Manhattan Liquor Co. v. Joseph A. Magnus & Co.

94 S.W. 1117, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 463, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 1117 (Manhattan Liquor Co. v. Joseph A. Magnus & Co.) 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
Manhattan Liquor Co. v. Joseph A. Magnus & Co., 94 S.W. 1117, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 463, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 124 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

GILL, Chief Justice.

This suit was brought by Joseph A. Magnus & Co., a partnership, to recover of the Manhattan Liquor Co., a corporation, the sum of $417 evidenced by a promissory note signed by Sol Chan and purporting to be endorsed by the defendant company. The plaintiffs sought to hold the defendant liable as an original maker of the note.

The liquor company filed a plea of non est factum, and defended upon these grounds:

1. That, the note was executed by Chan for his own personal ends, and the company could in no event be held as the accommodation endorser of another’s paper.
2. If Chan pretended that the transaction was the act of and for the *465 benefit of the liquor company, the plaintiffs had notice that the pretense was false, or else were put upon inquiry which if diligently pursued would have brought such knowledge home to them; and
3. That the purchase, in consummation of which the note was given, was made by Chan without authority of the liquor company, either express or implied,, and was not within the apparent authority of Chan as general manager of defendant.

A trial to the court without a jury resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff. The defendant has appealed and renews its contention here.

The general history of the transaction as disclosed by the record may be summarized as follows:

The Manhattan Liquor Company is a Texas corporation organized for the purpose of buying and selling liquors and cigars at retail in the city of Beaumont. Its home office and place of business was at Beaumont, Texas, where it conducted a retail liquor house known as the Manhattan saloon under the management of one Sol Chan. The company came to be organized under the following circumstances. Sol Chan was in financial straits and out of employment. He had a wealthy friend in Hew Orleans, La», name Sig Kohlman, to whom he applied for aid. Kohlman was willing to aid him but did not care to risk his entire fortune in so doing. He therefore conceived the plan of organizing the corporation in question. Kohlman and his brother were the principal stockholders. They continued to reside in Hew Orleans. Chan and Myrick, the other stockholders, resided in Beaumont. Sig Kohlman was made president. Myrick was one of the directors. Chan was a member of the directory. Was secretary and treasurer and general manager and was the company’s sole official representative in this State. The company, in furtherance of its purposes, established the Manhattan Saloon and placed Chan in charge. He proceeded to conduct it, buying the necessary stock from time to time either for cash or on short credit and paying for it by checks upon the company’s funds consisting of receipts from the business, which he deposited in a local bank to the company’s credit.

J. A. Miller & Co. owned and were conducting the Stag Saloon in Beaumont. They owed to Magnus & Co. on their stock of wines, liquors and cigars, $1,251. On the 19th day of June, 1903, Joseph A. Magnus & Co. received at their place of business in Cincinnati, Ohio, the following telegram addressed to them:

“negotiations' to buy Miller place. Can we owe you his accounts? Wire.
(Signed) Manhattan Liquor Co.”

They knew that Sig Kohlman was largely interested in the Manhattan Company and, being aware of his financial standing, decided to accept the offer and release Miller. They therefore wired their acceptance and confirmed it by letter addressed to the Manhattan Liquor Co., at Beaumont. They promptly sent their agent, Louis Ochs, to close the deal. When he arrived at Beaumont he learned that Chan had sent the telegram and received the letter, and that Chan was the Manhattan Company’s sole official representative in Texas. He proceeded to close the deal with Chan personally acting for the Manhattan Company, without inquiry as *466 to whether Chan had authority from his directory to make the purchase, and seems to have acted under the belief that the transaction came within Chan’s general power. The company had not held Chan out as having such power, -this being the only transaction of the kind that Chan had ever undertaken. As a matter of fact Chan had not been so authorized.

When Ochs arrived in Beaumont Chan had completed his arrangements with Miller and Company and nothing remained to be done but to assume the debts due Magnus & Co. This was to be arranged by execu- . tion on the part of the Manhattan Company of three notes for $417 each, payable to Magnus & Co., with interest, due respectively August 21, October 22 and December 21, 1903. Ochs prepared.the notes and handed them to Chan for execution. When they were returned to Ochs he discovered that Chan had signed them individually. When he protested that he had agreed only to accept the notes of the Manhattan Company Chan told him to look on the back. He did so and found that Chan had endorsed the company’s name on the back of each note. Upon Chan’s assurance that it was “the same thing” he accepted th.em, but his suspicions were aroused. Chan, perceiving this, took him to the Stag Saloon and, still protesting that the two concerns were the same, took a case of liquor from the Stag stock, sent it to the Manhattan bar and then, opening a bottle, drank from it. Ochs afterwards saw a barrel of goods in the Manhattan stock which he believed to have been sold to Miller Brothers by Magnus & Co. Upon this evidence he inquired no further but accepted the notes and released Miller brothers. The first note was paid upon presentation, by whom it does not appear. The note due. December 21 was assigned to the Geyman National Bank. The one due October 22 is the basis of this suit. Thus far the evidence is undisputed.

The fact findings of the trial court are lengthy and for the purposes of this opinion need not be set out in full.

He found, among other things, that Chan did not buy the Stag Saloon for himself but for the Manhattan Company, and that the notes were signed by Chan with the endorsement of the liquor company in order to keep the affairs of the two concerns distinct and separate.

This finding is assailed as without sufficient support in the evidence, and we think the assignment is meritorious. The only evidence remotely tending to sustain the finding are the acts and declarations of Chan at the time of the execution of the notes, and these, in the light of the other evidence, are utterly refuted. Plaintiff’s witness, Hegele, testified on cross-examination that Chan and Miller told him at the time that Chan had bought the Stag Saloon. That he conducted it as his own from the date of the purchase until October. That witness sold Chan goods on his individual account for use in the Stag Saloon and that witness never heard of the Manhattan. Company owning or claiming it. Tippett’s testimony is equally strong upon the point. It was also shown without dispute that in October Chan was adjudged a bankrupt, and Tippett, the trustee in bankruptcy, took charge of the Stag stock as the individual property of Chan and administered it as such.

These facts and the individual form which the notes assumed leave practically no doubt upon this record that Chan made the purchase for himself and endorsed the notes in fraud of both Magnus & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 1117, 43 Tex. Civ. App. 463, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manhattan-liquor-co-v-joseph-a-magnus-co-texapp-1906.