F. Groos & Co. v. Brewster

78 S.W. 359, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 140, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 402
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 23, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 78 S.W. 359 (F. Groos & Co. v. Brewster) 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
F. Groos & Co. v. Brewster, 78 S.W. 359, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 140, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 402 (Tex. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

During the months of April, May and June, 1897, the J. L. S. Hunt Company, a private corporation, shipped to appellee at Laredo, Texas, on various days during that time, thirty-three carloads,of corn, and drew its drafts for each carload, thirty-three in number, on appellee, payable to the order of said company with bills of lading attached, aggregating $9041.90. The drafts with bills of lading attached were then assigned and delivered by the J. L. S. Hunt Company to appellants, F. Groos & Co., partners, doing a banking business in the city of San Antonio, Texas, who by virtue of such assignment became the legal holders thereof.

The appellee, C. G. Brewster, was then a commission merchant doing business in Laredo, Texas, and had theretofore handled corn on commission for the Hunt Company. But at the time these shipment^ were made and drafts drawn, he had ceased to do business for said company. He had not purchased the corn or any part thereof, nor authorized its shipment or consignment to him, nor accepted or in any way obligated himself to pay said drafts, or any of them, or to receive said shipments of corn.

F. Groos & Co. transmitted the drafts with bills of lading attached to the Milmo National Bank at Laredo for collection. The appellee not having purchased, ordered or agreed to receive the corn, refused to accept Or honor any of the drafts. Twenty-five carloads of the corn *141 having arrived at Laredo, were becoming heated and damaged, and appellee having refused to receive the shipments, which facts being made known to appellants, they on Hay 27, 1897, wrote to the Milmo National Bank:

“San Antonio, Texas, May 27, 1897.—Milmo National Bank, Laredo, Texas: Dear Sir.—A number of cars of corn covered by bills of lading attached to drafts on C. G. Brewster sent you at various times, having heen sold at a reduced price from original figures, and in paying for said drafts Mr. Brewster is to draw on the J. L. S. Hunt Company for the difference of value of the corn, which said drafts you arc hereby authorized to accept as part payment of such collections. Respectfully, F. Groos & Co.”

When this letter was written, appellant knew that none of the cars of corn had been sold for less than the amounts drawn for or at any price. Their purpose in writing it was to authorize such sales and such returns therefor as the letter indicated. In view of these facts, their letter being shown by the Milmo Bank to appellee, it was construed by them to mean that Groos & Co. desired appellee to receive and sell the corn for them, and when sold, that he should draw drafts on the Hunt Company which they would accept in payment for the difference between amounts of original drafts on Brewster and what was realized from such sale. In view of the facts recited, which were known by appellants as well as by appellee and the Milmo National Bank, no other construction could have been placed upon the letters, i. e., if it was contemplated by the appellant that it should be acted upon at all. In carrying out such construction, the Milmo National Bank, acting for appellants, being unwilling to deliver the bills of lading to appellee, or allow the railroad company to deliver him the corn without his payment in full of the drafts attached thereto, arranged and agreed with him that he should first pay in full the several amounts for which the drafts were drawn; that the bills of-lading should then be delivered to him, and he should receive the corn and after putting it in condition for sale, to sell the same for the best obtainable price, and should the proceeds of sale be less than the amounts for which the drafts were drawn, draw on the Hunt Company for the payment of the difference, it being understood from the letter that the drafts would be received by appellants for such payment.

In pursuance of such arrangement and understanding, the appellee paid the original drafts drawn' on him by the Hunt Company to the Milmo National Bank, who held them for appellants, in full; and, when paid, the full amount of the payments were remitted by the bank to áppellants. The bills of lading were then turned over to appellee, and he received the corn from the railroad company, placed it in condition for sale, at a considerable expense to him, and from time to time sold same for the best prices obtainable. And as soon as he received the proceeds of sale and was able to ascertain the difference between such proceeds and the amount he paid for the drafts, he drew drafts on the *142 ; Hunt Company payable to the order of the Milmo National Bank, with statements of sales attached thereto, for such difference, the sum of $1772.41 being the difference between the drafts drawn on appellee for the thirty-three carloads—the eight which arrived after, as well as the twenty-five which arrived before thé 27th of May, 1897—and' the entire amount realized from their sale. The drafts drawn by appellee for such difference were sent by the Milmo National Bank to its correspondent in San Antonio for collection. The Hunt Company, upon whom they were drawn, failed and refused to pay them. This company was then, as well as at the time it drew its drafts on appellee, which were assigned to appellant as aforesaid, wholly insolvent, such insolvency being, at all the times mentioned, well Imown to appellants. The insolvency of said company continued from such times and existed when this suit was filed, as well as when it was tried in the court below.

The Hunt Company having failed to pay the drafts drawn by appellee, as before stated, they were presented to appellants for payment and payment by them was refused, and they have never paid the amount or any part thereof for which said drafts were drawn.

The facts thus found are established by the uncontradicted testimony, and are not denied by appellants. They are substantially alleged by appellee in his petition as his cause of action.

That these facts constitute a cause of action in favor of appellee against appellants for the difference between the aggregate amount paid by the former on the drafts drawn on him by the Hunt Company prior to May 27, 1897, and the aipount realized by him for the sale of the corn for which said drafts were drawn, good against appellants’ general and special exceptions, is, to our minds, too clear for argument. This difference, as found by the verdict of the jury, is $1522.36, for which appellee obtained the judgment which is appealed from.

It would seem that there can be no question about this suit being founded upon an instrument or instruments of writing. Whether it be regarded as based upon the letter of May 27, 1897, or upon the drafts drawn by appellee, after the sqle of the corn, on the Hunt Company, in either event it is founded upon a written obligation. The facts show a consideration inuring to appellants for the sums of money for which the drafts were drawn, and the letter referred to may be regarded as a promise by them to accept the drafts as payment for the difference between the aggregate amount paid by appellee on the drafts drawn on him prior to its date and the sum realized from the sales of the corn for which they were drawn. Therefore, the four years statute of limitations, and not the two, is the one which must govern in determining whether the action was barred when the suit was instituted, and it being ' brought within that period on the facts stated, it was not barred.

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Bluebook (online)
78 S.W. 359, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 140, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-groos-co-v-brewster-texapp-1903.