Donnie Melton D/B/A Donnie's Wrecker & Body Shop v. Karl Klement Ford, L.P.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 14, 2006
Docket02-06-00051-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Donnie Melton D/B/A Donnie's Wrecker & Body Shop v. Karl Klement Ford, L.P. (Donnie Melton D/B/A Donnie's Wrecker & Body Shop v. Karl Klement Ford, L.P.) 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
Donnie Melton D/B/A Donnie's Wrecker & Body Shop v. Karl Klement Ford, L.P., (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 2-06-051-CV

DONNIE MELTON,                                                                APPELLANT

D/B/A DONNIE=S WRECKER

& BODYSHOP                                                                                    

                                                   V.

KARL KLEMENT FORD, L.P.                                                      APPELLEE

------------

FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW OF WISE COUNTY

 MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

I.  Introduction


This is an appeal from a suit on a sworn account.  The trial court entered a judgment awarding Appellee Karl Klement Ford, L.P. (AKlement@) $6,260.24, an amount representing the delinquent balance due on an open account that Appellant Donnie Melton, d/b/a Donnie=s Wrecker & Bodyshop (AMelton@) used to purchase parts from Klement.  In two issues, Melton complains that the trial court abused its discretion by denying his motion for continuance and that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to show that Klement sold and delivered the parts to him.  We will affirm.

II.  Factual and Procedural Background

Melton owns a wrecker service and body shop business in Wichita Falls named ADonnie=s Bodyshop.@  The business is contained in two separate buildings located about 300 yards from each other.  Klement sells auto parts and accessories in Decatur and manages approximately 1,400 parts department wholesale accounts. 

Sometime around September 2002, Klement approved Melton=s application for credit with its parts department.  The account was set up under the name of ADonnie=s Wrecker and Bodyshop,@ and the business was billed under the same name.  Klement assigned Melton a customer number, which identifies Melton=s account, and Melton used a tax identification number assigned to him by a Texas sales and use tax permit to avoid paying sales tax on the purchased parts.  Melton=s customer number appears on invoices produced by Klement that identify the transactions.


It was a common course of business for Melton=s employees to operate the body shop, which included ordering parts from Klement, while Melton handled managerial issues associated with the business.  Klement delivered parts ordered on the account to the body shop, not directly to Melton. 

Although Melton=s payments on the account were generally timely, the balance on the account became thirty days past due on six or seven different occasions during the last few years, which prompted an employee in Klement=s parts department to visit Melton=s wrecker office in order to collect the balance due.  On these occasions, an employee in the wrecker office would issue a check for the past due amount.

In March 2005, Melton=s account had a delinquent balance of $8,294.75.   A Klement employee, Charles Goen, visited the business and was directed for the first time to collect the past due amount from the body shop instead of the wrecker office.  At the body shop, Goen spoke to Jason Beavers, a body shop employee, who said that he could not pay the balance due.  Beavers indicated, however, that he had a number of returns, which Goen credited to the account, lowering the balance to $6,260.24.


Klement eventually sued Melton to collect the balance due on the account because Melton refused to pay it.  Attached to Klement=s petition asserting a suit on sworn account are a number of invoices evidencing purchases made on Melton=s account with Klement.  The invoices are dated from January 26, 2005 through April 1, 2005, and each invoice contains the same customer number that Klement had assigned to Melton.  They also contain the same AFTE,@ or federal tax identification number.

At trial, which was to the bench, Melton testified that Beavers was responsible for the debt owed on the Klement account because he and Beavers had entered into a Alease-purchase@ agreement sometime in October 2004. According to Melton, Beavers agreed to Alease-purchase@ the body shop for one year.  If Beavers made all of the monthly payments, then Melton would consider it a down payment on the purchase of the body shop.  Melton testified that he had contacted all of his suppliers, including Lonny Leming, a Klement employee in the parts department who was familiar with Melton=

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Donnie Melton D/B/A Donnie's Wrecker & Body Shop v. Karl Klement Ford, L.P., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnie-melton-dba-donnies-wrecker-body-shop-v-karl-texapp-2006.