Guaranty Bank & Trust Co. v. Beaumont Cadillac Co.

218 S.W. 638, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 95
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1920
DocketNo. 444.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 638 (Guaranty Bank & Trust Co. v. Beaumont Cadillac 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
Guaranty Bank & Trust Co. v. Beaumont Cadillac Co., 218 S.W. 638, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 95 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This suit was brought in the Fifty-Eighth district court of Jefferson county, Tex., by Guaranty Bank & Trust Company of Beaumont, Tex., as plaintiff, against Beaumont Cadillac Company, alleged to be a partnership composed of C. F. Gydeson, E. T. Barden, and H. D. Ellis, and against the persons named individually, and also against the Houston Motor Car Company, a corporation having its domicile in Houston, Harris county, Tex. The suit was based upon five promissory notes, as follows, to wit:

A note for $300, dated November 15, 1916, due 90 days after date; a second note for $450, bearing date December 1, 1916, due 60 days after date; a third note for $245, dated December 21, 1916, due 30 days after date; a fourth note for $500, hearing date January 8, 1917, due 90 days after date; and a fifth note for $500, bearing date January 18, 1917, due 60 days after date — each of these notes bearing interest at the rate, oi) 10 per cent, per annum after maturity, and providing for the usual 10 per cent, attorney’s fees. All of said notes were payable to Guaranty Bank & Trust Company of Beaumont, Tex., and signed Beaumont Cadillac Company, per H. D. Ellis, Manager.

The court tried this case without a jury, and on motion of appellee, defendant below, filed conclusions of law and fact.

Some time prior to 1915, the Houston Motor Car Company, a Texas corporation domiciled in Houston, Harris county, Tex., established in Beaumont, Jefferson county, Tex., a branch establishment under the business name of Beaumont Cadillac Company. The funds and stock of the Beaumont Cadillac Company were furnished by the Houston Motor Car Company. The manager or the Beaumont Cadillac Company was employed by the Houston Motor Car Company. All other employSs of this branch establishment were employed and discharged by the manager of the Beaumont Cadillac Company at his pleasure. All of the employes of this branch establishment were paid from the funds of this branch establishment. George De Witt, a prior manager of this branch establishment, was relieved of his duties on or about January 15, 1915, and was succeeded by H. D. Ellis. For several years prior thereto, Ellis had been a trusted employs of the Houston Motor Car Company in Houston, and the officers, agents, and employes of this corporation retained this confidence in him until January 15 or 20, 1917, at which time it was discovered that Ellis was short in his accounts in the sum of about $4,500. *639 When, this discovery was made, the Houston' Motor Car Company at once discharged him and instituted against him criminal proceedings. In managing this branch establishment, Ellis had authority to buy in Beaumont such incidental supplies as he needed, and had authority from the Houston Motor Car Company to sell cars on time. He also had authority to collect all notes, bills, and accounts due the Houston Motor Car Com,pany; but he was without authority to sign notes or to borrow money for said business in any manner or under any conditions, and likewise he was without authority to sign the company’s name to any negotiable paper.

The following additional facts were relied upon by appellant to establish Ellis’ authority to execute the notes sued on in this case:

(1) In 1915, Ellis went to the appellant bank with E. T. Barden and introduced him to Mr. Nees, cashier of said bank, saying, “Mr. Barden of Beaumont Cadillac Company” or “our company.” Mr. Barden, on this occasion, discussed the Beaumont Cadillac Company’s prospects with Mr. Nees, and remarked that “they were getting along nicely and hoped to get a good business established in Beaumont.” Mr. Barden, being in the electrical business, further said to Mr. Nees, “We are doing business with you people and would like to have a chance to sell you your fixtures.”

(2) With the knowledge and consent of the Houston Motor Car Company, Ellis opened an account for the Beaumont Cadillac Company in plaintiffs bank, and conducted his banking business through this bank.

(3) Beginning about May 1, 1915, and continuously up until he was discharged in January, 1917, Ellis, without protest on the part of the defendants E. T. Barden, C. P. Gydeson, or Houston Motor' Car Company (but without their knowledge or consent and and without their authority), drew checks on the funds of the Beaumont Cadillac Company deposited in plaintiffs bank, signed Beaumont Cadillac Company, by H. D. Ellis, Manager, to pay his personal accounts; the total amount of these checks, entirely exclusive of his salary, aggregating $3,897.05. Ellis also drew checks to cash,” amounting to $758.88, and to himself in the amount of $779.22. He drew all of these checks exclusive of his salary.

(4) The passbook of the Beaumont Cadillac Company contained all the deposits of every kind and character made by H. D. Ellis, including the proceeds of the notes sued on in this case, and also the proceeds of a prior note originally made on the 15th of December, 1915. (This note was renewed from time to time, and, as renewed, was reduced by partial payments, until finally paid in full.) When some of the deposits were made, deposit slips were issued to the Beaumont Cadillac Company. Some of these deposit slips show on their face that they were issued to cover the proceeds of the notes sued on. This deposit book and these deposit slips were with the papers of the Beaumont Cadillac Company and were on file in its office.

(5) This passbook was balanced every month. This balance showed total deposits so much; checks returned so much. Each month when the book was balanced, all canceled checks were returned to the Beaumont Cadillac Company.

(6) Every 60 or 90 days during all the time Ellis was manager of the Beaumont Cadillac Company, appellee sent an auditor from Houston to audit the books and accounts of the Beaumont Cadillac Company, and to check the stock. All books and papers of the Beaumont Cadillac Company were subject to his inspection, and a careful audit by him would have given him knowledge of all transactions had by H. D. Ellis for the Beaumont 'Cadillac Company, including the issuance of checks in payment of his personal accounts and checks issued in favor of himself and for cash, and of the execution by him of all the notes sued on in this Case. This auditor did not audit all the books and papers of ap-pellee. He never examined the passbook nor the deposit slips nor the check book nor the canceled checks. It was his custom to notify Ellis one or two or three days in advance of his arrival.

(7) Ellis was given the title of manager by the Houston Motor Car Company. He was actively in charge of the business of the Beaumont Cadillac Company, and was held out as the one in control and authority. Large assignments of cars were shipped to him, and he in turn sold and delivered the cars, collected the proceeds of the sales, deposited proceeds of such sales to the credit of the Beaumont Cadillac Company in plaintiff’s bank, drew drafts thereon, paid salaries of employés and paid out of said funds accounts contracted at various supply houses in Beaumont, made large reinittances to E. T. Barden, individually, from funds deposited in the name of Beaumont Cadillac Company, and to Barden Electric Company, and to the Houston Motor Car Company, and handled the financial affairs of said company, in so far as plaintiff knew or was advised, without restriction or hindrance.

(8) On October 9, 1916, Ellis, as manager of the Beaumont Cadillac Company, sold Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 638, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guaranty-bank-trust-co-v-beaumont-cadillac-co-texapp-1920.