Eugene Morris Hartis, Jr. v. Century Furniture Industries Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 28, 2007
Docket14-05-01099-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Eugene Morris Hartis, Jr. v. Century Furniture Industries Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed June 28, 2007

Affirmed and Opinion filed June 28, 2007.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

_______________

NO. 14-05-01099-CV

EUGENE MORRIS HARTIS JR., Appellant

V.

CENTURY FURNITURE INDUSTRIES, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 55th District Court

 Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 04-32785

O P I N I O N


Appellant Eugene Morris Hartis, Jr. sold furniture on consignment for appellee, Century Furniture Industries, Inc.  After Hartis repeatedly failed to remit payment to Century, the parties agreed that Century would pick up its consigned furniture and also furniture manufactured by third parties from Hartis=s Houston warehouses and credit the value of the furniture to Hartis=s outstanding indebtedness.  After retrieving and reselling the furniture, Century brought suit on a sworn account, alleging that, after applying the credit to Hartis=s account, an outstanding balance remained.  As an affirmative defense and counterclaim, Hartis alleged that the transfer was performed subject to a new contract under which Century agreed to pay the full price stated by Hartis for each item.  The main dispute on appeal involves Hartis=s contention that Century agreed to purchase each item of third-party furniture for the price stated by Hartis in a written document detailing his Houston inventory.  After a trial to the bench, the trial court ruled in favor of Century.  We affirm the trial court=s judgment.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

April 2002BFebruary 2003

Appellant Eugene Hartis, Jr. was a manufacturer=s representative for Century Furniture Industries, Inc. (ACentury@).  His company, Century Showrooms (AShowroom@) maintained an open account with Century.  Century consigned furniture to Showroom, and Showroom paid Century for the furniture after it was sold.[1] 

Century=s controller, Brandon Hucks, inventoried Showroom=s three warehouses in April 2002 and discovered that, although Century had consigned furniture with a wholesale value of $454,930.89 to Showroom, Showroom had only $229,724.25 in consigned furniture in its possession.  Hartis admitted that he had sold the missing furniture and had not remitted any of the proceeds to Century.[2]


In an effort to address the missing payments, Hartis executed a AKey Points of Agreement@ (AKey Agreement@) with Century on April 29, 2002.  Under this Agreement, Hartis assumed personal responsibility for Showroom=s debt (the ANote@) and agreed to execute required forms perfecting Century=s lien on Athe existing inventory and inventory acquired in the future@ as collateral securing the Note.  He also agreed that, effective January 1, 2003, he would devote 85% of Showroom=s net usable space to Century products.  Century agreed to reduce the debt arising from the missing furniture from $225,206.64 to $150,000, and the parties established a payment plan.  Hartis agreed to pay Century $50,000 of this debt on May 15, 2002 and to pay the remainder in four quarterly installments of $25,000 each, beginning on August 1, 2002.  Hartis made the first two payments totaling $75,000, but failed to make payments due on November 1, 2002 and February 1, 2003. 

By February 2003, Hartis had reported additional sales of Century=s consigned furniture with a wholesale value of $135,173.25.[3]  After deducting these reported sales from Hartis=s April 2002 inventory, Century expected that in February 2003, Hartis possessed Century furniture with a wholesale value of $94,551.00.  Hartis also incurred additional debts to Century during this time.  As a result of sales on other accounts and sales of floor samples, Hartis=s total debt to Century in February 2003, including payments due under the Key Agreement, totaled $256,432.03. 

February 12, 2003BMarch 17, 2003

Hucks testified that Hartis offered to pay his outstanding debt by turning over merchandise listed in three inventory spreadsheets that Hartis emailed to Hucks on February 12, 2003.  One spreadsheet listed merchandise stored in Dallas and identified with the Durango Trading Company (the ADurango Inventory File@); another listed imported goods stored in a warehouse in High Point (the AHigh Point Inventory File@).[4]  The third spreadsheet was identified as ACentury 2003 Reconciliation, Item Listing, February 12, 2003@ (the AHouston Inventory File@).  The Houston Inventory File contains six columns with the headings, AItem,@ ADescription,@ AQuantity on Hand,@ ACost,@ AExt Cost,@ and APreferred Vendor.@  On the last page of this spreadsheet, the sum of the entries in the column marked AExt Cost@ is listed as $386,503.54.


On February 17, 2003, Hartis emailed Century two files labeled ACSR Inventory Reconciliation021803

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