Houston Ice & Brewing Ass'n v. Armour & Co.

253 S.W. 635, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 393
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1923
DocketNo. 8358.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 635 (Houston Ice & Brewing Ass'n v. Armour & 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
Houston Ice & Brewing Ass'n v. Armour & Co., 253 S.W. 635, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 393 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

LANE, J.

We adopt as sufficient the general statement of the nature and result of. this suit as made by appellant and agreed to by appellee, as follows:

“This suit was filed in 1920 by Armour & Co., a Texas corporation, against Houston Ice & Brewing Association, to recover damages aggregating $3,197.01 alleged to have been suffered by plaintiff on account of the failure of defendant to properly care for and presérve certain pork, consisting of spareribs, pork loins, Boston butts, and pork shoulders.
“Houston Ice & Brewing Association, defendant below, answered with general denial and specially denied that the meat was in good condition when delivered by plaintiff to it, and alleged specially that defendant exercised ordinary care with reference to preserved meat, and that any damage thereto was due to its-bad condition at the time of its delivery to defendant or to the inherent character of the merchandise itself.
“Armour & Co., by supplemental petition, excepted to part of paragraph IV of defendant’s first amended original answer, wherein defendant pleaded, ‘Defendant gave to said meat thus stored by plaintiff the same care and attention it gave to a vast number of products of similar character it then had in storage, none of which other products were in the slightest degren damaged or injured.’
“The court sustained this exception and defendant excepted. Thereafter the cause went to trial before a jury, who answered certain special issues and awarded plaintiff a total recovery of $3,203.72. On this verdict the court entered a judgment in favor of Armour & Co. against appellant for the amount found by the jury, but plaintiff remitted the sum of $160.80, reducing the judgment to the sum of $3,043.42.”

Appellant first complains of the action of the court in striking out that portion of its first amended answer which reads as follows:

“Defendant gave to said meat thus stored by plaintiff the same care and attention it gave to a vast number of products of similar character it then had in storage, none of which other products were in the slightest degree damaged or injured.”

There is no merit in this complaint, first, because the averment stricken out was an attempt on the part of appellant to plead its evidence, and was therefore properly stricken out on exception; second, it is admitted by appellant in its brief that such pleaded evidence was admissible under its plea of general denial, in which admission we concur; and, third, there is nothing in the record to show that the court refused to permit appellant to offer proof of the alleged facts, but, to the contrary, it appears that testimony in support thereof was admitted without objection.

By the second assignment it is insisted that the court erred in overruling appellant’s objection to testimony of the appellee’s witness Bradford, giving various figures as to the value’of the meat after it was withdrawn from defendant’s custody, and giving testimony as *637 to the actual sales of said meat, the amounts received, therefrom, etc., because the testimony was obviously hearsay and secondary evidence, was on a material issue, and was not otherwise supported by legal evidence.

We do not think this assignment should be sustained. The testimony of the witness Sibewright, when considered as a whole, we think, is to the effect that the sales tickets made out when the various meats were sold and delivered were either made out by him or by those under him, and the same were made out under his supervision; that they were correctly made out; that they correctly showed the amount of meat sold, its condition, the price for which it was sold, and that the prices obtained for said meat, as shown by said sale tickets, were the best price obtainable therefor. He also testified that these tickets were all passed to the bookkeeper of the appellee and that the statement which he held in his hands, from which he was testifying, was made by Mr. Bradford; that it was taken from the books; that the facts stated in such statement are facts taken from the sale tickets and the books of appellee. There was no objection urged by appellant to the testimony of this witness.

Following the witness Sibewright the witness H. B. Bradford testified that he was assistant manager of the appellee, Armour & Co.; .that he remembered the delivery of the meat involved in the suit; that he made the statement testified to by Sibe: wright; that it was made up from the sales tickets; that the sales tickets were made up by those selling the meats shown thereon at the time such sales were made, and that such tickets were then sent to the office of appellee; that such tickets show the article or articles sold, the value of the article sold, the quantity sold, and the price for which it was sold; that the sales tickets were made by Sibewright and under his supervision, and were sent to the office of appellee, where they are kept; that he took each and every one of these sales tickets and checked them up, one by one, by the statement he made, and that he knew that such statement was correctly made; that after making same he checked it up by the sales tickets. He testified further that Sibewright was in charge of the meat when it was sold and that said sales tickets were made by Sibewright or under his direction; that the clerks under Sibewright who actually made some of the sales made some of said tickets, but when they were so made Sibewright was present and-dictated the price for which the meat was sold; that it was the duty of Sibewright to ascertain- what part- of the meat was good and what bad as it was taken out of cold storage, and that he attended to these duties. Testifying further, this witness said that he made up the statement at the completion of the last delivery of the products in question; that is, that he made the statement as soon as the last sales were made. He stated further that there were enough of the sales tickets to cover one side of the walls of the court room.

The facts stated, we think, show: First, that the sales tickets testified about by the witnesses were the original entries of the several transactions to which they purport to relate; second, that such entries were made in the regular course of the business of ap-pellee and at the time the several transactions to which they relate were had; third, that such entries clearly indicate what the several charges were for; fourth, that such entries were made by those authorized to make them; fifth, that the sales made and the tickets showing such sales were made in the regular course of the business of appellee, that such original entries were correctly entered upon the books of appellee, and that such books were correctly kept. The facts shown, we think, laid a sufficient predicate for the admission of the testimony complained of.

In Stark v. Burkitt, 103 (Tex. 437, 129 S. W. 343, Judge Brown, in speaking for our Supreme Court, said:

“To authorize the introduction of book accounts in evidence, it must be proved: (1) That the book or books contain original entries of transactions pertinent to the business in question. (2) It must appear that the entries were made in the regular course of business at or near to the time the transactions were had. (3) That the entries must be such as to indicate what the charge is for; that is, what the transaction was.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Beaumont City Lines, Inc. v. Williams
221 S.W.2d 560 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1948)
Community Public Service Co. v. Gray
107 S.W.2d 495 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 635, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-ice-brewing-assn-v-armour-co-texapp-1923.