Gugenheim v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc.

198 S.W.2d 950, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 627
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 1946
DocketNo. 9613.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 198 S.W.2d 950 (Gugenheim v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc.) 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
Gugenheim v. Anheuser-Busch, Inc., 198 S.W.2d 950, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 627 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

BAUGH, Justice.

Appeal is from an order of the district •court sustaining appellees’ plea of privilege and transferring the cause to the district court of Dallas County, Texas.

Jac E, Gugenheim, and eight other named individuals, doing business under the trade name as Gugenheim-Goldsmith Co. sued Anheuser-Busch, a Texas corporation, and August A. Busch & Co., a foreign (Missouri) corporation, having a permit to do business in Texas, for breach of contract. Both corporations filed pleas of privilege to be sued in Dallas County. In their controverting plea, in addition to specifically adopting the fact allegations .of their petition, appellants alleged in ex-tenso facts relied upon as constituting a written contract with appellees, performable in Travis County, set out the breach thereof in detail by appellees, and predicated venue in Travis County specifically under Sub. 5 of Art. 1995, R.C.S., Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. art. 1995, subd. 5. Hearing was had on the venue issue and the trial court sustained appellees’ pleas on November 6, 1946. On November 7, 1946, appellants filed a motion for “new trial or rehearing” wherein they urged for the first time that under their controverting plea and the proof made,, venue in Travis County would properly lie under Sub. 23, Art. 1995, R.C. S., in that the “cause of action, or a part thereof” under their pleadings and proof, arose in Travis County. The trial court entertained such motion, had a hearing thereon, and on November 22, 1946, overruled same, apparently on the ground that this exception to the venue statute had not been pleaded nor relied upon by appellants in the original controverting plea, nor in the hearing thereon.

The first question thus presented is whether, in view of the provisions of Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, rule 385(e) that “In all appeals from interlocutory orders there shall be no motion for a new trial * * the trial court, having entered its judgment, the appellants had any right to file such motion, or whether the court in its discretion could legally entertain or act upon such motion other than to dismiss it. Under the conclusions we have reached we do not find it necessary to decide this question. This for the reason that we are of the opinion that without such motion or the court’s action thereon, appellants both pleaded and proved venue facts or grounds sufficient to sustain venue in Travis County under Sub. 23, Art. 1995, R.C.S., even though they did not in their controverting plea expressly predicate venue on said exception. And in passing upon this appeal we do so as if said motion had not been filed, but as though the' appellants had, without filing any motion in the trial court, prosecuted their appeal direct from the order of November 7, 1946, and were urging here for the first time the grounds presented to the trial court.

*952 We think it -is clear that the appellants sufficiently pleaded and made prima facie proof of a contract in writing with appel-lees. The appellees offered no proof on the venue hearing other than to cross examine appellants’ only witness. It is not controverted that appellees were corporations. However, the only portion of said contract alleged to have been breached by appellees was performable in St. Louis, Missouri, and not in Travis County, Texas. Consequently, they did not establish venue in Travis County under Sub. 5 of Art. 1995.

The material facts and circumstances giving rise to the contract in question, pleaded and proved, were substantially as follows: Appellants had been district distributors for appellees of Budweiser beer in Travis and surrounding counties, — six in all — for many years prior to the beginning of World War No. 2. The war curtailed the supply and use of tin in industry and virtually eliminated the use of tin cans as containers for beer. Appellees, however, had adequate supplies of glass bottles, but insufficient tin to make caps or crowns for such bottles. They thereupon inaugurated what was designated as a “tin program” to acquire tin to make crowns for glass bottles. This was done through offers by letters, bulletins, circulars, etc., to their distributors throughout the United States to collect and send to August A. Busch & Company at St. Louis, Missouri, used tin cans from which crowns for bottles could be made. The beer manufactured at St. Louis was, after the war began, allotted to these distributors on the basis of 70% of the amount sold to each distributor in 1941. But as an inducement to them to collect, salvage, prepare and ship to the manufacturer used tin cans, August A. Busch &. Company offered to increase the allotment of beer for civilian sale and use in proportion to the amount /of tin collected, processed and shipped to it by the distributor. The program was authorized by the federal government, collectors of tin were required to secure licenses to do so, and ceiling prices for the purchase and sale of such tin fixed by OPA. In its directives, letters, circulars, bulletins, etc., issued by August A. Busch & Company, all signed by its authorized agents, and mailed to its distributors, including Gugenheim-Goldsmith Co., at Austin, Texas, full and complete instructions were given to them as to how to proceed, together with agreement to pay costs thereof and freight on the tin shipped from point of origin to St. Louis, Missouri. Clearly these various instruments duly signed by an officer or agent of appellees, constituted an offer in writing to appellants, upon the terms therein stated, under which, if complied with, said appellees agreed to ship to appellants the quantities of beer stated in such offer, in addition to the regular allotment to them based on their 1941 purchases. While the proof fails to show any written acceptance by appellants of such offer, the appellants did act thereon, employed additional men to collect, process, pack and ship from Austin, Texas, to said appellee at St. Louis, Missouri, large-quantities of such tin, on which August A. Busch & Company paid the freight, accepted and used, and gave credit to appellants for additional quantities of beer for civilian use. On January 5, 1945, in a written statement, appellees in a letter to appellants acknowledged that by virtue-of their “tin account statement” appellants-were then due on said account a balance-of 131,163 cases of beer.

Under these circumstances there-was clearly a written contract between, appellants and appellees for the shipment of additional quantities of beer over and. above their regular allotment, determinable by the amount of tin shipped by appellants to August A. Busch & Co. at St.. Louis. It is settled law that an offer in, writing, though not accepted in writing by the offeree, but which is received, acted upon and performed by him, and the of-ferer receives the benefit of such performance, constitutes a contract in writing between the parties. 10 Tex.Jur., § 19, p. 38;. § 152, p. 265, and cases cited.

It was for breach of this contract that-this suit was brought. From the above statement it is clear that such contract, so. far as appellants were concerned, was performable where the tins were collected'. *953 and shipped. All correspondence concerning the offer was addressed to appellants at Austin, Texas, and all tins shipped by appellants from Austin, Texas.

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198 S.W.2d 950, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gugenheim-v-anheuser-busch-inc-texapp-1946.