Corbell v. Stengel

83 S.W.2d 1084, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 669
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1935
DocketNo. 9559.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 83 S.W.2d 1084 (Corbell v. Stengel) 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
Corbell v. Stengel, 83 S.W.2d 1084, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 669 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

SMITH, Justice.

This action was brought by C. W. Cor-bell against George Stengel for damages for an alleged fraud perpetrated upon the former by the latter. In response to a directed jury verdict, judgment was rendered denying recovery to Corbell, who has appealed. The parties will be designated as plaintiff and defendant, respectively, as in the court below.

In brief, plaintiff alleged that defendant was cashier of a Menard bank, with which plaintiff transacted all his business; that he kept his notes and other business papers in the bank and transacted his banking and other business affairs through defendant, who attended to the collection of notes held by him and interest thereon and otherwise looked after his business interests, advising and consulting with him; that defendant by false and fraudulent representations induced plaintiff to purchase a promissory note of one Jopling, who was. in fact irresponsible and insolvent and for that reason could not and did not pay the note; and that plaintiff was damaged in the amount of the note.

All of plaintiff’s ten assignments of error are directed at the action of the court-in instructing a verdict in the face of issues of fact, which plaintiff asserts were raised by the evidence and should have, been submitted to the jury.

In passing upon the action of a trial court in directing a verdict, a reviewing court must accept as true all evidence which, when liberally construed in favor of the complaining party, tends to support that party’s cause; and all of the evidence of the adverse party will be disregarded when in conflict with the evidence of the complaining party. With that rule in mind, we will state the case made by the record at large.

At the inception of the transactions here involved, plaintiff was a successful ranch-man residing in Menard county. He was 67 years old, was a man of considerable affairs, and of much business experience, with idle money then on hand which he desired to invest.

Defendant was cashier of a Menard bank, with which plaintiff had transacted all his banking business for the previous seven years. During that period plaintiff had kept his business papers, securities, and the like in a box in defendant’s bank, and often exercised his free access to them. And also, during that period, defendant,, following a familiar custom in country banks, looked after plaintiff’s notes and collections, and apparently advised with plaintiff, as a customer of the bank, about such matters, when consulted by him. The parties were friends, at least in a business way, and each had confidence in the other.

In 1923 or 1924, defendant entered into a partnership with A. L. Jopling and J. D. Smith in the general mercantile business in the town of Menard, in which der fendant and Smith each took a one-fourth interest and Jopling the remaining one-half interest. The partnership prospered, but in 1926 Jopling purchased defendant’s and Smith’s interests, giving the latter two $2,500 notes, and defendant a $4,000 note and a store credit of $1,000. The notes were payable in January, 1928. Jopling’s *1086 note to defendant was renewed at maturity until January 1, 1929, on which date he paid the accrued interest.

Now, on January 23, 1929, plaintiff, having some idle money on hand for investment, called on defendant at the bank and (quoting plaintiffs testimony) asked him if he knew “about any vendor’s lien notes that I could buy and he said no, he didn’t, but that he had an A-l note which he considered as good as a vendor’s lien note, ■on A. L. Jopling, that he would love to sell' — that it was just as good as a vendor’s lien note”; that Jopling had a good business; that his business was all right and that he had “something like $25,000 worth of goods and that the note was well secured” and “would be paid; that there was no doubt about it”; that “he had been in partners with Jopling and that he had sold his part out and that was how come him with the note”; that Jopling “done business through the bank”; that he “kept up with Jopling’s business” and “knew all about it” and “kept up with the run of” it; that defendant said Jopling owed “very little, if anything,” not more than $1,000, besides the $4,000 covered by the note then and there offered plaintiff; that he “would take care of the note” for plaintiff “just like it was his own business”; that he had Jopling’s note for $4,000, due in 1929 or 1930, and “had a lien on that stuff” (there is nothing in the record tending to show what was meant by this reference to a lien). When defendant made these statements, plaintiff went out and consulted his daughter about the proposition (all the parties were residents of the same town and neighbors) and the two agreed that, upon defendant’s representations, it would be a good investment, whereupon, after being absent ten or fifteen minutes, plaintiff returned to the bank and told defendant he would “take the note.” We must accept as true, for the purposes of this inquiry, that plaintiff then “signed a blank check,” handed it to defendant, and “told him to fix that business up and to put the papers w'ith my other papers” there in the bank — -“told him to make the transfer of those papers and to fix the business up and put the papers with my other papers.”' Plaintiff further testified that he made no further inquiry about the note he was to purchase, about when it was due, or the rate of interest it bore, or whether it was, or would be, indorsed. The existing note was, in fact, the renewal of the original note made by Jopling to defendant in 1926, with interest paid up to January 1, 1929, and was therefore past due. The record shows that defendant had Jopling make a new note for the proper amount directly to plaintiff, dated January 1, 1929, to mature in two years, and bearing interest at the rate of 8 per cent, from date; that plaintiff’s check for that amount was made payable to Jopling, the maker of the note, with the notation “for loan” thereon, was indorsed by Jopling over to defendant, and the latter collected it through the bank. A few days later, on February 1, the check was sent plaintiff along with the bank’s usual monthly statement and other canceled checks. It was thereupon ⅛-spected by plaintiff and his daughter, and, while they commented upon the fact that it was made payable to Jopling (they thought it should have been made payable to 'defendant), they did not mention the fact, or the suspicions they said it aroused in them, to defendant, whom they frequently thereafter contacted as usual. In January, 1930, when the first year’s interest accrued on the note and it was not promptly paid, plaintiff mentioned the fact to defendant, who, expressing surprise at the delinquency, went, with plaintiff’s consent, next door into Jopling’s store, collected the interest from the latter, and placed it to plaintiff’s credit in the bank. By 1931, if not in 1930, Jopling began, to encounter financial difficulties, which eventuated in bankruptcy in 1932. By this process, plaintiff lost his $4,000, and brought this action against defendant, charging him as the author of the loss.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.W.2d 1084, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corbell-v-stengel-texapp-1935.