John E. Morrison & Co. v. Murff

212 S.W. 212, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 629
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 6, 1919
DocketNo. 7817.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 212 S.W. 212 (John E. Morrison & Co. v. Murff) 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
John E. Morrison & Co. v. Murff, 212 S.W. 212, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 629 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

Morrison & Co., a corporation, levied an execution upon and had the sheriff o,f Harris county to take into possession for sale thereunder, a Davis Chummy roadster automobile belonging to Murff. Murff then filed this suit in the Fifty-Fifth district court against the company, making the sheriff a party, claiming the car levied upon to be exempt to him by virtue of article 3785, Revised Statutes of Texas, under sworn petition alleging that he was the head of a family, that he owned no other property of the same kind or character, that being the only automobile,, carriage, or vehicle then belonging to him, and prayed for an injunction restraining both parties sued from selling the car so seized.

The defendants joined in a duly verified answer denying the allegations of Murff’s bill, and in turn averring that he had been divorced from his wife, was no longer the head of a family as contemplated by our exemption statutes, having no members of his family then living with him, and that he did then own other property of the same kind and character as that levied upon.

Issues having been thus joined upon the application for injunction, the district judge heard the evidence offered, and thereupon entered his order directing issuance of the writ as prayed for, and restraining the defendants from selling the ear pursuant to the levy made. From this judgment they present this appeal.

Appellants contend that the order awarding the injunction cannot stand, because, they say, the undisputed evidence showed, both that Murff was the owner of two automobiles at the time of the levy, and that he was not then the head of a family within the spirit and meaning of the exemption statutes.

Since only one such vehicle is exempt to a family, or the head of a family, under subdivision 10 of the article invoked (3785), it follows that, if either claim thus made was established as a- fact, the injunction should not have been granted.

It is quite true that the evidence is entirely free from dispute or controversy; but, after a most careful consideration of the whole of it, the court is unable to agree with appellants as to its legal effect.

[1] The question as to whether or not Murff owned at that time another automobile than the Davis car levied on depends upon the effect to be given a transaction of his with Mr. B. O. Gaveness, the material facts concerning which may properly, we think, be thus stated:

By agreement of counsel for both litigants, this affidavit of Mr. Caveness was admitted in evidence as confirmatory of the detailed testimony of Murff:

“I, O. B. Caveness, upon being duly sworn, state upon oath, that on or about June 8, 1918, I came to Houston for the purpose of trading in an old Case car for a new car and I saw L. A. Murff, who was at that time selling cars in Houston. He had at that time a Case car at his place of business and I told him that I wanted that car and he agreed to sell it to me. I bought the car for $2,050.00, and Mr. Murff took my old car in lieu of the first payment of $500.00. At the time I bought the car I was engaged in the sawmill business near Huff-smith, Tex., and was unable to take the car back with me at that time, so I told him to keep it for me until I sent for it. Later on, I decided that I would get Mr. Murff to sell the car, so I wrote him to sell it for me for not less than $1,750.00, as I did not want to lose more than $300.00 on the deal.
“Mr.. Murff still has the car in his possession as my agent and he has authority to sell it for me at the above price.
“I understand that the title to this car is questioned, and I am making this- affidavit for the purpose of showing that the car is my ear and not Mr. Murff’s car. C. B. Caveness.”

*213 Murff himself, as a witness upon the stand, went fully into the details of the matter; but his version did not materially differ from that thus given by Caveness. He was engaged in selling automobiles in Houston, but had at that time in his possession only one other car than the Davis roadster levied upon, a new seven-passenger Case, the one Caveness so testifies he bought.

There is no suggestion of collusion between them, nor of fraud on the part of either. Both positively swore that the sale of this particular new car was actually agreed upon and made at the fixed price of $2,050, $500 of which was represented by the old Case ear Caveness turned in at the time of the purchase in lieu of cash, leaving a balance due by him of $1,550; that when he drove his old car to Murff’s place he said: “Here is the old car. I want the new one, but I am not in a position to take it back with me now” — and left the new one in Murff’s possession to be kept for him until he sent for it. Murff immediately sold, the Old car and appropriated the proceeds to his own use and benefit; his testimony as to their further understanding about and disposition of the new one being thus:

“Q. I believe you stated that subsequent to that he asked you to sell that car for him. Is that correct; that is, the car that he purchased, the new Case ear? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Were you holding that as an agent for the purpose of selling that ear for Mr. Caveness, or not? A. I was.
“Q. I believe you stated that Mr. Caveness was unable to take the car out and agreed that you might sell it as his agent, is that correct? A. That was my understanding of it; yes, sir. It has always been my understanding that, if a man came and picked out an automobile and paid $500 on it, it was his car and subject to his instructions.”

There was no change in these arrangements up to the time of this trial, the new car being still so in Murff’s possession.

Such was the sum and substance of the transaction, without going into further and immaterial details. The new car was undoubtedly subject to the orders of Caveness and could have been taken out by him at any time; it was undisputedly the intention of Murff to sell, of Caveness to buy, and both thought that a sale of the machine had actually been made and that title had passed. It is true no particular time for payment of the balance of the agreed price was fixed, and that shortly after the purchase, when Caveness told Murff he did not then have the money to pay the car out, Murff offered to take hife notes for the balance, which Caveness declined to give, saying that he wanted to pay cash for it and asking Murff to hold it a little while longer for him; but that would not uproot the accomplished fact that a sale had already been specifically agreed upon, that nothing further remained to be done to, and that delivery of the subject-matter thereof had been effected by the turning over of- possession of it by the buyer to the seller to be held subject to the former’s order.

There is an utter absence throughout the entire body of evidence of any intimation even that full payment in cash of the balance of' the purchase price before removal of the car, or in the alternative the giving of a note therefor, were made or understood to be conditions precedent to completion of the contract of sale, or that they were part and parcel of it.

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W. 212, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-e-morrison-co-v-murff-texapp-1919.