Kincheloe Irrigating Co. v. Hahn Bros. & Co.

146 S.W. 1187, 105 Tex. 231, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 141
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1912
DocketNo. 2229.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 146 S.W. 1187 (Kincheloe Irrigating Co. v. Hahn Bros. & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kincheloe Irrigating Co. v. Hahn Bros. & Co., 146 S.W. 1187, 105 Tex. 231, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 141 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

Me. Justice Dibbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Hahn Brothers & Company, a co-partnership composed of Peter Hahn and others, as plaintiffs, brought this suit in the District Court of Wharton County against the Kincheloe Irrigating Company, defendant, to recover damages laid at $5,902.00. The cause of action was based on the breach of an alleged contract by the terms of which defendant obligated itself to furnish plaintiffs 360 acres of land, the necessary seed rice and sufficient water for irrigating said lands during the crop season of 1906, plaintiffs to cultivate the land so furnished, harvest the rice crop, and give one-half to defendant. The failure on the part of defendant to furnish a sufficient and timely amount of water for the irrigation of said land, causing a shortage in plaintffs’ rice crop, was the constituting cause of the breach of said contract and of the damages resulting therefrom.

The defense interposed was a general denial and special pleas *234 embodying substantially the plea that if the • contract sued on was entered into by Bullock, the agent of defendant, with plaintiffs as alleged, the same was not authorized by defendant and such agent exceeded his authority, and the plea of ultra vires was also interposed in bar of plaintiffs’ cause of action. We do not deem it essential to a proper understanding of the question raised by the assignments to state the facts upon which the two special pleas rest further than as they may be disclosed in disposing of such questions.

An intervention was sought by A. W. and H. P. Hahn and granted by the court. The trial was with a jury, and upon a verdict against defendant judgment was rendered in favor of interveners for $4,216.68. Upon appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. (Kincheloe Irrigating Co. v. Hahn Brothers & Co., 132 S. W., 78.) Upon petition to this court on January ,30th, 1911, a writ of error was granted with the notation that there was probable error in the rulings complained of in the 7th, 8th and 9th assignments of error. This opinion will be confined principally to a discussion of the questions presented in the three asignments mentioned, as the court in granting the writ considered all the other questions complained of in the Court of Civil Appeals as having been properly settled by that court in its decision.

The error complained of in the seventh assignment is, that the Court of Civil Appeals erred “in holding that the trial court properly permitted the plaintiff, Peter Hahn, while testifying in chief and in his own behalf, to state that F. M. Bullock was representing the Kineheloe Irrigating Company in making the' contract in .question, the objection being that said testimony was a conclusion of the witness invading the province of the jury.”

In considering the competency of the statement of Hahn as evidence, we are by defendant’s counsel cited to the cases of Southern Home Building & Loan Association v. Winans, 24 Texas Civ. App., 544, 60 S. W., 825, and Arndt v. Boyd, 48 S. W., 771, as in point. In the first of the two cases cited it was held by the majority of the Court of Civil Appeals that it was not competent for a witness to state that a particular person is the agent of a • corporation. The doctrine there announced is unquestionably the settled rule where the agency is a disputed fact. But in the case at bar it was an admitted fact that Bullock was the agent of the defendant. He was not only one of the important officers of the defendant, but he was the general manager of the corporation. The objectionable testimony had no relevancy to the question of Bullock’s agency. That was a conceded fact, but the question involved was whether Bullock, in making the contract with the witness, acted for Templeton and Bullock or for the Kineheloe Irrigating Company. The witness Hahn, who was one of the contracting parties, either knew or did not know which company Bullock represented in making the contract in question. He was making the contract with Bullock, who was the conceded agent of defendant, and if he knew Bullock represented defendant in the execution of that contract it was competent for him to so state. His knowledge of this fact was not in any sense essentially a conclusion. As a substantive fact he might have known it *235 for the reason that he approached Bullock as the general manager of defendant to lease the land in question, or from the. statement of Bullock that he made the lease contract for defendant. Neither of the cases cited is in our judgment applicable to the facts of this case. The one relates to the -method of proving agency and the other to the question of the authority of the wife to act for the husband. No such question is here presented. We quote the following from the case of Arndt v. Boyd, above referred to: “Question: ‘From your dealings with Mr. and Mrs. Arndt, before and at this time, who run the business on the Arndt place í’ Answer: ‘Mrs. Arndt, wife of defendant, run and managed the business; in fact, seemed to be boss, and Arndt acquiesced in what she did.’ The witness did not state any transaction or dealing with either husband or wife when the other was present, nor in fact any with either relating to the wife’s agency for the husband. This evidence was objected to on the ground that it was irrelevant, and was merely the conclusion of the witness. We think it was objectionable on both grounds. The fact sought to be established by the evidence was the wife’s authority to act for the husband. Such authority must, in some way, have been conferred by the husband. Of course, it might be proved by circumstances, and implied from his conduct. But, in order to authorize an inference of its existence, it was necessary for the witness to state the fact from which it was to be drawn, and leave the court and jury to make the conclusion.”

The statement of the issues involved in the case quoted from is all that should be required to show the dissimilarity of the questions presented in that and in this ease. In commenting on the question decided in the Arndt ease, since the question there presented is not analogous to the one presented in this ease, we neither approve nor disapprove the conclusion there reached by the Court of Civil Appeals.

A fuller examination of the record leads us to conclude that there was no error in permitting the witness, Peter Hahn, to state that Bullock, in making the contract in question with him, acted for the Irrigating Company.

• Complaint is made in the eighth and ninth assignments that there was error in permitting the witness Hahn to state that plaintiffs got the seed rice to plant their crop for the year 1906 from the Kincheloe Irrigating Company, and that one-half of the rice crop for that year was delivered to said company, for the alleged reason that said testimony was the conclusion of the witness. If .the witness knew the facts stated, we are unable to understand why he should not have been permitted to state such facts to the jury. Corporations act exclusively through agents, and if the rice was delivered or caused to be delivered to plaintiffs by an agent of defendant, it was competent for the witness to state that plaintiffs got the rice from defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W. 1187, 105 Tex. 231, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kincheloe-irrigating-co-v-hahn-bros-co-tex-1912.