Gohlman, Lester Co. v. Whittle

254 S.W. 595, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 531
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1923
DocketNo. 8355. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 595 (Gohlman, Lester Co. v. Whittle) 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
Gohlman, Lester Co. v. Whittle, 254 S.W. 595, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 531 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was originally brought by appellants, a firm of cotton merchants and factors, against J. W. Whittle, to recover the sum of $16,197.97, alleged to be due them by the defendant for advances' made to him upon 193 bales of cotton shipped them by defendant for sale, and for freight, storage and insurance charges on said cotton. On the filing of the suit attachment was sued out and levied upon lands in Hardeman county supposed to be owned by the defendant. Upon the coming in of the defendant’s answer, and after the depositions of Mrs. Ada T. Whittle had been taken, it was shown that the land on which the attachment had been levied was claimed by Mrs. Whittle as her separate property. Plaintiffs therefore amended their petition, made Mrs. Whittle a party defendant, and sought judgment against both defendants for the amount of the debt and foreclosure of their factor’s lien on the cotton.

As a basis of the liability against Mrs. Whittle, it was alleged that the cotton so shipped by the said J. W. Whittle, and on which the advancements were made, constituted the separate property of Mrs. Whittle, the same having been grown on land which constituted her separate property, and that the said J. W. Whittle had acted throughout the transaction as the agent of his wife, who constituted the undisclosed principal in the transaction. As to the notes for margins for $3,000 and $1,500 respectively, which constitute a part of plaintiffs’ claim, plaintiff pleaded in the alternative that, if J. W. Whittle was not authorized to bind his wife in the execution thereof, then the notes were executed for moneys previously advanced on said cotton by the plaintiffs, and they did not know at the time they accepted said notes as margins that the said J. W. Whittle was acting in the whole transaction as an agent *596 of Ms wife, who was Ms undisclosed principal, and that, if plaintiffs could not recover on the notes, then they he permitted to recover on the advancements originally ma'de for which the notes had been executed.

Alternative allegations were made seeking to hold both Mr. and Mrs. Whittle liable concurrently, and, if Mrs. Whittle was neither liable severally or jointly with her husband, seeking to fasten liability solely and alone on the said Whittle. It was also sought in the petition to have cancelled certain deeds exe-quted by the defendant J. W. Whittle to his wife, Ada T. Whittle, of the lands which had been attached, but in the course of the trial it was mutually agreed to eliminate any contest as to the title of the lands in question.

Mrs. Whittle filed a plea of privilege to be sued in Potter county, Tex.,vw¿ich was controverted by the plaintiffs; and subject to her plea filed her answer, embodying a general demurrer, and certain special exceptions unnecessary to detail because eliminated in the course of the trial, followed by a general denial, together with disclaimer of any interest in the cotton shipped to plaintiffs, and pleaded coverture. .

The defendant J. W. Whittle filed a motion to quash the attachment levied on the land, and, subject to the motion to quash, filed a general demurrer and general denial and special plea asserting that the cotton shipped was of sufficient value to pay the'advancements, and only the negligent action of the plaintiffs in not selling the same seasonably occasioned any inadequacy of security, and at the same time filed a cross-action against plaintiffs based on damages alleged to have been sustained in the sum of $10,000 by the alleged wrongful issuance and levy of the attachment.

Plaintiffs filed supplemental pleadings for reply to Mr. and Mrs. Whittle’s pleadings, which amounted in substance to general denials of the truth thereof.

The case came on for disposition before the court, who rendered judgment on March 18, 1922, overruling Mrs. Whittle’s plea of privilege, and sustaining her general demurrer in so far as plaintiff’s alleged cause of action against her for personal liability was concerned, overruling J. W. Whittle’s motion to quash the attachment, and, on agreement of the parties, dismissing out of the case any contest of the title to the lands, or any issue looking to the cancellation of the deeds from Mr. J. W. Whittle to Mrs. Whittle, without prejudice to either of the parties to litigate such question in the proper form where the lands were situated, dismissing said J. W. Whittle’s action against Gohlman, Lester & Co. and the Lion Bonding & Surety Company, their surety on the attachment bond, for damages growing out of the alleged wrongful issuance of the attachment, rendering judgment for plaintiffs against the .defendant J. W. Whittle for the sum of $18,522.23, together with the foreclosure of a factor’s lien on 188 bales of cotton on hand at the time, and foreclosing the attachment lien on the land in so far as any interest therein might be owned by the defendant J. W. Whittle, and refusing to render judgment in favor of plaintiffs against Mrs. Ada T. Whittle. This judgment of the trial court is based upon the following findings of fact filed by the court:

After finding that the 193 bales of cotton were shipped plaintiffs by J. W. Whittle, and the advances were made him, and the charges and expenses incurred by plaintiff in handling said cotton as alleged in their petition, and that this was the usual and customary way of marketing cotton, the court made the following fact findings:

“ ‘That it was agreed that plaintiffs might have on said cotton a factor’s lien to secure plaintiffs, in the repayment to them of their advancement and of any charges to which plaintiffs might be entitled in connection with said transaction and the handling of said cotton.’
“Under fact finding VIII the court found that the cotton market continued to decline, and-, J. W. Whittle having failed to respond to calls for margins, that they brought suit and caused a writ of attachment to issue and be levied on land in Hardeman county, Tex., as the land of said Whittle.
“The court’s fact finding X is as follows:
“ ‘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 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 was 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.

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Related

Gohlman, Lester & Co. v. Whittle
273 S.W. 808 (Texas Supreme Court, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 595, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gohlman-lester-co-v-whittle-texapp-1923.