Greer, Mills & Co. v. Gill, Harris & Co.

35 S.W. 328, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 380, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1896
DocketNo. 1527.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 S.W. 328 (Greer, Mills & Co. v. Gill, Harris & Co.) 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
Greer, Mills & Co. v. Gill, Harris & Co., 35 S.W. 328, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 380, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 74 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

COLLARD, Associate Justice.

— This suit was originally filed March 14, 1894; amended petition filed April 8, 1894, by Gill, Harris & Co., a co-partnership doing business and residing in Texas, — plaintiff Gill resident in Wise County, Smith, in Tarrant County, and Harris, in Dallas County, — against Greer, Mills & Co., a firm the members of which reside in Cook County, Illinois, and doing business as such firm in the city of Chicago, the members of the firm being J. E. Greer and Frank O. Mills. The petition shows that plaintiffs borrowed of defendants §3670 cash, for which they executed their promissory note to *381 defendants, payable twelve months after date, which note is attached to and made an exhibit to the petition; that on the same day, to secure the note, plaintiffs executed to one W. E. Cobb, trustee, defendants’ agent in Texas, a chattel mortgage upon 367 head of beef steers, plaintiffs, by the terms of the instruments, retaining the possession of the steers, by the terms of which plaintiffs were, with Cobb’s consent, when the same were ready for market, to ship to defendants at Chicago, where defendants were to sell the same for plaintiffs and apply the proceeds to the satisfaction of the note, — defendants to have fifty cents per head for marketing the same. The trust deed is attached to the petition as an exhibit and made a part of the same. It is further alleged that at various times before the maturity of the note, the dates endorsed on the note, plaintiffs paid, various amounts on the same by shipments of certain of the mortgaged steers, which were sold by defendants and proceeds applied as credits on the note; and when the note became due there only remained unpaid on it 8387, which plaintiffs proposed to Cobb to pay upon the presentation of the note and an accounting by defendants for the cattle already shipped and sold by them, and “said Cobb as the agent of defendants” agreed to present the note and upon payment of balance due to release the mortgage, but instead of doing so, it is alleged that he, Cobb, at the instance and under the direction of defendants and without plaintiffs’ consent, took possession of the forty-four head of cattle, then worth 825 per head,, and shipped them to Chicago to defendants, who received the same, and pretending to act under the deed of trust sold them, but failed to account to plaintiff for their proceeds, except in so far as to satisfy the balance due on the note; that they retained in their hands and refused to pay over to plaintiffs 8350 of such proceeds; “that by reason of the fact that said cattle were taken and shipped to and received and sold by defendants without the consent of plaintiffs and against their will, and for greatly less than their value defendants are liable to plaintiffs for the full value of the same less the balance due on said note, which amounts to the sum of 8600 for which plaintiffs sue and pray for judgment,”

The money was borrowed, the note and mortgage given as alleged, dated September 27, 1890, containing provisions as alleged — the mortgage stipulating that “when the cattle are ready for market the grantors herein shall ship the same (with the consent of the trustee) to the said Greer, Mills & Co., at Chicago, and shall pay a commission of fifty cents per head to Greer, Mills & Co. for marketing the same,” and also “And it is expressly agreed that said commissions above provided for shall become due and payable in any event, whether said cattle are shipped to said Greer, Mills & Co. or not, upon the maturity or payment of said note.”

Defendants answered by general demurrer, special exceptions that it was not shown that Cobb was the agent of defendants to make the alleged agreement, but was trustee under the deed of trust, nor that the note was due at the date of the agreement.

*382 Defendants specially pleaded the statute of limitation of two years to plaintiff’s demand; that the defendants received the cattle about the third day of November, 1891, and sold them about the same day in Chicago, 111., and that they fully informed plaintiffs of the sale about November 10, 1891, wherefore more than two years had expired since that time to the bringing of the suit. Other defenses were set up, showing full accounting to plaintiffs of all the proceeds of the sale of the cattle shipped, which were sold at the highest market price in Chicago and the balance of proceeds, after deducting amounts due, was forwarded to plaintiffs and received by them with full statement of account. There was an item in defendants’ account, as set up, of $65 for 130 head of cattle not shipped, as provided in the deed of trust, on which they charged 50 cents per head commissions, as stipulated in the deed of trust. Also that Cobb signed the note with plaintiffs and was not defendants’ agent.

Plaintiffs by supplemental petition replied to defendants’ plea of limitation by averment, “that at all times from the conversion of said cattle and from the time plaintiff’s cause of action accrued till the bringing of the suit, defendants resided, and were and remained outside of the State of Texas, and that said defendants and none of them since the accrual of said cause of action have been in the State of Texas for a period of one year or any other period of time, save at one time J. E. Greer, one of the defendants, was in Texas on a visit and for a few days only.” Plaintiffs’ reply to other matters in the account of defendants, pleaded usury, that the note bore ten per cent interest while the statutes of Illinois only allowed seven per cent interest, and that though Cobb had signed the note with plaintiffs, it was without their assent or knowledge, and that he acted for and as agent of defendant alone, and was not the agent of plaintiffs, as alleged by defendants.

October 20, 1890, the case was tried by the court without a jury and upon hearing the judge rendered judgment for plaintiffs for $286.56.

The note was signed by plaintiffs and by Cobb. It and the deed of trust are as stated in the pleadings. The forty-three head of cattle were shipped, as alleged by plaintiffs, by Cobb to defendants, in disregard of plaintiffs’ instructions; they were received by defendants at Chicago, sold by them about the 4th November, 1891, and the proceeds applied to the balance due on the note and deed of trust, as claimed by defendants, leaving a balance due plaintiffs of $59.29, which was remitted to Cobb, plaintiffs allowing Cobb to retain the same for pasturage due by them to him. Cobb had the cattle in his pasture when he shipped them to defendants at Chicago. Plaintiffs received the statement of the account from defendants showing the sale of all cattle shipped and sold, as well as the forty-three head, the application of the proceeds to the note and deed of trust, leaving the balance due plaintiffs as shown of $59.29, and plaintiffs received this statement about the 10th of November, 1891, not later than the 15th of November, 1891, and allowed Cobb to retain the same for pasturage due him by plaintiffs. There, is no conflict in the testimony or controversy about the fact that plaintiffs so received *383 the statement of account, at the time mentioned, and allowed Cobb to retain the balance as stated. Defendants were residents of the State of Illinois as alleged in plaintiffs’ replication.

Opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W. 328, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 380, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greer-mills-co-v-gill-harris-co-texapp-1896.