Gohlman, Lester & Co. v. Whittle

273 S.W. 808, 114 Tex. 548, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 112
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1925
DocketNo. 4066.
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 273 S.W. 808 (Gohlman, Lester & Co. v. Whittle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gohlman, Lester & Co. v. Whittle, 273 S.W. 808, 114 Tex. 548, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 112 (Tex. 1925).

Opinion

MB. JUSTICE GBEENWOOD,

delivered the opinion of the court.

By their third amended original petition plaintiffs in error alleged that on and subsequent to March 15, 1920, they as cotton factors had made advancements and paid freight, fire insurance, and storage on 193 bales of cotton which belonged to the separate estate of defendant in error Mrs. Ada T. Whittle and which had been consigned to them under a contract between them and defendant in error J. W. Whittle. Plaintiffs in error sought to recover of defendant in error, Mrs. Ada T. Whittle, or of both defendants in error, large sums alleged to be balances due for the advancements made on the cotton or for charges for its transportation, insurance, and storage.

Plaintiffs in error sued out an attachment which was levied on several tracts of land.

After setting forth the consignment contract and the amounts claimed for advancements on the cotton and charges against same, as well as various notes executed by defendant in error J. W. Whittle for margins to secure plaintiffs in error against declines in the market value of the cotton, plaintiffs in error.alleged:

“That plaintiffs are advised and believe that at the time the said J. W. Whittle shipped them said cotton and drew said advancements against said cotton and executed said notes as additional margin on said cotton, that said cotton was the separate property of his wife, Ada T. Whittle, and that in all said transactions the said J. W. Whittle was acting as the agent for his wife, with her full knowledge and consent, she being then and there at all times the undisclosed principal of the defendant, J. W. Whittle; that plaintiffs did not know at the time said cotton was shipped to them and at the time of the transaction hereinabove detailed, including the making of said *554 advancements and the execution of said notes by the defendant, J. W. Whittle, that he was acting as the agent of his wife, who was his undisclosed principal; and in this connection plaintiffs allege that the said J. W. Whittle, acting as agent for his wife, defendant Ada T. Whittle, had full authority from her to market said cotton and to do any and all things reasonable and necessary to the marketing thereof; that it is the customary and usual method of marketing cotton for the owner to ship the same to cotton factors for sale and to draw advancements against the same; and plaintiffs allege that by reason of the premises, and by reason of the shipping of said cotton to plaintiffs and drawing advancements against the same, and that by reason of the making, executing and delivery of said notes as additional margins by the said J. W. Whittle, that the defendant, Ada T. Whittle, as his undisclosed principal, became bound, liable and promised to pay plaintiffs, the full sum of said advancements and of said additional margins represented by said notes executed by the said J. W. Whittle; and in this connection plaintiffs show the court that said notes provided for ten per 'cent attorneys ’ fee if not paid when due and turned over to an attorney for collection, and said notes having been defaulted in and having been turned over to attorneys for collection, that said additional ten per cent on the principal and interest thereof is now due and payable, as attorneys’ fee.”

Besides a general demurrer, Mrs. Ada T. Whittle presented various special exceptions to plaintiffs in error’s petition, and pleaded, in addition to a general denial, that the consigned cotton was community property of herself and husband, disclaiming title in her separate estate, and that she was under the disabilities of coverture from the date of the consignment contract.

Defendant in error J. W. Whittle answered with a general denial and special pleas charging plaintiffs in error with negligence in handling the cotton and seeking to recover of plaintiffs in error actual and punitive damages for the wrongful and malicious issuance and levy of the attachment.

The District Court found that 193 bales of cotton were consigned to plaintiffs in error by defendant in error J. W. Whittle and that advancements were made and charges incurred against same as alleged, all in accord with an usual and customary method of marketing cotton.

The District Court further found:

11 That the land on which the cotton was grown, which was shipped to plaintiffs and on which said advancements and charges accrued, was the separate property of the defendant Mrs. Ada T. Whittle; that the defendant J. W. Whittle, as the husband of defendant Ada T. Whittle, and with her full authority and consent, and as her agent, had full charge, supervision, and management of said farms, which lay in Hardeman County, Tex., and had charge of the renting of said *555 farms and the cultivation thereof and the marketing and selling of said cotton, and all the income to be derived from said crops was used by them for their mutual benefit. That the farms were rented to several different tenants, who produced the cotton on the land which was shipped to the plaintiffs, under contracts by which the tenants would own certain portions of the crop and the owner of the land would own the proper portion; and plaintiffs offered to introduce testimony to show that advancements were made to said tenants to enable them to plant and produce said crops, and that the advancements made by the plaintiffs against said cotton were for the purpose of repaying the advancements made by the owner of said land to the tenants to enable the tenants to cultivate said crops, but the court refused to permit the introduction of said testimony, because of the court’s ruling that in no event under the allegations could the defendant, Mrs. Ada T. Whittle, be held liable for any deficiency judgment that might be recovered, as the undisclosed principal of the defendant J. W. Whittle or otherwise. That the respective portions of the ownership of the cotton crops on said land belonging to Mrs. Whittle was three-fourths to the tenants planting and cultivating the same and one-fourth to the owner of the land. That the status between the defendants J. W. Whittle and wife with regard to the management of said farms and the marketing of said crops is shown by the following testimony of said two witnesses:

“The defendant, J. W. Whittle, in answer to the fourteenth interrogatory in his deposition, testified:

“ ‘I managed and supervised the renting of the land, the planting of crops and the marketing of the crops. I had an arrangement with my wife whereby I managed and supervised the renting of the land, the planting of the crops and marketing them, and we used the rentals and proceeds of the land and cotton for the support of our family.

That is, my time and labor offset the use of the land, and the earnings from the land was divided half and half between us, out of which we lived and supported our family.' ”

Mrs. Whittle testified in answer to cross-interrogatories numbered 40 and 41, as follows:

“ ‘My husband has attended to the management of the farms, the cultivation and planting of the same, but they are my property, and he has not managed them by any right claimed by him, but simply from the natural interest that he had in me and our family and in trying to make my property return as large a revenue as it could be made to return.' ”

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Bluebook (online)
273 S.W. 808, 114 Tex. 548, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gohlman-lester-co-v-whittle-tex-1925.