Farmers' & Merchants' Gin Co. v. Simmons

178 S.W. 621, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 781
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 15, 1915
DocketNo. 8097. [fn†]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 178 S.W. 621 (Farmers' & Merchants' Gin Co. v. Simmons) 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
Farmers' & Merchants' Gin Co. v. Simmons, 178 S.W. 621, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 781 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

During the cotton season of 1910-1911, commencing about September I, 1910, and ending about January, 1911, the appellant company was the owner of a gin at Lewisville in Denton county, and was engaged in ginning its own cotton, as well as cotton for its customers. Appellee during the same season was engaged in buying seed cotton on his own account at Lewisville, and the parties named entered into a contract, by which appellant agreed to gin for appellee all seed cotton delivered to it by him, and to deliver to him 65 pounds of cotton seed out of each 100 pounds of seed cotton so delivered at the gin, appellee agreeing to pay appellant $2.50 for each bale of lint cotton ginned for him during the season. This suit was instituted by the appellant gin company to recover of appellee the value of 101,984 pounds of cotton seed at the rate of $26 per ton, alleged to have been delivered to appellee in excess of the cotton seed he was entitled to receive under his said contract, and also to recover $1,686.20, the value of 11,833 pounds of lint cotton, the property of the appellant company, and alleged to have been wrongfully taken and converted by appellee, and also to recover of appellee $1,205.95 as the alleged balance due appellant for the ginning of 1,502 bales of cotton at the contract rate, and which it was alleged had never been paid except by a wrongful credit that had been entered upon the books of the appellant company for 96,626 pounds of cotton seed, which appellant had already delivered to the defendant. It was charged that the defendant had been enabled to receive such lint cotton and such excess cotton seed and such wrongful credit by the aid and connivance of N. S. Reedy, appellant's manager, or else by mistake. The defendant admitted the contract as alleged, but denied that he had received the lint cotton as charged, and denied that he had received more cotton seed than he was entitled to under the contract, and denied the conspiracy charged with Reedy. The defendant further specially pleaded that on the 21st day of March, 1911, a settlement had been made of all accounts existing between the parties. The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, and the jury found that the defendant had delivered to the plaintiff’s gin for ginning during the season of 1910-1911, 2,262,824 pounds of seed cotton; that the defendant received from the gin during the same season 1,374,860 pounds of cotton seed; that he got no more cotton seed from the gin than he was entitled to under the contract, and had not received the *622 lint cotton for the value of which plaintiff sued to recover. The proof shows that a settlement between the parties was had as alleged by the defendant, and that this settlement was made by the weights of the gin company as to lint cotton received and as to cotton seed delivered to the defendant. The proof further shows that all cotton seed received hy the defendant at Lewisville was by him shipped to oil companies at Dallas, Tex., and that the weights of the cotton seed as rendered by the Dallas concerns and credited to the defendant aggregated a greater number of pounds than the books of the gin company at Lewisville had charged against him, and the jury, in answer to an interrogatory as to which weights were correct, answered that the Lewisville weights were. The proof further shows that Cunningham Bros, also operated a gin at Lewisville, during the season of 1910-1911, at which the defendant also delivered cotton under a contract by which he was to receive 65 pounds of seed for each 100 pounds of seed cotton delivered, and one of the principal contentions in the case was whether two certain cars of cotton seed (Nos. 10,136 and 12,066) containing in the aggregate 89,630 pounds came from the Cunningham gin or from the plaintiff gin, and the jury, in answer to a special interrogatory, declared that these cars came from the Cunningham Bros.’ gin. Upon the return of the findings of the jury, as above indicated, the court rendered a judgment in the defendant’s favor, and the plaintiff gin company appeals.

It was substantially admitted on the submission that the verdict, if supported by the evidence, sustains the judgment rendered, and the only assignments of error presented to us are assignments which question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the several findings of the jury. It is very earnestly insisted that a number of the jury’s special findings are in opposition to the undisputed evidence, or at least that the evidence so greatly preponderates against the findings that they should be seit aside. Under our law, the weight of the testimony and the credibility of the witnesses is committed exclusively to the jury in cases of jury trials, and the uniform practice of our appellate courts is to refuse to set aside the jury’s findings where the testimony with reasonable sufficiency supports the verdict. Moore v. Rogers, 84 Tex. 1, 19 S. W. 283.

Our Supreme Court, in passing upon the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict adopts the following rule:

“We must reject all evidence favorable to the plaintiffs in error, and consider only the facts and circumstances which tend to sustain the verdict, and if the jury, in an honest and impartial effort to arrive at the truth, might have reached the conclusion embodied in this verdict, this court cannot set it aside.” Cartwright v. Canode (Sup.) 171 S. W. 696.

With these principles as guides, we have, as carefully as we could, examined the evidence in this case, and feel unable to say that the jury’s verdict is so manifestly unsupported by the evidence as to require a reversal of the judgment on our part, particularly in view of the action of the trial court in refusing to set such verdict aside when called upon to do so by appellant’s motion for a new trial herein. The most important controversy, as is perhaps apparent from what we have already said, is about the question of whether the 89,630 pounds of cotton seed, which the evidence without dispute shows that appellee received in cars Nos. 10,136 and 12,066, came from the appellant gin or from the gin of Cunningham Bros., for in the settlement between the parties to this controversy in March, 1911, these two cars of cotton seed vrere not charged to appellee on the gin books of the appellant company, as they should have been if in fact the cotton seed in these cars was received from appellant. The jury found that cotton seed at the time was worth $26 per ton, and if appellant’s contention is to be sustained, it should have had a credit in the March settlement of something over $1,150 that was not allowed it. The evidence relied upon by appellant to sustain its contention that the jury were wrong in this finding consists of evidence showing the amount of seed cotton that appellee placed in the Cunningham gin during the season of 1910-1911, and the amount of cotton seed to which he was entitled to receive under his contract with Cunningham Bros., with certain evidence which shows that the books of Cunningham Bros.’ gin give no account of the two car-loads of cotton seed in question. If to the cotton seed charged against appellee by Cunningham Bros.’ gin, there be added the cotton seed in the two ears mentioned, it will appear that appellee received in all from the Cunningham gin about 100 pounds of cotton seed to every 100 pounds of lint cotton that he placed in that gin, aggregating in all more than he was entitled to by substantially the number of pounds contained in the two cars.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 S.W. 621, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-gin-co-v-simmons-texapp-1915.