Durant Milling Company v. Hall

284 S.W.2d 760, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2217
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 1955
Docket6534
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 284 S.W.2d 760 (Durant Milling Company v. Hall) 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
Durant Milling Company v. Hall, 284 S.W.2d 760, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2217 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinions

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This appeal involves the granting of a judgment and injunctive relief to appellee, George F. Hall. The said appellee as plaintiff in the trial court and as a grain dealer operating a grain elevator in Belleville, Kansas, established by his own testimony that on or about February 15, 1955, he sold and delivered two loads of bulk shelled corn to C. R. Atkission in Belleville, Kansas, and received therefor from the said buyer a check in the sum of $1,798.75, payable to Hall Mill & Elevator, dated February 1, 1955, signed by J. W. Pitts and drawn on the Atoka State Bank of Atoka, Oklahoma; that, although he had never seen or even heard of J. W. Pitts before, he accepted the said check without any inquiry or question about it being a good check; that he had done business with C. R. Atkission three or four years prior thereto and was relying on the credit and honesty of Atkission but did not ask him to endorse the check as he thought it would be paid when presented in the ordinary course of business; that he did not ask At-kission what he planned to do with the corn and Atkission did not tell him what he would do with the corn but he (the witness) realized as a grain dealer that when he sold and delivered such truck loads of corn to a trucker, such would usually be taken and delivered within the next day or two by the trucker to somebody else.

The record further conclusively reveals that on the following day, February 16, 1955, C. R. Atkission sold and delivered the same two loads of corn to Martin-Lane Company, a partnership, with W. N. Martin as manager and principal owner thereof, located at Vernon, Texas, and received therefor Martin’s partnership check No. 6450, of even date being February 16, 1955, for the sum of $2,089.89, payable to C. R. Atkission, drawn on the Waggoner National Bank of Vernon, Texas; that the business transaction was there made between C. R. Atkission and W. N. Martin, acting [762]*762for the partnership; that W. N. Martin bought the said corn in good faith and without any actual or constructive knowledge that either appellee, George F. Hall, or J. W. Pitts, had any previous connection with the said corn or any previous sale thereof; that soon thereafter, J. W. Pitts presented the last mentioned check given by Martin to C. V. Tunnell, general manager of Durant Milling Company, a corporation, of Durant, Oklahoma, seeking an accommodation endorsement -of the check acceptable to the Durant National Bank, since J. W. Pitts was not very well acquainted in Durant, Oklahoma, except with Tunnell and the said corporation with which he had previously done some business; that C. V. Tunnell was in a hurry on his way to lunch when the endorsement was sought but casually examined the check and saw it was drawn on Martin-Lane Company of Vernon, Texas, which company he knew to be dependable, for-which-reason he directed his clerk to endorse the said check, which was so endorsed merely as an accommodation; that the said check was thereafter presented to the Durant National Bank, cashed, and on February 18, 1955, sent by the said bank in due course to the Waggoner National Bank at Vernon, Texas, for collection; that the Wag-goner National Bank of Vernon declined to honor the same because it had not been endorsed by the payee thereon, C. R. Atkission; that the said check was returned to the Durant National Bank unpaid and was there charged by the Durant Bank against the account of Durant Milling Company and C. V. Tunnell was so notified; that C. V. Tunnell had inadvertently ordered the said check endorsed by his company without procuring the endorsement thereon of the payee, C. R. Atkission, but he immediately called C. R. Atkission by telephone at Vernon, Texas, to see if he would endorse the check and proposed to drive himself to Vernon to procure the endorsement of C. R. Atkission and get the said check cashed at the Waggoner National Bank at Vernon, but Atkission insisted that he be permitted to talk to Mr. Joe Wolver-ton, president of the Waggoner National Bank, and urged Tunnell to return the check for collection through the usual' channels marked for the attention of Mr. Joe B. Wolverton and he (Atkission) would' appear and endorse the check upon its arrival; that C. R. Atkission soon thereafter called Tunnell back by telephone and advised him that such an arrangement had been made with Mr. Joe Wolverton.

Appellee, George F. Hall, further testified that four or five days after he accepted the check on February 15, 1955, for the sum of $1,798.75 and delivered the corn to C. R. Atkission, he was advised by his local bank that the said check had been returned unpaid and the amount thereon had been charged back to his account. The record reveals that the said check was introduced in evidence, together with a bank slip attached thereto, showing the check was not honored by the Atoka State Bank because of insufficient funds in the account of J. W. Pitts, the drawer thereof.

Before the Martin-Lane Company check of date February 16, 1955, for the sum of $2,089.89, payable to C. R. Atkission for the sale and delivery of the corn to Martin-Lane Company, could be returned to the Waggoner National Bank by Tunnell for the arranged endorsement of Atkission and for payment by the Waggoner National Bank, it appears that a temporary restraining order had been issued out of the court and served restraining the payment of the check, although the record before us does not reflect the proceedings concerning the granting and issuance of a temporary restraining order.

Predicated upon the factual situation previously stated, appellee, George F. Hall, filed suit against J. W. Pitts, the Waggoner National Bank of Vernon, Texas, C. R. Atkission and Martin-Lane Company, seeking a permanent injunction prohibiting C. R. Atkission from endorsing the check given to him by Martin-Lane Company in payment for the corn and prohibiting the Wag-goner National Bank from honoring the check and prohibiting Martin-Lane Company from making further payments to J. [763]*763W. Pitts and C. R.- Atkission for -the corn in question. He .likewise sought to have the check in question . cancelled and further sought judgment .against Martin-Lane Company for .his debt in.the sum of $2,-089.89 and also judgment against J. W. Pitts and C.. R. Atkission for.any amount they or "either nf them- may owe him.

C. R. Atkission answered disclaiming any interest in the subject matter here involved but admitted that he bought the corn from appellee as alleged and gave the check therefor signed by J. W. Pitts, which check he thought was good and would be paid when presented in due course.

Martin-Lane Company answered to the effect that it bought the corn in question on February 16, 1955, in good faith from C. R. Atkission 'and gave him on the same date check 'No. 6450 for the sum of $2,089.89 in payment for the corn; that Martin did not have any notice of appellee’s claims or interest in the said corn or that anyone else other than Atkission had any interest in the com at the time of the sale thereof; and that Martin-Lane • Company does not know whom it is justly indebted to for the corn but is willing to pay whoever the court finds to be justly entitled to receive payment therefor upon final adjudication of the matters. It likewise sought recovery of an attorney fee in the sum of $150 payable as to the court may seem just and proper.

The Waggoner National Bank answered to the effect that the check in question, No. 6450 for the sum of $2,089.89, was presented to it for payment before a restraining order was served upon it but was returned unpaid because the same had not been endorsed by the payee thereof, C. R.

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Durant Milling Company v. Hall
284 S.W.2d 760 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W.2d 760, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durant-milling-company-v-hall-texapp-1955.