First Pasadena State Bank v. Marquette

425 S.W.2d 450, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2999
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1968
DocketNo. 15028
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 425 S.W.2d 450 (First Pasadena State Bank v. Marquette) 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
First Pasadena State Bank v. Marquette, 425 S.W.2d 450, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2999 (Tex. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

BELL, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment against appellant in the amount of $55,101.22, based on breach of contract implied in fact. $35,-658.58 represents the principal amount found by the jury to be due because of the contract, and $19,442.64 represents interest thereon to the date of judgment.

In September, 1954, appellee entered into a written contract with Deer Park Independent School District to furnish all labor and material for the construction of a junior high school building, and of a shop addition to the High School. On October 19, 1954, Lonnie Wallace, owner of Allen Plumbing Company, by written contract with appel-lee, agreed to furnish all material and labor in performing a designated portion of the contract. Under the contract Wallace, as subcontractor, was to receive payment on the 15th of each month for 85'% of the work done and materials furnished during the previous month.

Each month, beginning in November, 1954, Wallace would compile a written estimate of what was due from appellee for work done the previous month. The first estimate in November was presented by him directly to appellee, and after it was verified by appellee’s estimator and after the School District had paid appellee his estimate, he paid Wallace. After this estimate, however, Wallace arranged with appellant to finance his work on the job. The financing was effected by Wallace’s assigning his estimate each month to appellant. The appellant would send an executed copy of the assignment together with the estimate to appellee. After each estimate was verified by appellee’s estimator and after the School District had paid appellee his estimate, ap-pellee would pay the estimate by check payable to Allen Plumbing Company (Wallace) and appellant. The check was transmitted to appellant, who cashed it and thus was repaid the loan it had made Wallace on the estimate plus interest. Each assignment by Wallace gave authority to appellant to endorse checks payable to Wallace.

Appellant’s connection began with Estimate #2, dated December 3, 1954. Wallace executed an assignment of it to appellant. The assignment, as did all others, contained the language, “and within the knowledge of the undersigned such account, claim or demand is just and true and there are no just and lawful offsets, payments or credits to be allowed thereon. * * * ” The assignments were sworn to by Wallace. Appellant through its then president, Mr. Reed, would transmit a copy of each assignment and estimate to appellee. The letter of transmittal, after reciting the transmittal of the assignment, would contain the direction, “You will please be governed according to the terms of this assignment.”

It should be noted that the estimates assigned contained an enumeration of work done and material furnished, but, with two or three exceptions, contained no information concerning who the suppliers of the materials were.

The last assignment paid was in July, 1955. It had come to light in June that Wallace had not been paying for all the materials. Appellee subsequently had to pay the suppliers, and this suit against appellant resulted.

Trial was on appellee’s Sixth Amended Original Petition. The petition recited in substance what we have stated above: de[452]*452tailed the various estimates that included materials and work contained on them that had allegedly been paid for but which were not paid for, and asserted that together with Wallace’s sworn account and the appellant’s transmittal letter, these constituted a representation by appellant that such work and mateiral had been paid for or would be paid for. He alleged that he, in reliance upon such representations, paid in full the amounts shown by the estimates to appellant.

The petition further alleged that Mr. Reed, acting for and with the authority of appellant, as an inducement for appellee to pay the money to the appellant, agreed with appellee that appellant would agree that the amounts shown on said estimates would be paid for in consideration of appellee’s paying to appellant the total amount of the estimates when presented. In reliance on such representation and agreements by appellant, it is alleged, appellee made such payments in full and he was damaged, as above stated, as a result of appellant’s failing and refusing to carry out its agreements and breaching its contract with appellee. The alleged representation, assurance and agreements by Mr. Reed were that all amounts specified in the estimates would be paid to the suppliers and appellee would suffer no damage or harm by paying the estimate to the appellant.

In the alternative, appellee relied on the theory of fraud by appellant in making the representations.

Appellant in its answer, apart from a special exception which seems to have been waived because not acted on, pled a general denial, various special denials, the statute of limitation and the statute of frauds, Article 3995, Subdivision 2.

The court submitted the case to the jury on special issues encompassing the theory of liability because of a contract implied in fact and on the theory of false representations by Mr. Reed that payments of all amounts shown to be due on each estimate had been made.

The jury answered as to each issue based on false representations, separate issues being submitted as to each estimate, that it did not find from a preponderance of the evidence that Mr. Reed represented to ap-pellee, prior to payment by appellee, that payment of all amounts shown to be due on the estimate had been made. This exonerated appellant from liability on this theory.

Appellee had paid appellant six estimates that included claims by Wallace for work and material done or furnished. It later developed that as to such estimates some of the suppliers of the material had not been paid. The court submitted an issue as to an implied agreement between appellee and appellant that appellant would pay for any such unpaid items. An illustration of the issue submitted as to each estimate is Issue No. 1, reading as follows: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that at the time Plaintiff made payment to the bank the amount shown to be due on estimate no. 2, said bank, acting through M. F. Reed, impliedly agreed to apply the proceeds to the payment of the work described in the estimate ?”

There was then an issue following inquiring as to the amount of the estimate that had not been paid by the bank or Wallace.

The court gave the following definition of “impliedly agreed” ¡ “ * * * by the term impliedly agreed is meant where the intention in regard to the subject-matter is not manifest by explicit or direct words, but is gathered by implication or necessary deduction from the circumstances, the general language and conduct of the parties.”

Appellant complains that neither the pleadings nor the evidence support recovery under the theory of implied contract and the court erred in submitting the definition and issues on such theory, Too, it says in any [453]*453event, recovery is barred by the statute of frauds.

We are of the view that appellee’s pleading, though somewhat inarticulately drawn, sufficiently, in the absence of special exception, states a cause of action based on contract implied in fact.

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425 S.W.2d 450, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-pasadena-state-bank-v-marquette-texapp-1968.