Fort Worth Elevators Co. v. Keel & Son

231 S.W. 481, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 418
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 1921
DocketNo. 7892.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 481 (Fort Worth Elevators Co. v. Keel & Son) 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
Fort Worth Elevators Co. v. Keel & Son, 231 S.W. 481, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 418 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

LANE, J.

This suit was brought by appellant, Port Worth Elevators Company, on the 19th day of December, 1916, against J. Z. Keel and W. L. Reel, parties composing the firm of Keel & Son, the- Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fé Railroad Company, hereinafter referred to as the Santa Fé Company, and the Galveston Wharf Company, hereinafter called the Wharf Company, to recover the sum of $2,364.53, the value of two cars of wheat. The plaintiff in its original petition, in effect, alleged:

That on the 6th day of August, 1915, it and the defendants Keel & Son entered into a contract whereby the latter agreed to sell and deliver to the former at Galveston, Tex., for export, two cars of No. 2 bulk wheat, containing 1,000 bushels each, for which the purchaser agreed to' pay the seller $1.20½ per bushel, or a gross sum of $2,410, less $45.47 unpaid freight charges from Gaines-ville, Tex., to Galveston, Tex.; that it was the understanding and agreement of the contracting parties that the weight and grades of the wheat as ascertained at Galveston should govern in the final settlement between said parties, and that the contract of sale and purchase should not be complete until all of the wheat .had arrived at Galveston for export, and had been inspected, weighed, and accepted by the purchaser; that thereafter in due time Keel & Son, the sellers, did deliver the two cars of wheat to the Santa Fé Railroad Company, to be by said company transported to Galveston and to be there delivered to the purchaser, Port Worth Elevators Company, and that the Santa Fé Company executed and delivered to Keel & Son a bill of lading for each of said cars of wheat, showing that each contained 1,000 bushels, that said bills of lading contained a stipulation that the wheat should be delivered to shippers’ order, notify the Port Worth Elevators Company; that such bills ’of lading with drafts attached thereto for the purchase price of the wheat were sent to the Port Wort Elevators Company by Keel & Son on the 7th day of August, 1915, and that they were received by the Port Worth Elevators Company at Port Worth, Tex., on the 7th day of August, 1915, and that said drafts were paid in full, less the sum of $45.47, part of the freight charges, the net sum so paid being $2,364.53, that being the sum which the purchaser had contracted to pay Keel & Son for the wheat; that the sum so paid was the reasonable market value of the wheat at Galveston at the time of the conversion thereof by the defendants.

“That said payments aforesaid were made to the shipper because the plaintiff relied absolutely and implicitly upon the correctness of said drafts and bills of lading and upon the agreement of the defendant shipper and the obligation of the defendant railway company to deliver to the plaintiff at Galveston, Tex., the quality and quantity of wheat contracted for, and that such payments were made in accordance with the custom prevailing in the grain trade of the state of Texas and the custom commonly used by and between the plaintiff and the shipper; that the said bills of lading and each of them were properly indorsed by the shipper, and that the plaintiff, upon the payment of the drafts attached to such bills of lading, and upon procuring possession of such bills of lading, became the owner and holder thereof, and that it is now, and has been at all times since the payment of the aforesaid drafts, the owner and holder of said bills of lading, and of each of them, and the defendant railway company became thereby bound to deliver the grain as described in said bill of lading to the plaintiff at Galveston, Tex., for export.”

That It was well known to all the defendants that said wheat was intended for export to points without the United States by water from Galveston; that the defendant Wharf Company, as well as the Santa Fé Company, was a common carrier and public transportation company, maintaining lines of railroad and transportation facilities connected with the line of railway of the Santa Fé Company, terminating at the water’s edge at the port of Galveston, and connected with an elevator owned, maintained, and operated by said Wharf Company.

“That the railway had no facilities at Galveston for the delivery of grain and in contracting to so deliver said grain for export said railway bound and obligated itself to arrange for some connecting line at Galveston to be by it selected for the exchange of said grain from the line of said railway to an elevator necessary to handle said grain;. or from cars to shipside *483 for export, and plaintiffs allege upon information and belief and assert it to be a fact that the railway company by some arrangement, the terms of which are unknown to the plaintiff, delivered the said gram to the Wharf Company for delivery to plaintiff at ship!s side or in the elevator of said Wharf Company, and that the said Wharf Company accepted and received suoh grain for sueh delivery to the plaintiff. (Italics ours.)
“That plaintiff has no knowledge of the facts, if any, as to what disposition was made of said grain after delivery was made by the said shipper to defendant railway, other than the conflicting claims made by defendant railway and defendant wharf company to plaintiff as to the whereabouts of such grain, the truth concerning such shipment of said grain being wholly within the knowledge of the defendant railway and the Wharf Company, both of said defendants knowing all the facts concerning the same, and none of said facts being known to plaintiff. Defendant railway advised plaintiff that said grain was delivered to said Wharf Company, which latter company contends that said grain was not delivered to it by said railway company, but that it was retained by the said railway, and plaintiff ihad made demand upon said shipper, railway, and said Wharf Company for delivery of said grain in accordance with the terms of said contract and bill of lading, but said defendants have failed and refused, and still fail and refuse, to deliver same to plaintiffs, but have converted said grain to their own use or to the use of one or the other of them, the facts of such conversion being wholly within the knowledge of defendants and not at this time known to the plaintiff.
“That the said railway has converted said grain to its own use, and, pleading in the alternative, plaintiff says that if said railway has not converted same, then in that event said railway did deliver same to the Wharf Company, which latter company converted same to its own use; that defendant shipper by reason of the obligation to deliver said grain to plaintiff at Galveston, Tex., under its contract with the plaintiff, is jointly and severally bound with said railway company and. said Wharf Company, and with each of them, to deliver said grain at Galveston, Tex., to plaintiff, but that each dnd all of the defendants have failed and refused to deliver such grain to the plaintiff, although demand has ofttimes been made therefor, on each and every one of them; that by reason of the failure and refusal of the defendants and each of them to deliver said grain to the plaintiff, the plaintiff hns thereby been damaged in the sum of $2,364.53; together with interest thereon from the 7th day of August, 1915, until paid, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum and all costs herein incurred.”

Prayer was for judgment against all the defendants for the sum of $2,364.53, and interest thereon from August 7, 1915. '

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 481, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-worth-elevators-co-v-keel-son-texapp-1921.