Manufacturers' Equipment Co. v. Cisco Clay & Coal Co.

15 S.W.2d 609, 118 Tex. 370, 1929 Tex. LEXIS 114
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1929
DocketNo. 5246.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 609 (Manufacturers' Equipment Co. v. Cisco Clay & Coal 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
Manufacturers' Equipment Co. v. Cisco Clay & Coal Co., 15 S.W.2d 609, 118 Tex. 370, 1929 Tex. LEXIS 114 (Tex. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Judge LEDDY

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

As a basis for certified questions propounded the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second Supreme Judicial District presents the following certificate:

“The Manufacturers’ Equipment Company, an Ohio corporation, without a permit to do business in this1 state, sued the Cisco Clay & Coal Company, a joint stock association, and C. B. Pash, T. B. Hoffer, J. A. Colliton, Peter Swenson, W. E. Smith, Evan Jones, and T. B. Williams, as trustees and stockholders of said Cisco Clay *373 & Coal Company, hereinafter called company to recover damages in the amount of $1250, with interest, on account of a breach of a written contract entered into by and between the plaintiff and the defendant. The plaintiff sought to hold the individual defendants named by virtue of their being members and trustees of said company. Plaintiff alleged that the said defendants were partners; that on or about September 1, 1921, said company, acting' by and through its lawfully authorized president, C. B. Pash, entered into a contract with plaintiff, under the terms of which the said company, in consideration of plaintiff’s preparing and furnishing it certain plans and blue prints for a paving brick plant, agreed to pay to it the sum of $1250 on December 1, 1921. That the plans and blue jprints as in said contract provided were actually prepared and furnished by plaintiff. Plaintiff prayed for judgment for the full amount agreed to be paid in said contract against all of the defendants, both jointly and severally.

“Defendant answered by pleading a general demurrer and certain special exceptions to plaintiff’s amended petition, because showing on its face that plaintiff was doing business in Texas without a permit, a general denial, a denial of the authority of C. B. Pash, the president of the Cisco Clay & Coal Company, to bind either the company or the individual defendants by the execution by him of the contract involved in this suit.

“Upon the trial, C. B. Pash, who it appears had died in the meantime, J. A. Colliton, Evan Jones and T. B. Williams, not having been served with citation, were, upon motion, dismissed from the suit and the cause proceeded to trial as against the other defendants named. The court overruled the general demurrer and special exceptions to plaintiff’s amended petition, and the cause then proceeded to trial upon its merits, and a jury having been waived, the matters of fact as well as of law were submitted to the court. The case was submitted upon an agreed statement of facts signed by the parties, through their attorneys of record, and the court, after hearing the evidence, rendered judgment, first, that plaintiff was entitled to prosecute the suit; second, but that for the want of authority on the part of C. B. Pash the contract upon which the suit was based was not its contract nor binding upon the Cisco Clay & Coal Company, or upon the other defendants remaining in the suit. To the latter part of the judgment plaintiff excepted and gave notice of appeal.

*374 “The agreed statement of facts, briefly stated, recites that the plaintiff is a foreign corporation, organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of Ohio, and has not a permit to do business in the state of Texas and has never had. That the contract upon which plaintiff sued was executed by I. M. Justice on behalf of plaintiff and by C. B. Pash on behalf of the company. That at the time of the execution of said contract said C. B. Pash was the duly elected, qualified and acting president of said company; that other than being such president he was not authorized by the board of trustees of said company to execute said contract. That the plaintiff nor its agents had any knowledge of any limitation upon the authority of the said C. B. Pash, as president of said company, to enter into any contracts. That the certified copy of the declaration of trust under which the company was organized, together with the various amendments thereto, show that the trustees had the entire control of the management of said company, and that said Pash, as president, had no such control, except that he was a member of the board of trustees. It was further agreed that the plans and blue prints were made by said plaintiff at Dayton, Ohio, and that the first lot of plans were mailed from Dayton on September 24, 1921, and that the rest of the plans were actually delivered to said company by delivering the same to C. B. Pash, as president of said company, at Fort Worth, Texas. That T. B. Hoffer, Peter Swenson and W. E. Smith were, at the time of the signing of said contract by Pash, members and trustees of said company. That said company was not a corporation, but was organized under a declaration of trust. It was further agreed by and between the parties hereto that unless the execution of the contract upon which suit was filed constituted doing business in Texas, the only work performed in the State by plaintiff was that performed by said Justice, vice-president of plaintiff company, which was as follows: He spent parts of two days in East-land County, Texas, taking measurements and securing data upon which to base the work in preparation of the plans and specifications called for in said contract. That the actual work, drawing and preparation of said plans and blue prints, was done at Dayton, Ohio. That the trustees of said company did not adopt any formal by-laws, but at all times faithfully followed the terms of the declaration of trust in conducting the business of the company. That said trustees held meetings from time to time as occasion required, and at such meetings all contracts proposed to be made by the company and all matters pertaining to its affairs were discussed and acted upon by *375 the trustees as a board. The trustees did not authorize the making of contracts for the company in any other way, unless the declaration of trust by its terms authorized the president to make the contract in question. That the trustees, other than C. B. Pash, did not know of or consent to the making of the contract herein sued upon, and the trustees did not at any time, by resolution, vote or other action, approve the making of said contract, either in advance or after it was made. The trustees never at any time constituted the president or any other officer a general manager of the company’s business, but the management of such business was kept in the hands of the board of trustees, who in meeting assembled transacted all business except mere matters of routine. That the next meeting of said board of trustees after the signing by Pash of the contract sued upon was held in Fort Worth on September 22, 1921. Said Pash was present at said meeting, but did not mention the fact that he had made said contract, and the other trustees remained in ignorance of its existence until long afterward. If Pash had told about making said contract, the trustees would have passed a resolution or vote repudiating it and would have promptly notified the plaintiff of such repudiation. That the trustees, against whom judgment was obtained, never saw the plans or drawings made by plaintiff, and said company never used such plans or derived any benefit from them. The said plant in question was never constructed or even begun. Not long after the plans were sent to Pash the enterprise for which said company was organized was abandoned.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 609, 118 Tex. 370, 1929 Tex. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manufacturers-equipment-co-v-cisco-clay-coal-co-tex-1929.