Johnson v. Gattegno

267 S.W. 740
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 1924
DocketNo. 1660.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 267 S.W. 740 (Johnson v. Gattegno) 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
Johnson v. Gattegno, 267 S.W. 740 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

The appellant, Harry F. Johnson, whose trade name is J. W. Johnson, sued as plaintiff in the court below for the value of certain merchandise sold and delivered to the appellee, doing business as Sheldon Jewelry Company, alleging in three separate counts:

“(a) That plaintiff, at the special instance and request of defendant, bargained, sold, and delivered tó defendant the certain merchandise set out in the sworn account marked Exhibit A to the petition, at and for the prices thereon shown, and that by reason thereof the defendant became bound and promised to pay plaintiff said sum of money of eight hundred and forty-nine and 81/100 ($849.81) dollars;
“(b) That by reason of the bargain, sale and delivery of said merchandise to the defendant by plaintiff, defendant agreed to pay so much as said merchandise was reasonably worth, it being alleged that same was worth the said sum of money of eight hundred and forty-nine and 81/100 ($840.81) dollars;
“(c) That, by reason of the receipt and acceptance of said merchandise, it being alleged that same was received and accepted by defendant, defendant became bound and liable to pay plaintiff so much as said goods -were reasonably worth at the time, the said sum of eight hundred and forty-nine and 81/100 ($849.81) dollars; and further alleging that no part of said sum had been paid except sixty-five and 10/100 ($65.10) dollars, leaving a balance of seven hundred and eighty-four and 71/100 ($784.71) dollars long past due and unpaid, and which defendant refused to pay, and praying for judgment for said sum with interest and costs, and for general relief.”

*741 The defendant answered, pleading general demurrer, general denial, and a sworn denial of the sworn account.

The proof showed that in March, 1920, some one representing himself to be the defendant, Gattegno, came to plaintiff’s place of business in New York Oity, presenting a card of the Sheldon Jewelry Company, showing thereon the name of I. Gattegno. This party presented the card and wanted to buy some silverware from plaintiff, who was a wholesale silver merchant or jobber. This party placed an order for some silverware, and, on March 24, 1920, plaintiff confirmed the order by letter addressed to Sheldon Jewelry Company, El Paso, Tex.

A part of the order was a crumb sweeper, sold at $3.60 and a mahogany chest sold at $45, the sweeper being delivered to the party presenting the card and the chest at his request -. was delivered by plaintiff to another jewelry concern. The balance of the order consisted of silverware which this party bought through plaintiff of Webster Company. That is, plaintiff took this party presenting the card'to the office of Webster Company in New York, where he selected the merchandise of the value of $690.56, to be shipped to Sheldon Jewelry Company by Webster Company and charged to Johnson, the plaintiff. A copy of this order, together with the balance of the order, plaintiff sent to Sheldon Jewelry Company in a letter of March 24th.

On May 21, 1920, plaintiff received a letter written on the stationery of Sheldon Jewelry Company and signed by Sheldon Jewelry Company, inclosing a check for $48.-60 in payment of the crumb sweeper and mahogany chest above mentioned, which letter reads as follows:

“Inclosed please find check for $48.60. We would like to ask you to send us the order of silverware placed with you by Mr. Gattegno. We wish you will send at once whatever you can by express.”

This letter was written by Miss Regina Lavis, the sister-in-law of Gattegno, who lives in his home and who works in his store and has charge of same when he is not there. She says it was written for M. Gattegno, who was a brother of the defendant.

Gattegno says, regarding his sister-in-law: “My sister was in that store running it for me.” And again he says regarding her:

“When I am away she runs the store. She did not have authority to write letters for the Sheldon Jewelry Company and sign Sheldon Jewelry Company’s name to them. She had no authority to do that. While I was sick she did that.”

M. Avila, the driver for the Express Company, testified that he delivered two shipments of the silverware shipped from North Attleboro, Mass., being the factory of the Webster Company, at the place of business of the Sheldon Jewelry Company and identified the receipts therefor.

H. Lavis, a brother of Miss -Lavis and -a brother-in-law of the defendant, testified that all of the merchandise -in .question was received at the place of business of the Sheldon Jewelry Company, and that he helped to unpack and check same in the store, and he says that he did this at the instance of M. Gattegno, the brother of defendant. H. Lavis stayed around the store and assisted when he was needed, although the defendant says he was not employed. But the defendant’s books showed that H. Lavis was waiting on about as many customers as anybody during the period in the spring and early summer of 1920 when the matters in con-, troversy took place.

The defendant knew that this merchandise had been received at his store. He says: “I presume that the goods came to the Sheldon Jewelry Company,” although he says that he never ordered the merchandise, but that his brother placed the order.

The merchandise came by express and was received on June 6th and June 7th, and on the latter date, and on the stationery of defendant, a letter was written to plaintiff as follows:

“We received the crumb sweepers O. K. with the exception of one without a handle, No. 106. Please advise if you can send us the handle or if we return the sweeper.”

This was also written by Miss Lavis.

Again on June 22, 1920, another letter was written, under the same circumstances, to the plaintiff by the defendant, as follows:

“In checking up the goods we found a defective pair of candle. sticks. We are returning same to you by parcel post. Please send us a credit bill for same and oblige.”

The defendant issued the check for $48.60, which was inclosed in the letter of May 20th. He says: “I issued this check for $48.60.” But he claims he did it for his brother. He could not produce the check or the stub therefor.

The store was about 60 feet by 80 feet in size and the merchandise stayed there for a time before M. Gattegno took same to Mexico. One witness says it w{is there for several months; another said it was there only a short time. Gattegno says:

“If this stuff came addressed to the Sheldon Jewelry Company with Johnson’s name on i^ or Webster Company’s name on it, my brother had authority to open it because he ordered the goods. He would have known it was his goods.”

Defendant says that he never ordered the goods and claimed that he knew nothing about the entire transaction, and that no one had authority to-open letters addressed to Sheldon Jewelry Company.

Miss Lavis states that she wrote the letters in a friendly way for M. Gattegno; and *742

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Bluebook (online)
267 S.W. 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-gattegno-texapp-1924.