Hartt v. Yturia Cattle Co.

228 S.W. 551, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 748
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 1921
DocketNo. 205-3287
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 551 (Hartt v. Yturia Cattle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartt v. Yturia Cattle Co., 228 S.W. 551, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 748 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

POWELL, J.

This is an action in damages, instituted in the district court of Tar-rant county, Tex., by W. E. Hartt against the Tturia Cattle Company, the George R. Barse Live Stock Commission Company, and A. Cohn. The action is based upon the breach of an alleged contract of guaranty as well as alleged false and fraudulent representations made by Cohn to the agents of Hartt in the sale of certain cattle. The opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, reported in 210 S. W. 612, contains a rather complete statement of the nature of the action, the pleadings filed, and the jury’s verdict. We shall not, therefore, give any extended statement of that kind here, but will content ourselves with a brief survey of the case as more especially applicable to the question raised in the petition for writ of error filed in the Supreme Court.

The Tturia Cattle Company of Brownsville in. December, 1915, shipped a car of cattle to the George R, Barse Live Stock Commission Company of Port Worth, authorizing the consignee to sell the same on the usual commission and in the customary way. The commission company promptly undertook its task, and its agent, Cohn, was in charge of the sale. He went on the market and Stock Exchange, where he met one W. E. Toung, who was acting as agent of W. E. Hartt in.the purchase of certain cattle. The latter desired to send most of the cattle to his ranch near Lovelady, Houston county, Tex., which was in the so-called “tick belt.” Early in the negotiations involving the purchase of the cattle the controversy arose as to whether or not the same were from the tick country and safe to be shipped into a similar section. Toung admitted that the cattle appeared to be clean and free from ticks, and therefore doubted the advisability of the purchase. He testified, however, that Cohn represented them to be ticky cattle and safe, and that he would guarantee them to be safe for location in the ticky country. Hartt also testified that officers of the commission company made similar representations and guaranties lo him. Cohn and the said officers were as vigorous in their denial that any such conversations 'ever occurred. At any rate, Toung, acting- for Hartt, purchased and paid for 184 head of said cattle. The commission company deducted its usual commission and remitted the net proceeds to the Tturia Cattle Company. Hartt shipped 90 of said cattle to Houston county. Shortly thereafter they all became afflicted with ticks and fever. Sixty-five of them died, involving an alleged loss of 82,860 to Hartt. The remaining 25 depreciated in value by reason of their suffering to the alleged extent of 8500. Hartt claimed a still further damage of $800 incurred in having the cattle treated while they were down. He sued all three defendants for a total damage of $3,660. All the parties to the suit, as well as the witnesses, were experienced dealers in cattle, and especially on the Port Worth Exchange.

The case was tried in the lower court before a jury and submitted on special issues. The jury answered all questions against the contention of plaintiff in error, including a finding that no representations or guaranties were made by defendant C'ohn or the commission company as alleged by Hartt and Toung. The court entered judgment for the defendants in error, and Hartt perfected his appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals, where the judgment of the lower court was duly affirmed. He then brought the case to the Supreme Court' on writ of error.

It is admitted by all the parties that the controlling question on this appeal is whether or not testimony of custom on the Port Worth Stockyards was admissible in evidence. As heretofore stated, the action was based upon an alleged express contract of guaranty, orally made, by Cohn and the commission company to Toung and Hartt, and certain representations made in connection therewith. Hartt alleged that Cohn gave such guaranties, and that in so doing he was acting ás agent of the Tturia Cattle Company and the Barse Live Stock Commission Company, and that each company had either expressly authorized him to do so, or that his action was in' the apparent scope of his authority. Both companies denied the making of the statements by Cohn and said he never had any authority, express or implied, to make them, if he did. The Tturia Cattle Company pleaded that it did not know Cohn, that it had authorized the Barse Commission Company to market the cattle in the usual and customary way, that, if a sale was made in any other way, the' commission company was liable to Hartt, and asked for judgment over against the said commission company v for such amount, if any, as Hartt might recover against the cattle company. The cattle company was permitted to prove, over the ob[553]*553jection of counsel for Hartt, that it was irrelevant and immaterial, that it was not customary for commission companies or their salesmen on the Fort Worth yards to make such representations and guaranties as alleged by Hartt; that they never did so in fact. In overruling counsel’s objection to this testimony, the trial court said it was admissible in any event on the issue of apparent scope of the agent’s authority. Counsel for Hartt made no request of the court to limit the effect of such evidence.

The Court of Civil Appeals refused to commit itself definitely to the proposition that the evidence in question was admissible for all purposes, but held that it was undoubtedly admissible as bearing upon the issues involved between the cattle company and commission company on the cross-aetion filed by the former over against the latter.

We do not think the Supreme Court has jurisdiction of this case.

In the first place, the petition for writ of error sets up “grounds of jurisdiction” as follows:

“The case is one of which the jurisdiction of the Court of Civil Appeals is not final under article 1591 of the Revised Statutes of Texas, the amount sought to be recovered being in excess of $1,000. The Supreme Court has jurisdiction because, as your petitioner conceives and here avers, the Court of Civil Appeals in its decision herein rendered committed material error and made erroneous rulings upon questions of substantive law involved in the case, which were material to petitioner’s cause of action, viz.”

It is evident that counsel was complying with subdivision 6 of article 1521 of Vernon’s Sayles’ Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, known as the Act of 1913. However, on July 1, 1917, the latter act was superseded by the act of 1917 (Laws 1917, c. 75 [Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1918, art. 1521]). The new act reads in part as follows:

“In any other case in which it is made to appear that an error of law has been committed by the Court of Civil Appeals of such' importance to the jurisprudence of the state, as in the opinion of the Supreme Court requires correction,” etc.

The petition for writ of error in this ease was filed in the Court of Civil Appeals February 17,1919, and should have conformed to the act of 1917, as aforesaid. The failure so to do was doubtless due to an oversight on part of counsel, and we attach no importance to it. That matter is purely formal and technical. Considering the jurisdictional question upon its merits as shown by the petition for the writ in considerable detail, we still think the Supreme Court has no jurisdiction of this cause. The petition is confined solely to an attack upon the action of the trial court in admitting certain testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 551, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartt-v-yturia-cattle-co-texcommnapp-1921.