Greer, Mills & Co. v. Featherston

69 S.W. 69, 95 Tex. 654, 1902 Tex. LEXIS 213
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1902
DocketNo. 1120.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 69 (Greer, Mills & Co. v. Featherston) 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
Greer, Mills & Co. v. Featherston, 69 S.W. 69, 95 Tex. 654, 1902 Tex. LEXIS 213 (Tex. 1902).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The Court of Civil Appeals of the Second Supreme Judicial District has certified to this court the following statement and question:

“This appeal is from a judgment allowing appellee $1000 as compensation for services rendered appellants from July 7 to December 31, 1899, and $50.65 as incidental expenses incurred for the benefit of ap-
pellants. “Appellee, residing at Henrietta, Texas, undertook to represent appellants, live stock commission merchants, doing business at Chicago and other cities, as soliciting agent in Texas for the year 1899, as he had done during preceding years, at a salary of $3500, payable monthly, and *658 such reasonable expenses as appellants had been in the habit of allowing him. The business or employment so undertaken was such as soliciting agents for live stock commission companies usually do or perform, and required appellee to solicit shipments of cattle, and to make and solicit loans for appellants. In making loans the appellee was required to become responsible equally with the borrower and to add his own name to the notes, which were usually secured by mortgages on cattle, in which he was made trustee, and which were -made payable to appellants, and by them assigned in the course of their business to others. Included in the duty of soliciting shipments of cattle was that of making commission contracts and collecting the usual commission of 50 cents a head when the cattle were not shipped to appellants in accordance with these contracts; but the business was principally a money-lending business. The commission year began with February, and loans were made or renewed in the spring and fall on from six to eight months time. It was the duty, as well as to the interest, of appellee to look after these loans, covering, as they did, movable security, in ordér to protect the holders and indorsers of the notes and himself as comaker and guarantor. Appellee received his salary in monthly payments up to July 7, 1899, when his employment ceased, as will be seen, we think, from the following correspondence:
“ ‘Henrietta, Texas, July 3, 1899.
“‘J. E. Greer, Esq., Union Stock Yards, Chicago, Ill.:
“ ‘Dear Sir.—I do not want to loan any more commission money. I have several reasons for my not wanting to do so. One is on account of the state of my health. I am not able to look after such matters as carefully as I would want to. Another is, the risk is too great for me to take where I have to indorse all paper. I thought best to write you this at ■once. So if you had another application for money in this territory you could have some one else to look after it. My health is some better since I had the operation performed in Yew York,' but am not well by any means. Am working all the time, but am very weak. Respectfully yours,
“‘W. H. Featherstok/
- “ ‘Union Stock Yards, Chicago, July 7, 1899.
“ ‘W. H. Featherston, Henrietta, Texas :
“ ‘Dear Sir.—In reply to your letter of July 3, would say we are sorry to lose you from our force of solicitors, but, of course, if you can not see your way clear in the future to sign paper on loans that you make for us, and your health is not good enough to look after the business,- we can not blame you for wishing to quit. Hereafter you will kindly refer applicants to George Beggs, at Fort Worth. We will try and take care of them when it is desirable. Yours truly,
“ ‘Greer, Mills & Co/
*659 “July 8, 1899, and before he had received the letter of July 7th, appellee wrote appellants as follows: Tinder the present condition of affairs, I do not think it is right that I should remain in your employ any longer. In the past I have been loyal to Greer, Mills & Co., but since showing the disposition you have, to treat me, as I think, in a very unfair way, it would be impossible for me to be as loyal towards you as I think I should be for a firm that I am working for, and feel that it would be dishonest in me to continue longer, but as there is considerable paper out that I am responsible for, it will be quite a while before it all matures, and I will have to look after the collection of the same, as well as being responsible, and, of course, will not want to do this without compensation; neither would I agree for anyone else to take charge of this paper and I continue to be responsible for the payment. I would suggest this: That you investigate all the paper that I have out, and if you find it safe, release me from any further responsibility/
“Again, on September 8, 1899, he wrote them as follows: 'Referring to my letter to you of date July 8, 1899,1 have to say that you have never informed me as to whether I would still be held on the paper referred to in said letter. Of course, if you expect to hold me responsible for the payment of said paper, I will have to be paid for my time in collecting it, which will amount to what my salary was. Please notify me by return mail whether you have released me on paper indorsed by me and held or negotiated by you. If you decline to do so I will consider that you owe me salary at the rate of $2500 per year, up to the time of maturity of all said paper/ To this appellants replied by letter of September 14, 1899, as follows: 'Replying to your letter of September 8th, if you will look at telegram sent you July 26th, you will find our decision which answers the communication which you say has not been answered. The paper you mention has been sold, and, of course, all makers on the notes are liable to the holders of the same. We accepted your resignation July 7th, and from that time you have not been in our employ. As you are one of the makers on this paper, , it will be expected you will see that it is paid promptly at maturity/ In their letter of September 5, 1899, correcting the error of their bookkeeper in crediting appellee with full month’s wages for July, appellants stated that he had ceased working for them on the 7th of July. Other letters and telegrams passed between the parties, but we find nothing in them to change the status fixed by what is above quoted.
“The notes taken and guaranteed by appellee, and assigned by appellants, amounted, on July 7, 1899, to $100,000 or over, and as they matured appellants repeatedly urged upon appellee the payment thereof, and he continued to look after the same till the last note was paid, December 21, 1899. He also released the mortgages given to secure the notes and caused to be collected on the commission contracts made in connection with the loans, but which he did not guarantee, as much as thirty-seven or thirty-eight hundred dollars, after July 7, 1899; that is, when the loans he was looking after were paid, the incidental eommis *660 sions in most instances were also paid. None of the loans were in fact collected by him, and only a portion of his time was given to looking after them.
“The case was tried before the judge without a jury, and judgment entered for appellee for $1000. No motion for new trial was made.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 69, 95 Tex. 654, 1902 Tex. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-mills-co-v-featherston-tex-1902.