Gregory v. Newsom

279 S.W. 912
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1926
DocketNo. 6925.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 279 S.W. 912 (Gregory v. Newsom) 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
Gregory v. Newsom, 279 S.W. 912 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

MeCLENDON, C. j.

Suit by J. T. New-som, doing business under the trade-name of Southwestern Music Company, against Holland Y. Gregory, to recover a piano or its value. Trial by jury. Judgment for plaintiff for $250, the amount sued for, and costs upon a directed verdict. Defendant has appealed.

The ’controlling question in the case is whether there -was any issuable fact which would support a verdict in defendant’s favor.

Plaintiff was engaged in the piano business in Corsicana. Defendant resided near Street-man. On December 14,1923, plaintiff shipped the piano from Corsicana to Streetman under an open bill of lading, in which Miss Flora Parker was named as consignor and J. G. Madison consignee. Shipment was made for the purpose of placing the piano in the home of defendant as a prospective purchaser. It was taken by Madison from the railway agent at Streetman and delivered at defendant’s residence. Defendant purchased it from Madison as owner for $278, under the representation by Madison that he owned it.

Plaintiff testified, in substance, as follows: He knew of defendant and had probably met him, and knew that he was a reputable citizen of Streetman, and had had business dealings with some of his relatives, having sold one or two .pianos to them. He first met Madison about December 10 or 11, 1923, when Madison called at his place of business in Corsicana and purchased a used piano for $225, of which $25 was cash, and the balance represented by eight notes of $25 each, secured by a lien on the piano. This piano was shipped by plaintiff to Madison at Street-man. Madison represented to him that he was engaged in the oil business, He nest saw Madison December 14th, early in the morning, at his place of business in Corsica-na, at which time Madison made a second payment of $25 on the piano he had purchased, and told plaintiff that, if he would send another piano to Streetman, he was confident he could sell it to defendant. The roads were bad, and the piano could not be shipped by truck, so it was hurriedly boxed, sent to the depot that morning, and shipped as above stated. Madison stated that defendant wanted to try out the piano for a few days, asked that it be shipped to himself, and that he would deliver it to the Gregorys, representing in this regard that he had a crew of men who would make the delivery without charge to plaintiff. There was no explanation of the cause for making the consignor Miss Flora Parker, other than that there was a woman of that name in plaintiff’s employ. Late that evening Madison phoned plaintiff, advising that the piano had arrived, but that the stool was broken, and wanted another sent down, that Gregory seemed well pleased with the piano, and that he (Madison) “would be up Sunday afternoon, and would be in the store early Monday morning and see him.” Madison did not come, and on Monday evening plaintiff telephoned defendant’s wife; the substance of the conversation being that he-asked her how she liked the piano, and she -replied that she liked it very well. Pie told her that he could not come on that day, but that he would be down the next day and close the deal, if they wanted the piano, to which she replied that that was all right. This was substantially all that was said. He testified to the following telephone conversation with her the next day:

“Mrs. Gregory called me, and I answered the phone. She asked me if we had shipped that piano down there, and I told her, ‘Yes,’ and I asked her why, and she said, ‘Well, this man Madison delivered the piano to them, and they paid him for it.’ I told her we had shipped it, and expected to come down on Monday to close the deal. She said that he represented that it was his piano, and he had gotten it from his house in Dallas, that he said they had a house here in Corsicana and also one in Dallas, and that he did not have the kind of piano here she wanted and he would have to go to Dallas and get it, and that he did get it from the Dallas house, but it had to come here to Corsicana to be shipped down here. She said that they paid him for it, but that she spoke to Mr. Gregory and told him that there was something wrong about it. She said that the Southwestern Music Company’s name was on the box, and called Mr. Gregory’s attention to it. I told her that I would be down as soon as I could get there. I asked her to call Mr. Madison, but *914 she told me that he had left Streetman on Sunday. That was about the sum and substance of the conversation I had with Mrs. Gregory over the phone. Mrs. Gregory said they would be up here the next day.”

He testified that he gave Madison no authority to sell the piano, hut that the arrangement simply was that Madison was to deliver it to the house of defendant, and, if he liked it, plaintiff would go down to Street-man and close the transaction.

On cross-examination, he testified:

“I told Mr. Madison that I was willing to take $250 for the piano, and I was willing that he should have anything over $250 the piano might sell for.”

The evidence shows that Madison was a stranger in Streetman; that he had come there a short time before the transaction in .question, representing himself to be a piano tuner and dealer in used pianos. He talked to a number of people in the community with a view of selling them used pianos. He bought a piano about December 10th from plaintiff, which he sold to a Mr. McKissack, a neighbor of defendant, for $285. This piano was taken direct from the depot where it had been shipped to the McKissacks. Mrs. Gregory saw this piano at the McKissack home and wanted a similar one, and in this way she came in contact with Madison, who represented to her that he could get her a piano in Dallas. He left Streetman and returned in a very short time, stating that he had failed to get the piano he wanted, but had arranged for another one which would be shipped from Dallas to Corsicana in a through car,, and there reeonsigned by local freight over the T. & B. V. to Streetman. This conversation was on Friday, December 14th. The piano in fact arrived at Street-man that evening, and was delivered on Saturday morning about 9 o’clock at defendant’s residence, under the direction of Madison, by a local drayman, who was paid $5 by Madison for his services. When the piano was delivered at defendant’s residence, defendant and his wife wanted a little time to try it out. This Madison allowed them, and that afternoon about 2 o’clock defendant gave Madison his check for $278 on a local bank, which check was promptly cashed by Madison. A written receipt or bill of sale for the piano was given by Madison to defendant. Both defendant and his wife testified that the box in which the piano was shipped .bore two shipping tags, each of which showed that it was shipped from Miss Flora Parker at Corsicana, and that there was nothing on the box or the piano to indicate that plaintiff had any connection with it whatever.

There is a sharp conflict in the testimony of the plaintiff on one hand and defendant and wife on the other with reference to conversations over the telephone and a conversation. in Corsicana between, plaintiff on the one hand and defendant and his wife on the other, which occurred on Friday, December 21, 1923. Mrs. Gregory testified that she never had any telephone conversation with plaintiff, and that the first information she or her husband had regarding plaintiff’s connection with the piano was about 9 o’clock Wednesday evening, December 19, 1923, when plaintiff éalled defendant over the telephone.

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Bluebook (online)
279 S.W. 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-v-newsom-texapp-1926.