M. H. Thomas Co. v. Hawthorne

245 S.W. 966, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 311
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1922
DocketNo. 8701. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 245 S.W. 966 (M. H. Thomas Co. v. Hawthorne) 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
M. H. Thomas Co. v. Hawthorne, 245 S.W. 966, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 311 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

* Writ of error refused January 24, 1923. Appellees and their assignors owned, severally, different individual lots of cotton in the fall of 1918. All of them (nine in number) were farmers who resided in the vicinity of Seagoville, a village in Dallas county, Tex. The aggregate number of bales of cotton owned by them was 169. The highest number of bales owned by any one of them was 68; the lowest number of bales in any of the lots was 6. This cotton was all lying in the cotton yard at Seagoville, except 11 bales at Forney and 16 bales at Kleburg. Forney and Kleburg are villages near Seagoville. All the cotton stored in the cotton yards was exposed to the weather and was deteriorating and being damaged, while the appellees, its several owners, held it for an advance in price.

W. O. Cardwell was engaged in the mercantile business and in the business of buying and selling cotton at Seagoville. Cardwell had lived in Seagoville many years and had been engaged in the same business there during a period of about 10 years prior to the happening of the event out of which this litigation arose. His father had been a business man in Seagoville many years before he himself had entered business. Apparently his conduct and dealings had always been characterized by honesty, integrity, and uprightness. Appellees themselves had transacted business with him, and he had the confidence of them all. Upon his career he had been adjudged by them to be an honest man, and, so *Page 967 far as this record discloses, no circumstance had existed to impeach that judgment or render it equivocal. In his cotton transactions it seems that he bought various small lots of cotton from local owners and farmers and shipped it away in large volumes to cotton factors and dealers.

Some time prior to November 20, 1918, Cardwell, in what appeared to be a spirit of friendly concern and solicitation for the protection of appellees' cotton against deterioration in quality and value through exposure to inclement weather, began, and for some time persisted in, importuning them to deliver to him possession of their cotton in order that he might ship it to Dallas, there to be stored in a warehouse. He represented to them that he had under lease expansive floor space at the Shippers' Compress Warehouse Company in Dallas. He stated, in substance, to each of them that his space at the warehouse was unoccupied, and that there would be no added cost to him to store their cotton there for them, and that if they would deliver possession of it to him for the purpose he would ship it to Dallas, store it in the warehouse and protect it while it remained there with blanket insurance which he already had. This representation as to insurance was made only to some of the owners. By this means, under the representations he made to them, they would be enabled to protect their cotton against injury from exposure while they awaited a better market upon which to sell Finally each of them acceded to the suggestion and request thus made by him, and each of them delivered his cotton to Cardwell for shipment to Dallas.

Some of the owners themselves surrendered their yard tickets at the cotton yard and had delivery of the cotton made to the freight depot at Seagoville. Others delivered their tickets to Cardwell and he, by presenting them at the yard, there acquired possession of the cotton and had it delivered at the depot for shipment.

The cotton, possession of which was thus acquired by Cardwell from each of the owners, was shipped by Cardwell to M. H. Thomas Co. at Dallas. The first lot of cotton thus acquired was shipped on October 17, 1918, and the other various lots so acquired by him he shipped on different dates thereafter, the last shipment being made about January 15, 1919. In the instance of each shipment a draft was drawn on M. H. Thomas Co. and the bill of lading was attached to the draft. In the case of each shipment the cotton seems to have been consigned to "Shipper's order, notify M. H. Thomas Co." Cardwell made the shipments pursuant to an understanding with M. H. Thomas Co., by the terms of which Cardwell was to deliver to and M. H. Thomas Co. was to accept from him 300 bales of cotton upon stipulated terms, and one of the provisions of the arrangement was that M. H. Thomas Co. was to advance to Cardwell upon cotton actually shipped and delivered under the agreement money to within $10 per bale of its market value, Cardwell agreeing to protect M. H. Thomas Co. with margins in case of market decline. As the drafts were drawn and presented they were promptly paid by appellant. In due course each of the shipments arrived in Dallas, was delivered, and passed under the dominion of appellant.

The following letter of confirmation to Cardwell from appellant reflects the agreement subsisting between these parties at the time the respective shipments were made, and under which the drafts with bills of lading attached were paid by appellant:

"Oct. 17, 1918.

"W. O. Cardwell, Seagoville, Texas. — Dear Sir: We confirm arrangement by which we accept from you 300 bales of cotton on the following terms; 100 bales 50 on December, New York. 200 bales 25 on December, New York, basis Middling nothing below Middling. We advance market value within $10 per bale, you to protect us with margins if the market declines. Price to be fixed at your call at any time before November 25th within market hours. It is understood between us that we have the privilege of selling this cotton immediately upon your failure to respond to our calls for margins. Please confirm this by return mail. [Signed] M. H. Thomas Company, By _____."

Some time after the middle of January, 1919, the price of cotton having declined until the margins existing against it were insufficient, appellant, through its agents, attempted to communicate with Cardwell and obtain from him additional margin to protect the cotton against the declining prices. They were unable to effect communication with him and obtain funds from him for further margin. Whereupon, the margin being absorbed and Cardwell failing to respond to the calls for further margin, he was closed out by appellant.

About this time Cardwell's whereabouts became unknown and he could not be located. This circumstance having become known to appellees, they began to make investigation with reference to the cotton which had been shipped to Dallas by Cardwell under the agreement had with each of them, and they discovered then, for the first time, the true facts as to the shipments having been made in Cardwell's name, as to the drafts having been drawn by him and paid by appellant, and also the fact that all the identical bales of cotton delivered by Cardwell under the shipments made by him, except 7 bales, had been sold and exported by appellant. Cardwell at no time gave any of the appellees any information that the shipments were being made in the manner they were made, that he was shipping under bills of lading made to himself, or that he was consigning the cotton *Page 968 "to shipper's order, notify M. H. Thomas Co."

The uncontradicted testimony of both of the appellees and their witnesses was to the effect that when the cotton was delivered to Cardwell for shipment it was to be stored in the warehouse of the Shippers' Compress Warehouse Company, and in the names of the owners, and warehouse receipts issued in the names of such owners. In some instances representations were made by Cardwell to the owners of the cotton that he had blanket insurance which would protect it, as above stated. In other instances nothing was said between the owner and Cardwell at any time with reference to the matter of insurance.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W. 966, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-h-thomas-co-v-hawthorne-texapp-1922.