Dayle L. Smith Oil Co. v. Continental Supply Co.

268 S.W. 489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1924
DocketNo. 7233. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 489 (Dayle L. Smith Oil Co. v. Continental 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
Dayle L. Smith Oil Co. v. Continental Supply Co., 268 S.W. 489 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the Continental Supply Company against the Oil Company and others for the amount of a note given by the Oil Company to cover the purchase price of certain oil well material, and foreclosing • a mortgage lien upon such material. The Oil Company, which was in effect a joint-stock association, sought to defeat the payment of the note by setting up failure of consideration based upon the contention that a part of the material was defective and fell short of the warranty under which it was purchased. The oil association also filed a cross-action, alleging that the Supply Company warranted the quality of the material, but that the latter was defective, and the warranty was breached, resulting in special damages, for which the association sought judgment. The cause was tried without a jury, and the court rendered judgment against the association on its cross-action and in favor of the Supply Company for the amount of the note and for foreclosure. This judgment was based on thfe court’s findings that the Supply Company did not warrant the material, and that said material “was good, first-class steel upset drill stem, possessing all the qualities and materials called for in standard, specifications for such pipe, and not defective by reason of quality or material.”

Primarily, the case is essentially one of fact, and it is so conceded by the parties. Appellants contend that the uncontroverted testimony, or at least the overwhelming preponderance thereof, showed that the material was wholly unfit in quality to serve the purposes for which it was sold. We have gone to great pains to analyze and weigh the evidence presented in the record, upon this and related issues, and have been unable to escape the conviction that as to at least a part of the material in question the overwhelming preponderance of the testimony supports appellants’ contention that such material was defective and fell short of the warranty, which was necessarily implied from the sale thereof, if not given in express terms. This conviction may not be of' sufficient force to require a reversal of the judgment on that account alone, or if that were the only question in the case, but as the judgment must be reversed upon an-. other question as to some of the parties, we have concluded that the ends of justice will be moi;e nearly met by remanding the whole cause for another trial.

The Dayle L. Smith Oil Company was an association of persons operating under a so-called trust agreement, which contained this stipulation:

“The trustees 'shall have no power to bind the shareholders personally, except for the stock subscribed by them and the subscribers and their assigns and all persons and corporations extending credit to, contracting with, *490 or having any claim against the trustees shall look only to the funds and property of the trust estate for payment under such contract or claim, or for the payment of any debt, or damage, judgment or decree, or any money that may otherwise become, due or payable to them from the trustees so that neither the trustees, shareholders nor president, present or future, shall be personally liable therefor, and all contracts shall be in writing and contain provisions for this limitation.”

The negotiations for the purchase of the material from the Supply Company were conducted by Dayle L. Smith in behalf of the association, and the note sued on was signed “Dayle L. Smith Oil Company, by Dayle D. Smith, President,” and not otherwise. The note did not describe the association otherwise than by its trade-name, nor did it contain any' restrictions against the personal liability of the individual shareholders. It was simply a plain note of hand, signed as indicated. •Subsequently, and oyer the same signature, the president of the association executed and delivered to the Supply Company a chattel mortgage covering the material purchased, as well as other material owned by the association, to secure the payment of the note. The facts and circumstances attending the purchase- of the material and the making of the note and mortgage become important, and, we think, controlling, and for that reason we will here set them -out at some length, assuming, for the purpose of applying the law thereto, that they are true.

The president of the oil association first endeavored to purchase the desired material from the Supply Company through the latter’s agent at Houston, but, after some negotiation to that end, failed. She then went to the Supply Company’s domicile, in St. Louis, Mo., and there took up negotiations with the vice president and general manager of the company. The latter was shown the hereinabove quoted provision. The two officials of the respective concerns had numerous conferences leading up to and resulting in the deal finally consummated between them. At first the Supply Company’s manager refused to make the sale on credit, but finally agreed to do so, not upon the credit or possible liability or responsibility of the shareholders of the oil concern, but because of the assets and prospects of the association as such. Upon this point the Supply Company’s official testified that:

“I told her that we would be glad to sell to her if suitable financial arrangements could be made. She finally called upon me on September 19th, and represented that she .was having considerable success in selling stock in St. Louis, and that in addition recent development made it appear that she would in the very near future without doubt be able to dispose of a part of her company’s acreage, and would haye plenty of finances to take care of her purchases. Dor this reason I consented to take her order. * * *

The evidence further shows that the sale was made upon a 90-day open account, that when default was made in the payment of the account the Supply Company took the matter up with the president of the association, and after some delay the parties settled it by the execution, delivery, and acceptance of the note and mortgage here sued on. At no time prior to bringing this suit did the Supply Company demand payment from any of the individual shareholders, or indicate that it regarded them, or either of them, as liable for the debt, or that it had extended the credit upon any consideration other than the assets and prospects of the association.

The Supply Company brought this action, not only against the partnership under its trade-name, but against the individual shareholders, including Dayle L. Smith, D. G. Wood, A. Ledbetter, M. J. Bowe, and W. R. Jackson. The judgment was rendered jointly and severally against all the defendants, of whom Wood, Ledbetter, Bowe, and Jackson have together prosecuted a separate appeal and filed a separate brief from that of the association and appellant Dayle L. Smith. They take the position that, although under the decisions they were partners with each other and all the other shareholders, yet they are not individually liable here, because in the declaration of trust under which the association was operating the shareholders were expressly exempt from individual liability upon obligations incurred by the company as such, and the Supply Company knew of such exemption and of the exclusion of the power of the operating officials to bind them, and with such knowledge in mind took the firm’s obligation, whereby it was relegated to the latter’s assets and fund for payment of those obligations.

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Bluebook (online)
268 S.W. 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayle-l-smith-oil-co-v-continental-supply-co-texapp-1924.