French, Finch Co. v. Hicks

114 S.W. 691, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 427, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 387
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 691 (French, Finch Co. v. Hicks) 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
French, Finch Co. v. Hicks, 114 S.W. 691, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 427, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 387 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

RAINEY, Chief Justice.

— This is a suit by appellant, French, Finch & Company, plaintiff below, against appellees, defendants in the court below, J. A. Hicks, as principal, and M. G. Goss and J. F. Sutton, as sureties, on the bond which J. A. Hicks executed to Kellogg, Johnson & Company.

The plaintiff alleged, among other things, that J. A. Hicks made a contract on the 14th day of August, 1902, with Kellogg, Johnson & Company, a private corporation doing business at St. Paul, Minnesota, by the terms of which Kellogg, Johnson & Company employed Hicks for the period of one year to travel in the State of Texas and sell goods-for Kellogg, Johnson & Company, each to reserve the right to sever the contract upon giving the other ten days’ notice in writing. That Kellogg, Johnson & Company was afterwards succeeded in all its rights and privileges by the appellant herein. That Kellogg, Johnson & Company was to advance Hicks $50 per week as traveling expenses, to be returned to Kellogg, Johnson & Company out of the commissions earned on the sales made by him. That Hicks executed a bond to Kellogg, Johnson & Company with two sureties on the bond, Goss and Sutton, and that said bond provided that Hicks should return the samples and cases and all sums of money advanced to him under the terms of the *428 contract in excess of the commission earned thereunder, ■ and that Kellogg, Johnson & Company cancelled the contract of employment by giv-, ing Hicks ten days’ notice in writing in the latter part of March, 1903, and that at the time of the cancellation of the contract Hicks owed Kellogg, Johnson & Company $648.60.

Defendant J. A. Hicks answered by general denial, and then subsequently plead an oral agreement made between himself and Kellogg,

Johnson & Company, at St. Paul, Minnesota, whereby Kellogg, Johnson & Company engaged him to perform certain services independent of the written contract, and that these services he performed, while there was no compensation agreed upon in advance, were reasonably worth the sum of $900.

Defendants Goss and Sutton plead that at the time of the execution of the bond Hicks agreed with them to procure another surety, and that he would not deliver the bond until the said surety had been obtained.

The trial was before the court without a jury, and the court found in favor of French, Finch & Company against J. A. Hicks for the full amount sued for and interest, and found in favor of J. A. Hicks' for services rendered independent of the contract in the sum of $248.60, leaving a judgment in favor of French, Finch & Company against Hicks for $400, and found in favor of defendants, Goss and Sutton. Plaintiff appeals.

The trial judge’s conclusions of fact are correct and they are adopted as the conclusions of this court, and are as follows:

“That Kellogg, Johnson & Company, a private corporation incorporated under the laws of Minnesota, entered into a written contract with the defendant J. A. Hicks, of Terrell, Texas, on the 14th day of August, 1902, a true copy of which is attached to plaintiff’s petition. That said contract provided among other things that the defendant Hicks should furnish three satisfactory sureties on a $1,000 bond for the faithful performance of the contract by the said Hicks, and that until said bond was so furnished said contract should not be operative. That R. L. Warren represented the said Kellogg, Johnson & Company in the matter of accepting the contract and bond, and that after the contract had been executed in duplicate he furnished defendant Hicks with the bond to be executed. That defendant Hicks took the bond and his copy of the contract and went to the defendants M. G. Goss and J. F. Sutton and exhibited to them the contract and bond and requested them to become his sureties. That Hicks told each of them that there were to be three sureties on the bond, and that each of said sureties signed said bond with the knowledge that the contract provided there should be three sureties and with the understanding with defendant Hicks that there should be three. That after defendants Goss and Sutton had signed same defendant Hicks took the bond back to said R. L. Warren, who, acting for Kellogg, Johnson & Company, accepted it. That when the bond was delivered to R. L. Warren nothing was said by either Hicks or Warren as to a third surety or as to the -understanding by Goss and Sutton that there should be another surety. That Warren accepted the bond and sent it to Kellogg, Johnson & Company. That neither Warren nor Kellogg, Johnson & Com- *429 pony knew anything or had any notice of the understanding between Hicks and Goss and Sutton that there should be another surety further than such knowledge and notice thereof was given them by the contract. That after Kellogg, Johnson & Company had received the contract and bond they requested by letter the defendant Hicks to at once come to St. Paul and confer with them. That Hicks at once went to St. Paul and that while there the said Kellogg, Johnson & Company, through one of its officers, furnished defendant Hicks with a list v of its debtors in Texas in the territory over which he was to travel as their drummer, and requested him to visit these parties and make reports of same. That the work thus requested to be done by Hicks was not that or any part of that contemplated in the contract. That neither Hicks nor Kellogg, Johnson & Company made any mention of compensation to be given for same and no claim was made therefor by Hicks until after this suit was brought. That defendant Hicks began work under said contract about the last of August, 1902, and continued until some time in March following, about seven months, when the contract was terminated by plaintiff, who in the meantime had succeeded to all the rights and liabilities of Kellogg, Johnson & Company. That during the time defendant Hicks traveled as the salesman of plaintiff he spent some time and some money in looking after and reporting on the financial condition of plaintiff’s debtors at the request of plaintiff, and that the services thus rendered were reasonably worth the sum of $248.60. That plaintiff furnished defendant Hicks, under said contract, about $1,125, and that the amount of commissions earned by Hicks during said time amounted to about $476.40. That the sureties Goss and Sutton did not know until the filing of this suit but that there was another surety to the bond.”

The appellant submits its second assignment, which is: “The court erred in finding for the defendants, Goss and Sutton, because the uncontroverted evidence was that the plaintiff had no knowledge of any agreement made between them and the defendant Hicks as to the number of sureties- to be obtained on the bond, and the plaintiff had the right to waive the provision in the contract as to the number of sureties which Hicks was required to furnish on the bond, and in the absence of any knowledge on the part of the company that Goss and Sutton relied on the provision that there would be three sureties, they cannot escape liability on account of any private agreemént between them and Hicks.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 691, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 427, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-finch-co-v-hicks-texapp-1908.