Lewis v. Farmers' & Mechanics' Nat. Bank of Ft. Worth

204 S.W. 888, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 718
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 1918
DocketNo. 8897.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 888 (Lewis v. Farmers' & Mechanics' Nat. Bank of Ft. Worth) 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
Lewis v. Farmers' & Mechanics' Nat. Bank of Ft. Worth, 204 S.W. 888, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 718 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

The Farmers’. & Mechanics* National Bank of Ft. Worth brought this suit against A. S. Lewis on two promissory notes, each in the sum of §150, dated November 15, 1911, executed by defendant and payable to Hodge-Pemberton Auto Company, or order, due 90 days and 6 months, respectively, from date. Plaintiff further alleged that:

“Before the maturity of said notes, the said Hodge-Pemberton Auto Company by its indorsement of said notes in writing appointed the contents thereof to be paid to plaintiff.”

Defendant answered by general denial, and for special answer denied that plaintiff was the bona fide owner of said notes, and alleged that said notes were given as part payment for one Whiting, automobile purchased by the .defendant frota! Hodgeht’emberton Aiito Company, the purchase price being §550, of which amount §250 was paid in cash; that said auto company represented and warranted to defendant that said automobile was of good workmanship and material and that it would run well and perform the work for which it was intended in a first-class manner; that said auto was fairly tried, hut did not run or perform its work well, and was defective in workmanship and material, the answer setting out the respects in which it was alleged the auto was defective. Defendant pleaded that the consideration had failed for which the notes had been issued, and that, if plaintiff had purchased the notes, it did so after the maturity thereof, aud with knowledge of the defects in the car xileaded and with notice of the facts. Defendant prayed that the auto company be made a party to the suit, and that plaintiff recover nothing against him, and that he have judgment against the auto company for §200 alleged to have been expended for repairs on the car, and, in the alternative, that he have judgment over against the auto company for any amount .which the plaintiff should recover against him. The auto company answered by general denial, and specially denied any warranty of the automobile, and denied any defect in workmanship or material. The cause was submitted to a jury on special issues, and judgment rendered for plaintiff as prayed for, and in favor of the auto company on defendant’s cross-action. Defendant A. S. Lewis has appealed.

[1] The first and second assignments urge error in the failure of the trial court to give peremptory instruction for defendant, because of lack of proof to sustain plaintiff’s cause of action pleaded. It is contended that plaintiff pleaded that it acquired the notes by written transfer, and that the evidence showed that if it acquired said notes at all such acquisition was without indorsement or any written transfer: Appellant insists that, under the rule that pleading and proof must correspond, plaintiff failed to sustain by proof the facts pleaded. He cites article 1994, Vernon’s Sayles’ Texas Civ. Stats.; Mason v. Kleberg, 4 Tex. 86; Lumber Co. v. Hines, 184 S. W. 596; Loop v. Ogburn, 180 *889 S. W. 914; Padgett Bros. v. Dorsey, 194 S. W. 1124; Weld-Neville Cotton Co. v. Lewis, 163 S. W. 667; Cooper v. Loughlin, 75 Tex. 524, 13 S. W. 37; and other decisions, which sustain the general rule relied on and further cites cases, such as Henry v. Phillips, 105 Tex. 459, 151 S. W. 533; Morris v. Kasling, 79 Tex. 141, 15 S. W. 226, 11 L. R. A. 398, and Kindell-Clark Drug Co. v. Myers, 140 S. W. 463, to the effect that facts not pleaded, though evidence thereof be admitted without objection, cannot form the basis of a judgment.

In case No. 88S5, entitled Chas. Nimmo v. C. A. O'Keefe, 204 S. W. 883, recently decided by this court, not yet officially published, we had occasion to discuss the principles involved in these two assignments. In the cited case plaintiff alleged that certain fraudulent representations, which he claimed entitled him to a rescission of the contract sought to be canceled, were made by the agent of the defendant. Evidence of the alleged misrepresentations made by the agent were admitted without objection, and judgment was rendered for plaintiff. Defendant, as appellant in this court, urged that the judgment should be set aside because of a variance between the allegations and proof. In that case the court said:

“The case of Lewis v. Hatton, 86 Tex. 533 [26 S. W. 50], held that under a petition alleging that the sheriff had unlawfully taken possession of certain property proof was inadmissible that a deputy of the sheriff had made such levy, but here the testimony was objected to when offered, and the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and the trial court, on thé ground that such testimony was inadmissible against objection seasonably urged and constituted a variance between the allegata and probata. See Tarver v. Carter (Civ. App.) 42 S. W. 229. In Moody & Co. v. Rowland [100 Tex. 363], 99 S. W. 1112, cited by appellant, it was held that the fact that evidence not within the issues pleaded was admitted without objection would not authorize a charge thereon. But from a careful reading of that case and the authorities there cited, it will be found that the proposition of law there enunciated is not a rule of evidence, but rather a rule of pleading. One must allege in his pleadings the essential grounds of his recovery, or of a special defense, and evidence admitted, though without objection,’ will not avail the litigant unless it be in support of allegations made in his pleadings. In other words, the party must first plead the facts which the proof offered tends to establish before such proof will be admissible, or, if admitted without objection, will avail him anything. In the Instant case the cause of action would have been the same had the misrepresentation been alleged to have been made by the principal or by the duly authorized agent, for it is a well-recognized maxim of agency ‘qui Tacit alium faeit per se’; and if the act of the agent be a lawful one, done in the name and behalf of the principal, and by the principal’s implied or express authority, the principal is bound as fully as if he himself had acted in the premises. The contract made or the obligation assumed is just as binding in one case as in the other. If the party who attempts to bind the principal seeks to show that the principal’s liability arose by reason of the acts or words of a duly authorized agent, and no objection is made, at the time such evidence is offered, to the manner of proof, the adverse party waives any objection on the. ground of variance. 31 Oyc. 723. The variance in this instance does not go to the substance of plaintiff’s cause of action, as in the cases relied on by appellant, but merely to the manner or mode of proof.”

We think the rule announced in Nimmo v. O’Keefe applies to the question involved in these two assignments. See Baldwin v. Polti, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 638, 101 S. W. 543, writ denied; Orient Land Co. v. Reeder, 173 S. W. 939. In 3 R. C. L. p. 980, § 190, it is said: ;

“The possession and production of a note uncanceled and unextinguished by indorsement of payments, or otherwise, is prima facie evidence that the holder is the owner, and that the note is unpaid. Indeed, the doctrine that the production of a promissory note at the trial of an. action to recover the amount of it is sufficient proof of the plaintiff’s ownership is too well settled now to be questioned” — citing authorities.

Article 582, Vernon's Sales’ Tex. Civ. Stats., provides that:

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204 S.W. 888, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-farmers-mechanics-nat-bank-of-ft-worth-texapp-1918.