H. W. Williams & Co. v. Turner-Myers Drug Co.

248 S.W. 825
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 23, 1922
DocketNo. 10082.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 825 (H. W. Williams & Co. v. Turner-Myers Drug 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
H. W. Williams & Co. v. Turner-Myers Drug Co., 248 S.W. 825 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

The J.-W. Crowdus Drug Company instituted this suit in the county court of Dallas county against the Turner-Myers Drug Company, a copartnership, composed of J. E. Turner and C. R. Myers, to recover upon an open account in the sum of $998.67. Turner resided in Bosque county, Tex., and Myers resided in Eastland county, Tex. On April 27, 1920, the defendant Turner filed his plea of privilege to be sued in the county of his residence. The plea was sustained and the cause transferred from the county court of Dallas county to the county court of Bosque county.

After the suit was transferred, as stated, J. E. Turner filed an 'answer in which he made the appellant H. W. Williams & Co. and eight other firms and individuals parties to the suit. All of the persons and firms named in such answer were nonresidents of Bosque county; the defendant Turner alone of all the parties engaged in the controversy being a resident of Bosque county. H. W. Williams & Co., as also the others named in the cross-plea, appeared and presented pleas of privilege to be sued in the county of their residence. It was agreed that the pleas should be considered and determined upon the plea of H. W. Williams & Co. The plea is in all respects in compliance with the statute and set up the fact that H. W. Williams & Co. had its domicile and principal place of business in the city of Fort Worth, Tarrant county, Tex., and that none of the exceptions to the statute authorizing suits elsewhere existed. The defendant Turner controverted the plea of privilege, and after a hearing thereon it was overruled, and H. W. Williams & Co. have appealed.

The controverting affidavit of the defendant Turner alleged substantially the facts presented in his plea for additional parties upon which it is sought to retain jurisdiction against H. W. Williams & Co. and thé other .parties named in Bosque county. Briefly stated, the material facts so alleged are as follows: That during the year 1919 the said Turner & Myers, as partners, were engaged in business as druggists under the name of the Turner-Myers Drug Company; that on the 26th day of August of that year Turner sold out his interest in the business to C. L. Myers, Myers, as consideration, giving Turner two notes for $900 each and assuming to pay all outstanding indebtedness, including the account or indebtedness upon which the J. W. Crowdus Drug Company had instituted its suit; that after such dissolution Myers continued said business in Desdemona under the name of C. R. Myers'Drug Company until about November 15, 1919, when Myers got in an embarrassed financial condition and came to Fort Worth and called a meeting of his creditors, including the J. W. Crowdus Drug Company and the H. W. Williams Drug Company and the other persons, firms, and corporations named in his cross plea; that at said meeting it was finally arranged between Myers and his said creditors that he (Myers) should, for a consideration of $700 in cash then paid to him, set over and assign to Dr. R. McDaniel his said stock of drugs in Desdemona and the leasehold estate upon which the business had been conducted, as a trustee for the benefit of all of said creditors, said creditors also assuming to pay each and all of the outstanding indebtedness of the C. R. Myers Drug Company and the Turner & Myers Drug Company, which included the account declared upon by the J. W. Crowdus Drug Company. It was further alleged that pursuant to such settlement and agreement Dr. McDaniel took charge of the business at Desdemona and later sold it to Dr. Kuykendall upon terms not thought to be necessary to state, and that, later, while the business yvas being so conducted by Kuykendall, the property, which was uninsured, had been destroyed by fire.

As presented in defendant Turner’s cross-plea for additional parties, it seems that Turner bases his right to relief upon two theories. 'The first, upon the theory of a conversion of the stock of merchandise referred to; and, second, upon the theory that, by virtue of the agreement of H. W. Williams & Co. and the other creditors to pay the outstanding indebtedness of the Turner-Myers Drug Company and of the C. R. Myers' Drug Company, the said H. W. Williams Drug Company and the other creditors of the concerns became the principal debtors of J. W. Crowdus Drug Company upon the account declared upon, and he (Turner) but a surety for the payment thereof, invoking article 6336, V. S. Tex. Civ. Statutes, which declares that—

“No surety shall be sued, unless his principal is joined with him, or unless a judgment has previously been rendered against his principal,” except in certain cases not necessary to here specify.

We do not think the action of the court in overruling the plea of privilege can be sustained on the ground that there was a conversion of property in which the appellee Turner had an interest of any kind. If, under any consideration, it could be said that the appellant H. W. Williams & Co. or the other creditors were guilty of a conversion so as to bring the case within the ninth excep *827 tion to article 1830, Rev. Statutes, giving a defendant the right to he sued in the county of his domicile, except where the foundation of the Suit is some crime, or offense, or trespass for which a civil action in damages may-lie. Because,- if it was a conversion, it was in Eastland county or Tarrant county, and not in Bosque county. However, we need not consider this phase of the case, for on the appeal the appellee Turner distinctly states, in his first, second, and third counter propositions that he does not seek to recover for a conversion of the property or “expect venue in this case by reason of a suit of trespass or in conversion.”

It therefore only remains for us to determine whether, under the facts stated, H. W. Williams & Co. bears such relation to the appellee Turner, or is so connected with the debt of J. W. Crowdus Drug Company upon which the suit in Bosque county is pending, as to confer upon Turner the right to sue the appellant company and the other creditors in Bosque county. If, in fact, as appellee Turner in part contends, at the creditors’ meeting at Eort Wolth, the creditors agreed to pay the indebtedness of the business at Desdemona and discharge both Turner and Myers, and if the J. W. Crowdus Drug Company was in fact a party to that agreement and consented to such discharge, such .facts would constitute a bar to the suit of the J. W. Crowdus Drug Company in Bosque county, and no necessity for. the intervention of the other parties would be necessary. If, on the contrary, J. W. Crowdus Drug Company was not a party to the agreement as to the account upon which it declared and did not consent to discharge Turner and Myers therefrom, it would not be bound. It may be said that appellee Turner’s cross-action and controverting affidavit is susceptible of the construction that while the agree-' ment of the creditors might not constitute a bar because of a failure on the part of J. W. Crowdus Drug Company to consent to a discharge of Turner and Myers, that nevertheless, the J. W. Crowdus Drug Company could avail itself of the assumption of the other creditors to pay the debts of those two defendants, and that it would have a cause of action against such creditors on such assumption, and hence such creditors would be proper parties to this suit. If it be so admitted, we do not think the J. W. Crowdus Drug Company can be compelled to bring said parties in and declare upon such assumption.

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-w-williams-co-v-turner-myers-drug-co-texapp-1922.