Cuero Cotton Oil & Mfg. Co. v. Feeders' Supply Co.

203 S.W. 79, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 404
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1918
DocketNo. 8800.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 203 S.W. 79 (Cuero Cotton Oil & Mfg. Co. v. Feeders' Supply Co.) 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
Cuero Cotton Oil & Mfg. Co. v. Feeders' Supply Co., 203 S.W. 79, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 404 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This suit was instituted by ap-pellee, Feeders’ Supply Company, against the appellant, Cuero Cotton Oil & Manufacturing Company, in the Forty-Eighth district court of Tarrant county to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the alleged breach by appellant of an alleged express contract for the sale by appellant and purchase by appellee of certain cotton seed oil mill products. Appellant duly filed its pléa of privilege to be sued in De Witt county, its domicile, and subject thereto answered by demurrer and plea, denying the existence of the alleged contract. In its original petition, plaintiff alleged that the contract was made over the telephone, and by its terms “plaintiff purchased from defendant 300 tons of prime screened cracked cake or meal, 200 tons for prompt shipment, which expression is a common one in this sort of business, and jneans within ten days from date of purchase, and 100 tons to be delivered at any time up to September 15, 1916.” . Plaintiff admitted in course of trial that none of the exceptions to exclusive venue in the county of the domicile of defendant existed in this cause, except that it was not admitted that the exceptions contained in subdivision 24, article 1830, Vernon’s Sayles’ Tex. Civ. Statutes, did not exist. This article reads in part as follows:

“Suits against any private- corporation, association or joint stock company may be” maintained “in any county in which the cause of action, or a part thereof, arose, or in which such corporation, association or company has an agency or representative, or in which its original office is situated.”

From a judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $525, the defendant has appealed.

[1] There are only two assignments presented in appellant’s brief. The first attacks the judgment of the court below on the ground that the undisputed evidence fails to show that any contract and agreement was made by the defendant company with the plaintiff company, as alleged by plaintiff, and that the undisputed evidence shows that the minds of the parties did not meet upon an agreement so as to create in law a binding contract. While the evidence was conflicting as to the nature and purport of the conversation between D. G. Dumas, representing the appellee company, a corporation, and Thornton Hamilton, representing appellant company, also a corporation, yet we are of the opinion that, taking the evidence in its strongest probative effect in favor of appel-lee, which the trial court had a right to do, such evidence is sufficient to sustain the contention that contract was entered into by the parties over the phone. As it will be necessary for us to refer to certain phases of the evidence in our discussion of tlm second assignment, which evidence in our opinion supports the conclusion reached by the trial court that a contract was made, we will not undertake to discuss at length each assignment separately.

Dumas testified in part as follows:

“I was representing the Feeders’ Supply Company during the month of August, 1916, and up to the present time, in the capacity of local manager. In August, 1916, I received from the Cuero Cotton Oil & Manufacturing Company the following letter: ‘Cuero, Texas, August 8, o1916, The Feeders’ Supply Company, Ft. Worth, Texas — Gentlemen: We offer you, subject to your immediate wire acceptance and prior sales, all or any part of 300 tons of prime screened cracked cake or meal, at your option, for August and first half of September shipment at $28.75 per ton, f. o. b. Cuero, net to us. We guarantee this meal or cake to have 51 per cent, protein and fat combined. This price is strictly in line with the export market. Yours very truly, Cuero Cotton Oil & Mfg. Co., per Thornton Hamilton.’ * * * I called Mr. Hamilton over the phone and asked him if he could give me some of the cake he had quoted me, prompt shipment, as I had some orders on my desk, and’ needed some for prompt shipment, and he told me. he could. The first thing when I called him, I asked him if the offer stated in the letter was still open, or if he had sold the stuff, and he said he had not, and when he agreed to give me some on prompt shipment, I told him that I would take the entire amount of 300 tons, as mentioned in his letter, at the price stated in the letter.
“After I told Mr. Hamilton I would take this cake or meal, he said he had sent Ms analysis to the chemist, but had not received a report from it; that during the years previous he had made some shipments as prime that did not grade up- to prime and that he came near to getting into trouble about it, and that he did not want to get into trouble this time; if he was not making prime, he did not want to ship it as prime, and I told him that I did not want it unless prime, and that I would give him the privilege of canceling, provided his analysis showed that he was making a lower grade than prime meal or cake. I asked him when he expected to receive his analysis and he says, ‘Tomorrow or not later than the day following.’ I then told him that I would give him until the *81 day following, which would be the 11th, and if he found he was making a lower grade than prime to wire me; otherwise I would consider the purchase made. I did not receive any wire from Mr. Hamilton in regard to the matter, nor any information from him as to whether his cake or meal was prime or bettér, until it must have been the 12th of August, that I received a letter from him, after I had wired him on the 11th; I then received a letter from him in which he stated that the cake was prime or better. I never received any wire from Mr. Hamilton to the effect he was not making prime cake.
“After I had this conversation over the phone with Mr. Hamilton, I waited until the 11th, which was the time limit which I had given him to hear from his analysis, and then, not hearing anything from him to the contrary, I wired • him in orders for three cars, for prompt shipment, concerning which I had phoned him. s * jn reply to this telegram I received, a telegram from the Cuero Mills, in which he sáid he had no contract. It is my recollection I received that wire on the 12th. I never received 'any of this cake or meal which I purchased from the Cuero Oil & Manufacturing Company. I -made a further demand on the Cuero Cotton Oil & Manufacturing Company for this shipment, after my telegram .above referred to. * * * In this conversation ovér the phone; Mr. Hamilton told me • he could let me have as much as 150 or 200 tons of prompt, and I told him I did not need that amount. The balance of the cake was to be shipped the last half of August or the first of September, at $28.75 per ton.”

[2, 3] It is undisputed that appellant had no office, agent, or representative in Tarrant county at the time of this contract or at the time of the filing of the suit. If plaintiff below was entitled to maintain this suit in Tar-rant county it must be on the theory that the offer made by appellant in its letter of August 8, 1916, was accepted by appellee without change on its part of the terms contained in the letter, or- that a different proposition was made over the phone by appellant’s agent and accepted by appellee’s agent at Ft. Worth. It will be remembered that this letter offered the cake or meal for shipment “for August and first half of September shipment $28.75 per ton, f. o. b. Cuero, net to us.” The term “free on board,” or “f. o.

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203 S.W. 79, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuero-cotton-oil-mfg-co-v-feeders-supply-co-texapp-1918.