Interstate Forwarding Co. v. Vineyard

3 S.W.2d 947
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1928
DocketNo. 10185.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 947 (Interstate Forwarding Co. v. Vineyard) 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
Interstate Forwarding Co. v. Vineyard, 3 S.W.2d 947 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

VAUGHAJST, J.

This suit was instituted in the court below by appellee, R. A. Vineyard, the duly elected, qualified, and acting tax assessor of Dallas county, Tex., as such assessor for and on behalf of the county of Dallas and the state of Texas, to require the appellant, Interstate Forwarding Company, a corporation engaged in the general warehouse business, and operating, as a general warehouseman, a public warehouse or .place of storage located in Dallas county, Tex., to comply with article 7243 of the 1925 Revised •Civil Statutes of the state of Texas, viz. to furnish him, as the tax assessor of Dallas county, Tex., a list of all of the property stored in appellant’s warehouse on January 1, 1927, together with a list of the owners of such property and their residences. Appellant answered by an exception and plea in. abatement by several special exceptions in the nature of general demurrers challenging the constitutionality of said article, by general demurrer, specific denial, and by making allegations to be noted further on, upon the basis of which it charged that the law was not constitutional. There was a trial without the intervention of a jury on undisputed evidence, and judgment was rendered in favor of appellee, commanding the furnishing of such list, and making other provisions in reference to the performance of the judgment which will be developed in the discussion of the assignments covering same. This judgment is properly before us for review and revision on the following five propositions germane to the orderly disposition of this appeal, viz.: (a) The right of appellee to bring the suit in his own name on behalf of Dallas-county and the state of Texas; (b) the constitutionality of said article 7243; (c) the-proper construction of said article 72431 (d) whether the court erred in rendering judgment for appellee; and (e) the admissibility of certain testimony offered by appellant which was excluded. We find the following material facts to have been established :

Appellant; the Interstate Forwarding Company, is a corporation, incorporated under the laws of the state of Texas, engaged in the-operation of a warehouse within the limits-of Dallas county prior to and on the 1st day of January, 1927. That there was property-in storage in appellant’s warehouse on January 1, 1927, owned by parties other than appellant. That said warehouse company kept books of who placed property in its warehouse, and had records in its possession of the storage of property therein on January 1,. 1927. That from such records a list of the-property stored in its warehouse on January 1, ’ 1927, was disclosed, and. could have been made therefrom showing the property so-stored, the names of the respective owners,, and places of residence. That some time-during the month of April, 1927, a demand was made by the tax assessor of Dallas county, acting through one of his deputies, on-one W. I. Ford, president of appellant corporation, to deliver to said assessor a list of the property that was stored in appellant’s; warehouse on January 1, 1927, together witbs the names and addresses of the owners thereof. That, prior to said demand, no one of the-officers of said appellant corporation had any *951 knowledge on the 1st day of January, 1927, that such a list would he demanded. That appellant refused to comply with the demand so made, and the list requested was not furnished. That, in addition to the general storage of property, appellant handled merchandise stored with it, for which space for storage was rented, such merchandise being placed into the space so rented, and remained in such space until removed by the owner or otherwise changed, and such condition existed on J anuary 1, 1927. That appellant’s record of property so stored or removed in special space, that is, in apartments consisting of rooms kept under lock and key, with the key in possession of the owner, did not disclose any of the particular items of merchandise so stored, or that should afterwards he removed out of such space. That appellant received for storage and conducted what is generally known as two classes of ware-houseing, namely, household goods and merchandise storing, but was not engaged in cold storage, same being a separate branch of the storage business. Said Ford, as to handling of household goods, testified as follows :

“Household goods are placed with us by people for future use from all over the United States, and are stored by local people desiring to make a change in their arrangements. That is briefly what the household storage is; those coming here and making their homes here, and others living here.”

And, as to storage of merchandise, testified as follows:

“Then we have a cla'ss~óf accounts which’ we call ‘merchandise charge’’ that consists of various commodities being shipped to us for reshipment. Everything that comes to us is for the purpose of reshipment. It is not a permanent location for anything. That is the nature of the business. It is a distributive arrangement. It comes to us in carload lots, and we ship at less than carload lots; all of the cars to be reconsigned from Dallas and a portion of them may go into storage for out of town orders. Oarloads of merchandise arrive, and on each there are orders to ship. If not to ship immediately, to hold .for future orders, and it comes and goes continuously that way, and that is the way it was on January 1, 1927. There are a few less than carload lot shipments received, and a few carload lot shipments made, but the major portion of the business is dealing with goods in carload lots from within the state and out of the state, principally out of the state, from the manufacturers and reassigning it in less than carload lots to the Dallas territory. Much of this goods is handled by local agents. What the local agent has to do with the distribution of the goods depends upon the commodity, and in some instances they have entire -control; in others they can only file sales orders; and in others they can only draw on stocks when O. K.’d by the house (the owner). In other words, that orders come in to ship, and we send to the house (the owner) for an O. K. or compare it with a list that we have on file. In other words, they are sales agents, I would say in a broad way of putting it, yet some of them have entire control over their stock.”

That the merchandise and household goods so held by appellant as warehouseman on the 1st day of January, 1927, owned by others than appellant, had not been rendered for or assessed for taxation in Dallas county, Tex., for the year 1927. That appellee, in his official capacity as tax assessor of Dallas county, called upon all warehousemen doing business in Dallas county known to him to furnish a list of property on hand in their respective warehouses January 1, 1927, in the manner and form that the demand for the list was made bn appellant.

This suit was brought through the Attorney General of the state of Texas and the district attorney of Dallas county to enforce the observance of the following statute, viz.:

“Art. 724S. Assessment of Property Stored.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-forwarding-co-v-vineyard-texapp-1928.