Gladish v. Neeley

248 S.W. 751
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 2, 1923
DocketNo. 8272.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 751 (Gladish v. Neeley) 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
Gladish v. Neeley, 248 S.W. 751 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, O. J.

This appeal is from a judgment of the court below overruling a plea of privilege to be sued in the county of his residence, filed and presented by appellant. The suit was brought by appellee against the appellant and the First State Bank of Oakwood to recover damages for the alleged breach by appellant of a contract for the purchase from appellee of two carloads of hogs to be shipped by appellee from Oakwood, in Leon county, to appellant at Stratford, in Sherman county, and there paid for by appellant The First State Bank of Oakwood was made defendant upon allegations charging that it had warranted or guaranteed the performance of the contract by the appellant, and judgment was prayed'for against appellant as principal and the bank as warrantor of the contract.

Appellant’s plea of privilege, which was filed and presented in due time and in proper form, alleges that the residence of appellant is in Sherman county and expressly negatives all of the exceptions contained in the statute against the rule requiring suits to be brought in the county of the defendant’s residence. It also contained an exception . to the petition on the ground that it fails to allege a joint cause of action against the appellant and the bank, and shows on its face that the suit against appellant cannot be maintained in Leon county. It further alleges:

“That this defendant would further represent that the plaintiff, herein has made the defendant, First State Bank of Oakwood, a party for the fraudulent purpose of seeking to procure-jurisdiction upon this defendant in Leon county, Tex., although plaintiff well knows that the First State Bank of Oakwood, Tex., if it has' warranted the payment of any amount involved herein, did not do so at the instance, request, knowledge, consent, or acquiescence of this defendant, but for the sole and fraudulent purpose of. endeavoring to deprive this defendant of his right to be sued in the county of his residence. That this defendant would further *752 represent and show that, if he be mistaken in any of the foregoing allegations as to said cause of action being severable, or the fraudulent purpose of plaintiff in joining the defendant, First State Bank of Oakwood, as a party defendant herein, that he alleges that there is a conspiracy between the plaintiff herein and the First State Bank of Oakwood, Tex., whereby said bank has consented and agreed with plaintiff to be made party to this 'suit for the sole purpose of endeavoring to confer jurisdiction upon its person and venue upon the said district court of Léon county, Tex., of the person of this defendant so.as to maintain this cause of action in this court and deprive this defendant of his right to have this cause of action transferred to and tried in the district court of Sherman county, Tex., and that First State Bank of Oakwood in furtherance of said conspiracy with the plaintiff has agreed with plaintiff that in no event will it be liable for any judgment of any kind or character that might be rendered herein, but has consented and permitted that it would be made a party herein for the sole and only purpose of seeking to fraudulently confer jurisdiction and venue of this suit in the above styled court.”

Appellee filed a controverting affidavit, which, amplifies the allegation of the petition in respect to the warranty of the contract by the hank, and expressly denies the allegation of appellant’s plea that the bank was made a party for the fraudulent purpose of giving the district court of Leon county jurisdiction of the suit against, appellant, and further specifically denies the allegations of conspiracy contained in appellant’s plea.

On the hearing of the plea the court overruled the exception to the petition, and after hearing the evidence rendered judgment overruling the plea.

The evidence upon the hearing was in substance as follows:

Appellant testified that he made a contract with appellee to purchase from him two carloads of hogs at nine cents per pound, f. o. b. cars at Oakwood. Appellee was to obtain a public weigher’s certificate when the hogs were loaded and send it with a draft on appellant attached to appellant’s bank at Stratford, for payment. After making the agreement, at appellee’s suggestion, they went to the First State Bank of Oak-wood, and appellee introduced appellant to Mr. J. W. Barton, the president of the bank, and submitted to him the terms of the agreement. Mr. Barton then suggested to appellant'that he get his bank at Stratford to wire the Oakwood bank that any draft drawn by appellee under the agreement for the purchase of the hogs would be paid by it. Appellant agreed to this and sent a telegram to the Stratford .bank prepared by Mr. Barton. In reply to this telegram the Strat-ford bank wrote or wired the Oakwood bank that it would guarantee payment to Mr. Neeley of any draft with public weigher’s certificate, attached drawn by him on appellant for the purchase price of the hogs ap: pellant had agreed to purchase from him.

In regard to this transaction with Mr. Barton, the appellant testified:

“I took that to mean that he wanted to satisfy. himself and the bank there for the protection of Mr. Neeley, and whether I was able to pay for the hogs. He did not say to me, ‘Mr. Gladish, I will be glad to help you all I can with your contract in this matter.’ Anything that was said or done by Mr. Neeley and the Oakwood State Bank was not for my benefit. The bank was trying to arrange some kind of way to be sure that Neeley would get his money out of those hogs. I never . called upon the First State Bank of Oakwood to guarantee the performance of this contract for me.”

Before the hogs were shipped, appellant wired appellee that the contract had expired and that he would only take them at the then market price.

Mr. Barton testified:

“My recollection of what took place there in the bank the day that Mr. Neeley and Mr. Gladish were in the bank is about as follows: Mr. Neeley came in and introduced Mr. Gladish and said he was figuring on a contract with him for the sale of some hogs, that Mr. Gladish had agreed to purchase one car of hogs from him, that the hogs had been shown to him there in town, that he had agreed to sell him one car of hogs at a stipulated price, to run in grade like the ones he had seen, and during the conversation I told Mr. Neeley that he would have to find out how this stuff was to be paid for before we could furnish him the money to buy the hogs. Yes, I furnished him the money with which to buy the hogs, and I told him that we would have to be satisfied where this money was coming from and how it was coming, and Mr.. Gladish stated to me that he eould have his bank wire us guaranteeing the payment of the draft at Oakwood. Yes, I had agreed to furnish Mr. Neeley the money to buy the hogs with. I think Mr. Gladish suggested that he would have his bank wire us. I don’t think the suggestion came from me first. Anyway, Mr. Gladish had his bank up there to wire us that they would pay for those hogs, that they would honor a draft on Mr. Gladish for these hogs with the certificate of the public weigher of Oakwood attached.
“Q. Did the telegram say anything about the draft being paid at Oakwood? A. When they wire that they will pay a draft, it is understood that they will pay free of exchange. When it is paid free of exchange, that makes it payable in Oakwood.

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gladish-v-neeley-texapp-1923.