the trial was $2,500.
. , (S) That Stephens was entitled as exemplary .damages to $245.

. Upon the verdict the court entered a judgment that the plaintiff take nothing as-.against Parmer and Stephens, and that the; •defendants recover from plaintiff their costs; that the defendant. Stephens recover from the plaintiff, as principal, and the Fulwiler Electric Company and Hv D. .-Fulwiler,. as sureties, on the sequestration bond the sum of $1,250, with interest, said amount being the value of the truck at the time it was taken; that defendant Stephens recover from plaintiff and its sureties the sum of $2,500 as actual damages for the suing out of the writ, and the sum of $245 as exemplary damages. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

In appellant’s first assignment an attack is made on the ruling of the court in .admitting the testimony of defendant Stephens as to the reasonable rental value of the motor-truck involved in this suit It is claimed the said Stephens did not qualify as to testify as an expert as to the reasonable value of the use of the truck. Appellee answers this assignment in several ways:

[1] hirst, he alleged that appellant’s bill of exception is insufficient to raise the question herein pz’esented, because it does not show that an examination was made as to the witness’ qualification to testify as ,to the reasonable value of the use of the truck, and does not negative the existence of other testimony than that contained in the bill of exception; that in such case the presumption obtains that the court became satisfied with the competency of the witness upon sufficient evidence. The following cases seem to sustain appellees’ contention. Lee v. Buie (Tex.

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Bluebook (online)
241 S.W. 586, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-acceptance-trust-v-parmer-texapp-1922.