Danciger v. Smith

229 S.W. 909, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 121
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1921
DocketNo. 8539.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 229 S.W. 909 (Danciger v. Smith) 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
Danciger v. Smith, 229 S.W. 909, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 121 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This suit was instituted in the district court of Dallas county, Tex., by the appellee, N. K. Smith, against the appellants, M. 0, Danciger, a resident of Wichite county, Tex., the Oriental Oil Company, a private domestic corporation with its principal office in Dallas, Dallas county, Tex., and the Emerich Oil Company, a private foreign corporation, authorized to transact its business within the state of Texas, whose president is J. P. Emerich, with its principal office in Wichita county, Tex. Appellee alleges in substance, that the Oriental Oil Company entered into a contract with him by which it agreed to purchase the crude oil being produced by appellants Danciger and Emerich Oil Company if appellee would induce them to offer same on terms acceptable to it, the Oriental Oil Company, and if Dan-ciger and the Emerich Oil Company would pay the brokerage in case of sale and purchase. Also, that he entered into a contract with the appellants Danciger and Emerich Oil Company, by which they agreed that, if appellee would find a purchaser for their oil on terms satisfactory to them, they would sell the same and would pay appellee a commission of 5 per cent, on the purchase price. Appellee further alleges .that he advised the defendant Oriental Oil Company that the defendants Danciger and Emerich Oil Company had authorized him to act for them and would pay his commission in case he effected a sale, and also advised Danciger and the Emerich Oil Company that the Oriental Oil Company had authorized him to secure the oil and had agreed to buy same if terms were agreed upon; that he did, after long and patient negotiation, bring about a complete agreement between the parties in every detail and particular for the sale on one side and the purchase on the other, with nothing left to be agreed upon; that the parties after their minds met reduced the terms of sale and purchase to writing and fixed a date for signing their agreement, which each thereafter wholly failed to do, and wholly refused to discuss the matter with appellee or make any explanation of their failure to conclude their agreement by formal transfer, etc.; that he was unable to learn from the parties, themselves, whether the Oriental Oil Company breached its contract by refusing to purchase on the terms agreed upon, or whether Danciger and Emerich Oil Company breached their CQntract by refusing to sell on the terms agreed upon; that under his contract with the defendants Danciger and Emerich Oil Company, he was to receive 5 per cent, commission on the purchase price, or $60,000; and if, as a matter of fact, it was due to the fault, failure, or refusal of said defendants that said contract was not consummated, said defendants are jointly and severally indebted to and justly bound to pay plaintiff said sum, while, under his contract with the defendant Orienta?. Oil Company, whereby it agreed to purchase the output of the wells of the other defendants on the terms which plaintiff secured, if said contract was not consummated by reason of its fault, failure, or refusal, it is liable in damages to plaintiff for the reasonable value of his services, which plaintiff alleges to be *910 5 per cent, of the amount of the agreed purchase price, by reason of the breach of its contract to purchase and thereby making it impossible for plaintiff to claim, collect, and earn said commission from the defendants Danciger and Emerich Oil Company.

Plaintiff further avers that he is unable to secure from either of the defendants a full and true disclosure of the facts, conditions, or circumstances which brought about the failure of the defendants, or either of them, to execute the contracts evidencing their completed agreement, and charges, upon information and belief, that the defendants Danciger and Emerich Oil Company failed and refused to sell their crude oil to the Oriental Oil Company on the terms upon which they agreed, and that as a consequence they are liable to plaintiff in said sum of $60,000. The plaintiff also in the alternative alleges that, if mistaken in the respect mentioned, he then charges upon information and belief that the Oriental Oil Company refused to buy the crude oil of the defendants Dan-ciger and Emerich Oil Company, on the terms upon which they agreed and upon which terms the said Danciger and Emerich Oil Company was ready and willing to sell, and that as a consequence said defendant Oriental Oil Company is liable to plaintiff by way of damages for the reasonable value of his services, to wit, the sum of $60,000; but that the liability of each of said defendants to plaintiff grows out of the same transaction, and the issues will be determined by and depend upon the same facts.

The appellee prayed that upon a hearing all the defendants be required to make “as in equity” a full and true disclosure of all the facts relating to said transaction, and that if it should appear that the defendant Oriental Oil Company breached its contract to purchase said lease and the output of the wells thereon, then he have judgment against it “as for damages” in the sum of $60,000; but, in the alternative, that if it should appear from such full, fair, and true disclosure that the defendants M. O. Danciger and Emerich Oil Company breached their contract to sell, then plaintiff have judgment against such defendants for $60,000 upon their contract and agreement to pay plaintiff 5 per cent, commission on the purchase price for his services in securing a purchaser on terms satisfactory to defendants, etc.

The defendant Oriental Oil Company answered simply by general demurrer and general denial. The defendants M. O. Danciger and Emerich Oil Company filed pleas of privilege to be sued in Wichita county, Tex., asserting: First, that said county was the county of their residence and that none of the exceptions to article 1830 of the statute permitting a defendant to be sued in any other than the county of his residence existed : Second, that the suit had not in good faith been filed in Dallas county, but was filed there for the fraudulent purpose of conferring jurisdiction. These defendants filed no other pleading whatever.

The pleas of privilege were controverted by the plaintiff, Smith, who asserted that exceptions to article 1830 did exist, namely: First, that the Oriental Oil Company, one of the defendants, resided in Dallas county, Tex.; second, that the services rendered the appellants under their contract of employment was mainly rendered and performed in Dallas county; and that as a consequence the cause of action declared on, or a part thereof, arose in Dallas county, and accrued in Dallas county, which authorized the bringing of the suit in Dallas county. Upon a hearing the pleas of privilege were overruled, and from such ruling the defendants Dan-ciger and Emerich Oil Company appealed.

[1] The first assignment of error is as follows:

“The court' erred in overruling the defendants’ pleas of privilege and holding this case for trial in Dallas county, Tex., because the, controversy as shown by the pleadings is a separable controversy and not a joint action among the defendants herein, and the appellants herein do not fall within any of the exceptions mentioned in articles 1830, 2308 and article 1903, Revised Statutes and amendments thereto.”

The proposition asserted under this assignment is that-

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Bluebook (online)
229 S.W. 909, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danciger-v-smith-texapp-1921.