Dietz v. Van Nortwick

188 S.W.2d 590, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 504
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 1945
DocketNo. 11687.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 188 S.W.2d 590 (Dietz v. Van Nortwick) 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
Dietz v. Van Nortwick, 188 S.W.2d 590, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 504 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

The plaintiff below was Joseph Praiss. He has not been made a party to this appeal. On July 20, 1943, he gave his promissory note tq appellant Dietz in the principal sum of $4200, payable in monthly installments of $375.

Thereafter, on August 20, 1943, appellant Dietz and appellee Van Nortwick entered into a written contract by which Dietz agreed to buy certain described beer and pay therefor the sum of $7,399.90; and to buy certain described punch boards, (which are gaming devices) and pay therefor the sum of $4,981.46, or a total of $12,- *591 381.36. By the terms of the contract it was provided that the merchandise was to be stored in a warehouse in Texas City, where Dietz ran a cafe, and be gotten from there by him. The cost of drayage to the warehouse, the insurance, etc., were to be paid by Dietz over and above the cost of the merchandise. The terms provided that payment should be made at the rate of not less than $1,238.13 a month, and that Dietz could go to the warehouse and get such of the merchandise as he desired at any time, but whatever he withdrew should be paid for in cash as withdrawn until the full sum .of $12,381.36 had been paid, and that all payments which were required to be made, except those made on withdrawals of merchandise, should be applied on the tail end of the contract.

To secure the performance of the contract Dietz assigned the aforesaid Praiss note to Van Nortwick, together with the lien securing it. To further secure the performance of the contract he executed his note in the sum of $3000 payable to Van Nortwick, which was secured by a mortgage. If the contract were paid out before the notes were paid out, the notes were to be re-assigned to Dietz.

Seemingly the enforcement officers would not permit Dietz to use the punch boards in his place of business. In any case he and Van Nortwick got into a dispute, whereupon Van Nortwick notified plaintiff Praiss that he owned Praiss’s note, and demanded of Praiss that he make payment direct to him. When Praiss inquired of Dietz he found that Dietz claimed still to own the note. Thereupon Praiss arranged to place the remaining payments in escrow in the Union National Bank of Houston as they fell due. Van Nortwick was not a party to the arrangement, but did not interfere with it, and Praiss finished making the remaining payments.

Thereafter, Praiss brought this suit, making Dietz, Van Nortwick, and the bank parties defendant, in order to have it judicially determined who owned his note, and to whom the money in escrow belonged.

The bank answered as a stakeholder that it claimed no interest in the money, and would pay the money to whom it was determined to belong.

Dietz answered alleging that he was the owner of the note, and entitled to the money held by the bank. By a cross-action he then sued Van Nortwick. He fully alleged the contract between himself and Van Nortwick, and that after the contract was executed he had severed the lawful part of the contract, relating to the sale of the beer, from the allegedly unlawful part of the contract relating to the sale of the punch boards, and had repudiated the sale of the punch boards. He alleged that he had paid $1656 on the contract over and above the value of merchandise which he had removed from the warehouse, and that he was entitled to recover this. And he asked for judgment against Van Nortwick in such sum of $1656, and for the cancellation of his note for $3000 held by Van Nortwick to insure performance of the contract, and asked for judgment for the money held by the bank as stakeholder.

By his answer Van Nortwick claimed the money in the bank, and traversed the allegations of Dietz’s cross-action. And he also filed a cross-action against all parties. In his cross-action against Dietz he sought damages in the sum of $6003.41, on account of the breach of the contract.

Hereafter Van Nortwick will sometimes be referred to as appellee, and Dietz will sometimes be referred to as appellant.

In his cross-action seeking damages in the sum of $6,003.41, appellee sought to recover from appellant various items on which he alleged that appellant had defaulted in paying, and which he alleged appellant was obligated to pay by the terms of the contract. These items included insurance, the rental value of the warehouse, certain drayage costs, and the salary of a caretaker. Appellee further alleged that appellant repudiated the contract, and failed to remove the beer from the warehouse as he was bound to do, and that the beer caps began to rust, which caused the beer to begin to deteriorate, which compelled appellee to recondition the beer, and after so doing, appellee alleged that he sold the beer for $2900, for the account of appellant, and that he held the same as a credit to be applied in favor of appellant against such damages as he, appellee, recovered against appellant. Appellee further alleged that the fair value of the gaming devices in their then condition was the sum of $1200, and appellee by his pleadings tendered said sum as a credit in favor of appellant, upon a disclaimer to said gaming devices being filed in the case by appellant.

In his answer to appellant’s action, ap-pellee adopted the allegations of his cross-action. In other words, appellee pled the *592 same state of facts as constituting both his defense to appellant’s action, and as constituting his cross-action against appellant. We omit appellant’s further pleadings.

During the trial the parties agreed in open court that the punch hoards in question were gaming devices within Articles 615-642 of the Penal Code, Vernon’s Ann. P.C. arts. 615-642.

The case was tried without a jury, and the court rendered judgment:

That the plaintiff, Praiss, had fully paid off his note, and was entitled to a release of the mortgage securing its payment.

That Dietz had fully performed his contract of purchase relating to the beer, and was not indebted to Van Nortwick in any sum, and was entitled to the money held by the bank as stakeholder. Further, that he was entitled to a cancellation of his note in the sum of $3000, given to insure the performance of the contract of purchase, and to the cancellation of the mortgage securing the payment of said note. But recovery upon his cross-action for the sum of $1656 against Van Nortwick was denied.

That Van Nortwick was not entitled to recover any sum on account of the purchase price of the gaming devices, and should recover nothing on his cross-action against Dietz.

The Bank was duly discharged on its answer.

Appellee duly excepted to the judgment and gave notice of appeal, but never perfected an appeal by filing bond, etc. Appellant also excepted “to the action of the court in denying him recovery of the overpayment in the sum of $1656.00”, and gave notice of appeal. Appellant perfected his appeal.

' The case appears to have been tried upon the theory, acquiesced in by all parties, that such of the beer as had not been removed from the warehouse (where it was stored pursuant to the contract) by appellant, and paid for by him when removed, had been disposed of by appellee prior to the suit. In other words, it was not in dispute that all that remained on hand in the warehouse subject to the terms of the contract was the gaming devices.

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.W.2d 590, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dietz-v-van-nortwick-texapp-1945.