Gollnick v. Fry and Quarles

23 S.W.2d 677, 119 Tex. 23
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1930
DocketNo. 5365.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 23 S.W.2d 677 (Gollnick v. Fry and Quarles) 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
Gollnick v. Fry and Quarles, 23 S.W.2d 677, 119 Tex. 23 (Tex. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Judge LEDDY

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

*25 Certified questions from the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second District are as follows :

“This cause was before us on original hearing, the trial court having given a peremptory instruction in favor of the defendant John E. Quarles Company, as against plaintiff Gollnick’s claims and against the defendant W. S. Fry in favor of plaintiff. From a judgment in accordance with the court’s instructions, the plaintiff has appealed to this court.

“Appellant urged before this court that the evidence below established, or at least tended to establish, the issues of fact upon which plaintiff’s cause of action was predicated, towit: (1) That Fry and the John E. Quarles Company jointly undertook the construction of this house for their joint profit; (2) that the John E. Quarles Company undertook the burden as well as the benefits of the Smith contract and was under an implied obligation to construct the building, if not an express obligation, and as such the plumbing put in there by the plaintiff was furnished for the use and benefit of the John E. Quarles Company; (3) that tire John E. Quarles Company agreed with plaintiff to pay him for this work, expressly or impliedly; (4) that Fry was the agent for the John E. Quarles Company in accepting plaintiff’s bid and acted for it; (5) that the John E. Quarles Company obtained plaintiff’s work and material for its benefit by fraud and deceit.

“On original consideration, we concluded that from the evidence introduced the trial court erred in giving a peremptory instruction for John E. Quarles Company and in entering judgment for said company, and that the question of the liability of the lumber company should have been left to the jury, as will be noted from our opinion which accompanies this certificate.

“Upon appellee’s motion for rehearing, the case of Galbraith-Foxworth Lumber Co. v. Long, 5 S. W., (2d) 163, by the Dallas Court of Civil Appeals, was cited among other cases, and it was urged that the cited case decided all matters of controversy against the contentions of appellant. Appellant, on the other hand, cited the case of Clem v. Forbess, 10 S. W., (2d) 223, application for writ of error dismissed by the Supreme Court, and urged that this case practically determined the issues involved in the instant case favorable to appellant’s contentions.

“In addition to the testimony and facts mentioned in our opinion tending to show a joint undertaking or a partnership' relation between W. S. Fry and the lumber company, John E. Quarles testified *26 that he was president of the John E. Quarles Company, and that the company was engaged in buying and selling lumber and building material. That he supposed the reason Fry, the contractor, whose home was in Dallas, came to the John E. Quarles Company was that the company had a young man working for it who1 formerly worked for the Elliott Lumber Company in Dallas, and Fry had been with Elliott in Dallas. He testified:

“ ‘The contract price on this job, as I remember, was $8,750. I could not say as to what amount of money was received by me to pay out on this job from Mr. Smith, or other source; I don’t know exactly. * * * We knew to whom to- pay out that, and how much to pay them, because Fry gave us a list of what he owed on the job. Every dollar that we paid out was on Fry’s order, or sometimes he would come with the men and we would pay them there at the yard, would pay them direct. The balance we paid to men whom he told us to pay. * * * The way this job was handled was just the way most of our building contracts are handled, that is, where the contractor is not able to carry his own payroll.

“ ‘On September 22, 1926, Mr. and Mrs. Smith (who-were having the house built) came to my place of business and signed a contract with Fry, whereby the Smiths agreed to pay Fr.y $8,750, and Fry agreed to construct the improvements on the lot in question. * * * I cannot say as to whether on that day and at the same time Mr. Fry assigned over to me the written contract which he and Smith had signed. * * * I do not know it to' be a fact that on the same day that Fry got this contract he executed an instrument' whereby he assigned over to the John E. Quarles Company whatever this written assignment says here, but I imagine he did, as that is the only way we would have sold the material. We didn’t pay. anything for that assignment, nothing whatever. The records will show that the Smiths signed an acceptance of that assignment over to us. * * * When I took this assignment from Mr. Fry I did not advance him anything right then and there; when Mr. Smith made this assignment I was getting his permission to pay $8,750. I was furnishing the building material for that; I was to furnish enough building material to build the house. * * * Under this instrument we should have received the entire consideration of $8,750 on that building from Mr. Smith, but we did not receive it. I have just said that that money was for labor and material, and everything that went into the house. * * * If Mr. Gollnick had not put that plumbing in there the John E. Quarles Company, or Fry, *27 or somebody for them, would have had to put that plumbing in there, I imagine. * * * It is not a fact that if Mr. Fry, after making that assignment over to us of that money under that contract, and getting material out on the job, had gotten up and left it, we would have had to finish it. It would have been just as much the sub-contractor’s business to finish it as it was ours. * * * Q. You know that when a man contracts to build a house, and when it is built it has to be built according to the plans and specifications. This was that kind of a contract, wasn’t it ? A. I suppose it was.

“ I don’t think that I could have collected for the work on that building when it was half done, under that assignment, nor could I have collected for it when it was three-fourths finished. I don’t guess that I could have collected for it when it was all done, all finished, except the plumbing. I suppose that he was liable to us when the building was completely finished. * * *

“ ‘Q. So that before the John E. Quarles company could get anything under that assignment from Smith they would have to see that the building was completed, just as it was contracted, wouldn’t they ? A. I don’t know as it would be up to us to finish it.

“ ‘It is a question for the courts to decide as to whether or not before we can collect a dime of that $8,750 we have got to see that the building is completed and delivered to Smith. Somebody would have to finish it, but it would not be our duty to finish it. We were just holding this stuff as collateral. I do not think that after we.put the material in it we would have to see that the house was completed before we could get our money. Yes, we were the one to collect that $8,750. No, we did not go ahead and put out the money necessary to compléte that building. All the money paid out to anybody was paid out by the Quarles Lumber Company, except what Fry put out himself.’

“Mr. Gollnick testified that he had heard Mr. Quarles testimony about telling him, Gollnick, that Fry had been recommended by the lumber companies in Dallas, and that those statements were made to him after he had finished the job. That he talked to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W.2d 677, 119 Tex. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gollnick-v-fry-and-quarles-tex-1930.