Holmes v. Tyner

179 S.W. 887, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 977
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1915
DocketNo. 837.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 887 (Holmes v. Tyner) 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
Holmes v. Tyner, 179 S.W. 887, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 977 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HUFF, O. J.

[1] The appellant, Holmes, instituted this suit for the conversion of an automobile of the alleged value of $2,050, by appellee, Tyner, alleging the title in himself. The appellee, Tyner, answered, admitting the possession and alleged he purchased same through appellant’s agent; that one Hawkins was the agent of appellant and brought the machine to Childress and exposed it to sale and claimed to be the agent of appellant, who it is alleged held Hawkins out as such and that appellee was informed by Hawkins and others that he was the agent of appellant; that Hawkins offered to sell the car and distributed literature of appellant and had possession of the car for the purpose, of selling and demonstrating the car to prospective purchasers, and did show to appellant and others the car and held himself out as agent of appellant with power to sell, and solicited the sales of other cars of the same make and manufacture; that, after full notice of the acts of Hawkins, appellant paid divers and sundry costs and expense bills for him, and ratified and confirmed the acts of Hawkins, and directed Hawkins to proceed with the sale and to advertise and demonstrate the merits of the car and to seek and sell prospective purchasers for the car, and that thereby appellant was estopped to deny the right and authority of Hawkins to make the sale; that all of said acts of Hawkins were within the apparent scope of his authority, “and was within the ordinary and customary authority of one so using, demonstrating, and offering for sale cars when they are permitted to handle, demonstrate, and use cars, and that plaintiff well knew such to be the usual, ordinary, and customary object of one out so demonstrating, and, if the plaintiff did not in fact give and authorize the said Hawkins full power to make the sale in question that *889 said plaintiff was negligent in permitting tlie said Hawkins to make suck use of the car and is now estopped to say that Hawkins had no such authority”; that appellant, relying upon the acts and conduct of Hawkins, and the permission of Hawkins by appellant to so act, which was known to appellant, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have been known to him, induced appellee to purchase the ear and pay full value to Hawkins, to wit, $950 cash and one E. M. F. car, as the consideration therefor, and thereby appellant was estopped to deny the agency.

Appellant, by supplemental petition, denied specifically all the allegations in the answer, and denied that appellee got possession of the car from an agent of appellant, or that he purchased the same from such agent, but that in acquiring possession thereof he did so by barter and trade with Hawkins and never paid the value of the car in cash to any person. It is admitted therein that Hawkins was in possession of the car, but was so unlawfully, etc. The fact of Hawkins’ possession and the manner by which he obtained and held it was specifically alleged, showing a wrongful possession. The facts hereinafter set out will indicate the specific facts relied on as showing an unlawful possession as relied on and set out in the supplemental petition.

A verdict was rendered for the appellee, upon which judgment was entered. The appellant requested the court to instruct a verdict for him, and also, in his motion for new trial, requested that the verdict of the jury be set aside for the reason that there was no evidence supporting the verdict, because: (a) It is admitted in the pleadings that appellant was the owner of the car, and the evidence did not warrant the jury to find Hawkins was his agent to sell and use the car in Childress county; (b) if he was the agent to sell, he was not authorized to accept in part payment trade as alleged by ap-pellee; (c) if prior to the sale he was the agent, such agency was revoked before the trade to appellee, and the agency was not at any time known to appellee; (d) that ap-pellee by his own evidence shows that he dealt with Hawkins as the owner and not as an agent.

In stating our conclusions of the facts we shall state them from appellee’s standpoint. Appellant, Holmes, at the time of the transaction, had the state agency for the Jackson cars, situated in Ft. Worth. The car in question was one of that make. The cars, when delivered to appellant, were paid for by him and he employed agents thereafter to resell them. About the 20th day of April, 1913, appellant turned the car over to J. A. Hawkins, as he testifies, to go up the Denver road as far as Alvord or Decator, and to bring to Ft. Worth some prospective purchasers, which Hawkins claimed to have, and to show them the Jackson ears at Ft. Worth. The facts in this case show that Hawkins at some time thereafter went to Childress with the car in issue, and showed and tried to sell it, and represented that he had authority to do so. Mr. Knight, who it appears was the local agent for the Jackson car at Childress, by virtue of a contract entered into with appellant at some time before the sale, went with Hawkins to visit the appellee. On this trip Hawkins showed the car to appellee and the manner of its working and at this time gave appellee some literature with reference to the Jackson make of cars. T. F. Abbott, who during this transaction was employed as an agent for appellant in the sale of these cars, testified that at that time he resided in Ft. Worth and in the absence of both appellant and his wife managed the office at Ft. Worth. This witness says, about five days before Hawkins left with the car on April 20th, he (witness) returned from a trip and found Hawkins in the office and was introduced to him by Mrs. Holmes. This witness states that when he left to go to Clarendon (from the trip thereto, from which he had just returned when he first met Hawkins) appellant was not at the office and was out somewhere, and when he returned appellant was still out of the office, but during the time had been back and had gone away. At the time the witness got back Mrs. Holmes was in charge of the office. The witness testified Mrs. Ilolmes introduced him to Hawkins and he thinks Mrs. Holmes then said, “or something to the effect she had a salesman there. I do not remember her exact words, but that is nearly as I can remember them. We did not talk but little.”. Hawkins appears to be the person there referred to. At the direction of Mrs. Holmes, Hawkins took the witness home from the office in a car. After this first conversation with Mrs. Holmes with reference to Hawkins, witness asked Mrs. Holmes if she knew anything about him.

“She said she had ’phoned to the manager of the Carter car, Mr. Mathews, and that he said he was a good man but would steal anything he got his hands on. Mathews claimed the fellow had sold one of the tires off of a car and had put on an old one in its place, and I said, ‘No business man in town would keep a man on that recommendation,’ and I think she replied she would keep him and try him, or that was the meaning of it.”

The witness also testified the only car other than the one in issue, that he knew of Hawkins taking out, was one on the evening he (witness) returned. He took out a gray Roadster and took some one in it to show it. The witness testified that Holmes himself turned the car over to Hawkins, who left with it for some point up the Denver, and witness’ understanding was that he was to work some territory up there. He testified that he thinks Hawkins first stopped at Alvord, and that he knew he stopped at Wichita Falls from the fact that the office got hotel bills from there. The bill was not paid by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 887, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-tyner-texapp-1915.