Cooper Cotton Co. v. First State Bank of O'Donnell

37 S.W.2d 805, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 324
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 1931
DocketNo. 3555.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 S.W.2d 805 (Cooper Cotton Co. v. First State Bank of O'Donnell) 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
Cooper Cotton Co. v. First State Bank of O'Donnell, 37 S.W.2d 805, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 324 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

In the motion for rehearing filed by plaintiff in error, it is earnestly insisted that, by reason of a misconception or mistake of the facts, .this court has found that it is simply a question of the right to charge the draft of R. N. Leggett, Sr., back against Cooper Cotton Company, of which R. N. Leggett, Sr., was a member. We have therefore reconsidered the record before us and will now set out the result of our investigation.

This is the second time this case has been before this court. In the year 1923, on the former appeal, in an opinion which was not published, this court reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the case for a new trial' for the reason that the trial court admitted evidence upon an issue which was not pleaded.

There is an interim of practically eight years between the decision on that appeal and the hearing on this appeal.

The suit was originally brought by the plaintiffs Cooper Cotton Company, a firm composed of J. A. Cooper and R. N. Leggett, Sr., against the First State Bank of O’Donnell. Pending the former appeal, the First National Bank of O’Donnell took over the assets and assumed the liabilities of the First State Bank and was made a party defendant herein. R. N. Leggett, Sr., .having died pending said appeal, J. A. Cooper continued the suit as surviving partner. On another trial judgment was again rendered against the plaintiffs, and appeal therefrom has been perfected to this court.

J. A. Cooper and R. N. Leggett, Sr., formed the partnership of Cooper Cotton Company for *806 the purpose of huying and selling cotton in the territory around O’Donnell, Tahoka, and Damesa. Cooper furnished the capital of the tirm in the sum of $2,500, and Deggett, Sr., operated the business of buying and selling cotton for that firm. Deggett, Sr., opened an account in the name of the Cooper Cotton Company with the First State Bank of O’Donnell by depositing the funds of the Cooper Cotton Company therein. At the time the Cooper Cotton Company began operations in the territory named, R.' N. Deggett, Jr., son of the partner of J. A. Cooper, was operating in that territory, also buying and selling cotton, independent of the Cooper Cotton Company.

It is agreed by the parties that, at the time the check drawn by the Cooper Cotton Company for $1,400, upon which the suit is based, was turned down by the bank, the Cooper Cotton Company would have had on deposit in said bank the sum of $1,438.41 if no part of the loss incurred by R. N. Deggett, Jr., had been charged to the account of that company.

In reply to plaintiffs’ petition, the defendant, First State Bank, by way of special defense, alleged that about the 1st of December, 1920, R. N. Deggett, Sr., made a deposit with it, representing that he was in the business of buying and selling cotton, and that in such business he used the trade-name of Cooper Cotton Company and made such deposit in that name; that said Deggett, Sr., held himself out to other banks and to the public generally that he was using and doing business under the trade-name of Cooper Cotton Company ; that the actions, statements, and representations of Deggett, Sr., led it to believe and it did believe that said Deggett, Sr., was doing business for himself, and that he was only using the name of Cooper Cotton Company as a trade-name, and that the funds so deposited with it were the personal funds of said Deggett, Sr. Said defendant further alleges that Deggett, Sr., drew checks on the account to pay his personal expenses and for many other purposes than in buying and selling cotton; that he did not always use the trade-name in buying and selling cotton, but often used his individual name in purchasing same, and such purchases were paid for out of the account of Cooper Cotton Company, and the proceeds of such sales were deposited in the name of Cooper Cotton Company; that all of these facts led the defendant, its agents and employees, to believe, and they did believe and understood, that said Deggett, Sr., was the sole owner of the funds deposited in the name of Cooper Cotton Company.

It is further alleged by defendant that, when Deggett, Sr., opened up said account he also represented to the defendant that his son, R. N. Deggett, Jr., would be in the vicinity of O’Donnell and Damesa and would buy cotton in said places, and that he (said Deg-gett, Sr.) would stand behind any contract of purchase and sale made by his son, and that, after said statements and representations, said Deggett, Sr., did have business transactions with said Deggett, Jr., and did on one or more occasions pay the cheeks or drafts or overdrafts of Deggett, Jr. Defendant further alleged that thereafter there was pre-, sented to it a draft drawn by R. N. Deggett, Jr., for the sum of $5,022.13, which was attached to a bill of lading calling for fifty bales of cotton, which cotton had been consigned to R. N. Deggett, Sr., at Abilene, Tex.; that, at the time of the receipt of such draft, Deg-gett, Jr., had no money on deposit with defendant, but, on account of the various transactions that had taken place between said Deggett, Sr., and Deggett, Jr., defendant was led to believe and did believe that said Deg-gett, Sr., doing business under the trade-name of Cooper Cotton Company, had some interest in said fifty bales of cotton; that the defendant’s agents and representatives advised said Deggett, Sr., that Deggett, Jr., did not have any funds on hand in defendant bank with which to pay the draft, and that, unless some arrangement was made, said draft would be returned, and thereupon said Deggett, Sr., requested the defendant to pay said draft and to take up said bill of lading; that, by reason of such request, defendant did pay such draft and held said bill of lading; that said Deggett, Sr., at the time promised and agreed with defendant that he would protect it from any loss accruing by reason of paying the draft; that at the time such agreement was made with said Deggett, Sr., it had no notice, actual or constructive, that J. A. Cooper or any other person other than said Deggett, Sr., and Deggett, Jr., was interested in the trade-name of Cooper Cotton Company, or was interested in the business being carried on by Deggett, Sr., under the trade-name of Cooper Cotton Company.

Further defendant alleged that Deggett, Sr., had on deposit with it under the trade-name of Cooper Cotton Company a sum of money sufficient to indemnify it against any loss that might be sustained on said fifty bales of cotton, and therefore paid out the money on said draft and received said cotton for the use and benefit of Deggett, Sr., and Deg-gett, Jr.

Defendant also alleges that Deggett, Jr., and Deggett, Sr., were interested in and joint owners of said fifty bales of cotton; that said fifty bales of cotton were originally purchased from Edwards Bros, at Tahoka, Tex., by the said Deggett, Sr., and that said cotton was originally shipped to Dane & Allen at Abilene; that, after said cotton had been received at Abilene and after the draft had been drawn by Deggett, Sr., in favor of Dane & Dane and after payment of such draft had been refused by Dane & Dane, and in order that said trade with Edwards Bros, might *807

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37 S.W.2d 805, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-cotton-co-v-first-state-bank-of-odonnell-texapp-1931.