Mann v. Dublin Cotton Oil Co.

50 S.W. 190, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 678, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 242
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 S.W. 190 (Mann v. Dublin Cotton Oil 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
Mann v. Dublin Cotton Oil Co., 50 S.W. 190, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 678, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 242 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

*679 FISHEB, Chibe Justice.

This is a suit by the appellee, the Dublin Cotton Oil Company, against Felix Mann and his guarantors, Wm. Bevans and W. W. Lewis, for a breach of the following contract:

"The State of Texas, County of Menard.—-This contract, made and entered into this 3d day of September, 1894, by and between Felix Mann, of said county and State, party of the first part, and G-. H. Connell, of Erath County, Texas, party of the second part, witnesseth:

"That said Felix Mann has this day contracted and sold to said G-. H. Connell one thousand five hundred head (1500) of three (3) and four (4) year old steers and up (about one thousand head of said cattle to be four years old and over). Said cattle to average in weight not less than eight hundred pounds per head, and to be good, smooth, merchantable cattle, of good style, shape, and in good condition, and branded FT thus; and said cattle to be cattle raised in Menard and adjoining counties, to be passed upon as to style, age, and quality at said Felix Mann’s ranch in Menard County, Texas, between the 10th and 25th days of October, 1894; said Felix Mann to give said G. H. Connell notice of the time when said cattle will be ready to be passed upon, in time, so that the said Connell or his agent or representative may be present.

"And the said Felix Mann agrees to deliver said cattle on board the cars at Brownwood, Texas, between the 20th of October and the 1st of November, 1894. Said cattle to be penned at Brownwood one night without feed or water, the night before being weighed.

"And the said G. H. Connell hereby agrees to pay for said cattle two and one-eighth (2-J) dollars per one hundred pounds.

"Ten thousand dollars ($10,000) of the value of said cattle has this day been paid by the said G. H. Connell to said Felix Mann, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged by the said Felix Mann, and the said G. H. Connell hereby agrees to advance to said Felix Mann, on said cattle to be delivered as aforesaid, the further sum of five thousand dols. ($5000) on September 15th, 1894; and five thousand dollars on October 1st, 1894, and the balance of said money for said cattle on receipt of said cattle, as aforesaid, on the cars at Brownwood, Texas. Witness our hands, this the day and date above written.

ícFelix Mann,
“G. H. Connell.
"Witnessed by L. W. Ainsworth, W. E. Adkins.
“We hereby guarantee the fulfillment of the above and foregoing con- !
tract for and on the part of Felix Mann, this 3d day of September, 1894.
"Wm. Betans,
"W. W. Lewis.’’

Verdict and judgment in the court below went against the defendants for the sum of $5153.

We find the following facts: That the appellant Felix Mann and one *680 G-. H. Connell, on the 3d of September, 1894, made and entered into the contract as above stated. On September 18, 1894, G. H. Connell transferred the contract to the appellee, the Dublin Cotton Oil Company, and at that time and thereafter Connell was the agent of the Dublin Cotton Oil Company, and that thereafter, in all of his conduct relating to any question connected with the contract or the cattle delivered thereunder, he was authorized to and was acting as the agent of the appellee.

In the latter part of October or the early part of November, 1894, Connell passed upon 1107 head of cattle which Mann agreed to deliver under the contract in question. Nine hundred and seventy head of these cattle were purchased by Mann from Shannon and Westbrook, but at the time it was understood that the absolute title to these cattle would not be transferred to Mann until certain checks delivered by Mann to Shannon and Westbrook were paid; but the cattle were delivered to Mann, and they, with the other cattle, making the total number 1107 head, were driven by the employes of Mann to the city of Brownwood, Brown County, for the purpose of being delivered to the appellee or its agent Connell.

On the contract in question, Connell paid to Mann the full sum of $20,000, the amount which he agreed to pay before the delivery of the cattle. The checks given by Mann to Shannon and Westbrook in payment for the 970 head of cattle purchased from them were not fully paid, and Shannon and Westbrook were preparing to assert their claims in the cattle in question and take steps to recover the same, when Connell, acting for the appellee, paid into the San Angelo National Bank to the credit of Felix Mann the sum of $5000. Shannon and Westbrook then executed to Connell a bill of sale for the cattle; and in this connection we find that the effect of this transaction between Connell, Shannon, and Westbrook and the San Angelo National Bank ivas an advancement by Connell for the plaintiff to Felix Mann of the sum of $5000 on the contract in question, in order that the cattle might be released from the claim of Shannon and Westbrook and delivery made thereof to the plaintiff under the contract with Mann. It is unnecessary for us to set out all the facts in the record leading us to this conclusion, but such effect, we think, should be given to this transaction. In other words, that Connell or the plaintiff acquired no title to the cattle in question as against Mann, but the $5000 was an additional sum advanced by them to Mann, so that the cattle could be released from the claim of Shannon and West-brook. The advancement of this sum made a total amount paid to Mann on the contract of $25,000.

In the early part of November the cattle reached Brownwood, and Connell was notified of their arrival, and the appellant Mann sent to Brownwood one James White, who was authorized to have the cattle in question weighed; and sent by him a letter to Connell to this effect: “The bearer, James A. White, will represent me in weighing my cattle. Tours truly, (Signed) Felix Mann.” This was all the authority White had from Mann. This letter was delivered by White to Connell.

*681 There were no suitable scales at Brownwood upon which to weigh the cattle, and a day or so after they arrived at Brownwood they were by White and Connell caused to be moved therefrom to the town of Dublin, • which was about fifty miles distant, for the purpose of being weighed. They were carried to Dublin on the Port Worth & Bio Grande Bailway.. After they reached Dublin they were weighed, and the cattle delivered and turned over to Connell, as appellee’s agent.

It is true that Connell states in his evidence that he was not a party to removal of the cattle from Brownwood to Dublin and protested against the same; but his conduct in connection with the removal clearly makes him á party thereto. He furnished the cars in which the cattle were moved, and the evidence shows that they were billed to the plaintiff, and he accompanied White with the cattle from Brownwood to Dublin, and at the time they were weighed he appointed an agent to take down the weights and to assist in weighing them, and when weighed they were delivered to him and were received by him.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W. 190, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 678, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-dublin-cotton-oil-co-texapp-1899.