Johns-Manville Sales Corp. v. Haden Co., Inc.

543 S.W.2d 415, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3273
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 1976
Docket17767
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 543 S.W.2d 415 (Johns-Manville Sales Corp. v. Haden Co., Inc.) 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
Johns-Manville Sales Corp. v. Haden Co., Inc., 543 S.W.2d 415, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3273 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

*417 OPINION

BREWSTER, Justice.

This is an appeal by Johns-Manville Sales Corporation from an order overruling its plea of privilege to be sued in Dallas County. The case originated when Marshall Erdman and Associates, Inc., as plaintiff, brought suit in Wichita County against the Haden Company, Inc., and Johns-Manville Sales Corporation, as defendants, seeking to recover damages allegedly resulting from defective asbestos panels manufactured by Johns-Manville and allegedly installed to the exterior of the Wichita Palls Clinic Hospital by Haden Company, Inc. It was there alleged that Johns-Manville had furnished defective panels for use in the construction of the hospital. In that action Johns-Man-ville filed a plea of privilege, and the trial court sustained that plea of privilege and transferred the cause of action alleged by plaintiff, Marshall Erdman, against Johns-Manville to Dallas County.

Marshall Erdman and Associates, Inc. was the prime contractor for work being done on Wichita Falls Clinic Hospital in Wichita Falls, Texas. Haden Company, Inc. made a subcontract with Marshall Erd-man calling for Haden Company, Inc. to furnish certain labor and materials going into that job. Johns-Manville manufactured certain asbestos panels that it sold to Haden Company, Inc., and Haden Company, Inc. then installed those panels into the hospital involved.

After Johns-Manville’s first plea of privilege was sustained, the Haden Company, Inc., one of the defendants in the case above referred to, filed a third party action against Johns-Manville wherein it alleged that if it should be held liable to Marshall Erdman, that it was entitled to be indemnified by Johns-Manville on the ground that if the panels furnished by the latter were defective then the act of Johns-Manville in furnishing defective panels constituted a breach of implied warranty. When Haden Company, Inc. filed this third party action against Johns-Manville, the latter filed another plea of privilege. The Haden Company contended in the trial court that its third party action was properly maintainable in Wichita County under Subdivisions 4, 5, 14, 23, 27, 29a and 31, of Article 1995, Y. A. C. S. The trial court overruled the plea of privilege and this appeal is brought by Johns-Manville from that decree.

We reverse and order the case transferred to Dallas County.

We will refer to Johns-Manville as appellant, and to Haden Company, Inc., as appel-lee, throughout the balance of the opinion.

In oral argument counsel for appellee advised this Court that it no longer contended that venue of the case was in Wichita County by virtue of Subdivisions 4, 5, 14, 23, 29a and 31 of Art. 1995. It abandoned its contentions relative to those subsections.

We therefore sustain appellant’s points of error Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4 without discussion. They are devoted to appellant’s contention that the subsections referred to do not entitle appellee to maintain venue of this case in Wichita County.

The undisputed evidence is that appellant is a foreign corporation with an office in Dallas, Texas. Appellee is a corporation with its offices also being located in Dallas, Texas.

The controlling question on this appeal is whether or not appellee can keep venue of the case in Wichita County under Subdivision 27, Art. 1995, on the theory that a part of the cause of action accrued in that County.

Appellant’s 5th and 6th points of error are that the court erred in overruling its plea of privilege because there is “no evidence” and “insufficient evidence” to show that this action or any part thereof accrued in Wichita County, Texas.

Appellant’s 7th point of error is that the trial court erred in overruling its plea of privilege because its implied finding that the cause of action or a part thereof accrued in Wichita County, Texas, is so against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence as to be clearly wrong.

We sustain appellant’s 5th, 6th and 7th points of error.

*418 Appellee’s action was founded entirely on its claim that appellant had breached an implied warranty in its contract by which appellee had purchased the asbestos panels involved from appellant in that such asbestos panels sold and delivered by appellant to appellee were not fit for the purposes for which they were intended. Appellee contended that in the event Erdman and Associates, Inc., recovered from it, that appellee was therefore entitled to be indemnified for such loss by the appellant.

Subdivision 27, Art. 1995, provides: “Foreign corporations . . . doing business within this State, may be sued in -any county where the cause of action or a part thereof accrued, or in any county where such company may have an agency or representative, or in the county in which the principal office of such company may be situated; . . .

The trial court did not file findings of fact and conclusions of law and none were requested. We must on this appeal therefore presume that the trial court found the facts to be in support of its judgment if there is sufficient evidence to support such findings. Gilmore v. Transit Grain & Commission Co., 213 S.W.2d 880 (Tex.Civ.App., Fort Worth, 1944, no writ hist.). It is also true that if there is evidence to support a presumed finding that the exception contained in Art. 1995, Sec. 27, is applicable, then this Court is required to accept said evidence as true and sustain the findings of the trial court. McGriff v. Hazle, 201 S.W.2d 92 (Tex.Civ.App., Eastland, 1947, no writ hist.).

In order to establish venue in Wichita County under Art. 1995(27), appellee’s burden at the venue hearing was to establish by a preponderance of the evidence all of the elements of the cause of action alleged, and that the cause of action or a part thereof arose in Wichita County, Texas. Permaspray Mfg. Corp. v. Permaspray Mfg. Corp., a Delaware Corp., 490 S.W.2d 866 (Tex.Civ.App., Fort Worth, 1973, no writ hist.).

A venue exception permitting suit to be brought in any county in which the cause of action, or a part thereof, arose, means that either some part of the transaction creating the primary right, or some part of the transaction relating to the breach of that right, must have occurred in the county wherein the suit is brought. Stone Fort Nat. Bank of Nacogdoches v. Forbess, 126 Tex, 568, 91 S.W.2d 674 (1936).

In this case the following facts are undisputed: the precontract meeting between the representatives of Marshall Erd-man, Haden Company, Inc., and Johns-Man-ville at which the panels and methods of installing them were discussed occurred in Dallas County; the order for the panels was given to Mr. Royer, Johns-Manville’s representative, at Haden Company’s Dallas County office; the panels were shipped by Johns-Manville from Waukegan, Illinois, to Haden Company, Inc. in Dallas; upon receipt and acceptance of the crated panels, Haden Company, Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
543 S.W.2d 415, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johns-manville-sales-corp-v-haden-co-inc-texapp-1976.