Garrow, MacClain & Garrow, Inc. v. Texas & N. O. Ry. Co.

39 S.W.2d 919, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1137
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 15, 1931
DocketNo. 9547.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 919 (Garrow, MacClain & Garrow, Inc. v. Texas & N. O. Ry. Co.) 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
Garrow, MacClain & Garrow, Inc. v. Texas & N. O. Ry. Co., 39 S.W.2d 919, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1137 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

*920 GRAVES, J.

The suit was by appellant, a private corporation engaged in the business of a cotton factor at.Houston, against the several appel-lee railway companies composing “the Southern Pacific Lines of Texas,” to recover an aggregate excess or overcharge of $4,270.50, alleged to have been through a mistake of facts paid them by it in a series of fifteen checks between July 5, 1921, and July 1, 1922, as for freight on 3,876 bales of cotton hauled to Houston over their railways in different shipments during that period, with an alternative count for judgment for the stated sum as for money had and received.

After a demurrer and a denial, both general, the appellees specially pleaded that they had, at the different times the several cheeks were presented to them by him, refunded in cash to the appellant’s agent, Mr. Gammell, whatever sum was then due it on each one of them resulting from any excess in the amount thereof over the proper freight charge, that such agent had the authority to so receive the money for appellant, “and that, if the said Gammell was not authorized to accept said amount, then that in accepting the same he was acting within the apparent scope of his authority.”

The appellant, without challenging the sufficiency of this answering plea by specially excepting thereto, joined issue on the facts therein alleged by denying that its .agent, Gammell, was acting within the apparent scope of his authority in receiving the refunds specified.

The trial court, presumably under the view that Gammell was shown to have had no express authority to do' so, submitted the cause to a jury upon this single special issue:

“Was Gammell acting within the apparent scope of his authority when he received the refunds on the fifteen checks offered in evidence, aggregating $4,270.50? Answer yes or no as you may find.
“In this connection you are charged that an employee is acting within the apparent scope of his authority when from the acts and conduct of such man’s employer a reasonably prudent person having knowledge of such facts and conduct of such employer, acting in good faith, would conclude the employee had the authority to act as he did and would rely and act upon such assumption.”

On the return of an affirmative answer, judgment went for the appellees.

•All of appellant’s freight bills, including those evidenced by these transactions, were paid by checks, or vouchers, that indicated by recitations on the face thereof that they were for freight to Houston on a specified number of bales of cotton, the further facts about the fifteen here involved being reflected in this written agreement of the parties, which was in evidence below:

“It is agreed in the above entitled and numbered cause that the plaintiff, Garrow, McClain & Garrow, on the dates and in the amounts shown below, issued their checks, or vouchers, to J. A. Sanders, Agent of the Southern Pacific Lines;
“That Mr. Gammell, an employee of Gar-row, McClain & Garrow, took the checks to T. D. Elam, Cashier of the defendant railroad companies, for the purpose of paying the freight on the stipulated amount of cotton as stated in said Vouchers; that when Mr. Elam cheeked his freight receipts against the particular vouchers presented, they showed that the voucher was in excess of the true amount of freight due in the amounts shown below under the heading of amount of refund, whereupon Mr. Elam, as Agent for the defendant railroad companies, accepted said checks and paid to Mr. Gammell, said employee of plaintiff, the difference between the true amount owed and the amount specified in the check. That this amount was paid to Mr. Gammell in cash.
Amount of Check Amount of Refund
$ 609.72 $ 327.61
751.25 434.32
319.29 319.29
354.06- 289.72
1,006.26 238.81
1,284.19 494.24
734.90 440.06
506.37 292.29
1,291.58 ' 345.14
2,026.13 402.97
341.55 59.88
698.58 142.67
575.20 241.54
519.41 64.48
622.19 177.56
Total amount of Refund $4,270.53
“The issue between the parties being whether or not Mr. Gammell, the employee of Gar-row, McClain & Garrow, Inc., had authority to accept the money mentioned as paid him above for his employer.”

The undisputed testimony additionally showed that appellant’s employee thus named appropriated the. whole of the $4,270.50 so refunded to him to his individual use, without its knowledge, or consent, and that it never received any part thereof.

Appellant asks a reversal and rendition in its favor on two grounds, which are thus stated in its brief:

“First, appellees’ pleadings did not allege the necessary facts to constitute-estoppel and were wholly insufficient as a plea of estoppel, and therefore the court erred in submitting to the jury the question of whether or not the *921 appellant should be estopped to deny tbe authority of its employee to receive payment of the money sued for from appellees.
“Second, the evidence was wholly insufficient to warrant the trial court in submitting to the jury such issue of estoppel.”

Both of these contentions are inept, we think, in referring to the issue of fact submitted by the court to the jury as “the issue of estoppel”; in our view, while it may be said to have in a sense rested on the same fundamental principle as a technical plea of estoppel, it rather should be termed what it plainly purports to be and is, the issue of “the apparent scope of his authority” to do for his principal what this agent was admittedly shown to have done, that is, received these refunds in cash from the appellees; the question submitted to the jury follows almost exactly the -wording of the appellees’ pleading tendering the affirmative defense that Gammell was acting within the apparent scope of his authority for appellant when he received the refunds from them in the way he did; in reply, instead of challenging its sufficiency as such by special exception, or otherwise averring that it did not apprehend just what was meant thereby, or what proof it would be called upon to present in opposition, it chose rather to in effect assert that it understood fully and to join issue on the facts charged by saying: “Plaintiff specifically denies allegations in paragraphs 3, 4, and 5 of the defendants’ said answer wherein the defendants allege that one W. G.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 919, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrow-macclain-garrow-inc-v-texas-n-o-ry-co-texapp-1931.