Marcus v. Armer

5 S.W.2d 960, 117 Tex. 368
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1928
DocketNo. 4259.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 5 S.W.2d 960 (Marcus v. Armer) 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
Marcus v. Armer, 5 S.W.2d 960, 117 Tex. 368 (Tex. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Certified question from the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth Supreme Judicial District of Texas-.

The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals makes the following statement and propounds the following question to this court, to-wit:

“This appeal is from an order made by the District Court of Travis County overruling a plea of privilege filed by E. A. Marcus another to be sued in Burnet County, in which they reside.

“The suit was for damages for breach of contract in which appellant Marcus, a resident of Burnet County, is alleged to have obligated himself to sell and deliver twenty-five tons of cottonseed to appellee Armer in Travis County. It was alleged that Armer purchased the seed by sample, which tested ‘95 per cent germination,’ whereas, the seed actually delivered to him tested only ‘48 per cent germination.’ It was alleged that this contract was performable by Marcus in Travis County, and that venue of the suit against him lay in that county by virtue of the exception embraced in Subd. 5, Art. 1830, the general venue statute.

“The terms of the contract of purchase and sale, none of which were in writing, are thus 'stated by the court below:

“ ‘The court is further of the opinion, and finds from the evidence that the plaintiff about the time alleged (December 1, 1919) was in Bertram, Burnet County, Texas, and purchased orally from the defendants a car load of cotton planting seed at the price of $112.50 per ton and deposited one hundred dollars on the purchase price; that the plaintiff wanted the cotton seed sacked and it was understood between the parties either at that time or later that the plaintiff was to furnish the sacks and pay for the labor of putting the seed in the sacks and defendants were to load the sacked seed in the car and the plaintiff was to pay the freight on the seed from -Bertram, it being understood between the parties that the plaintiff would later *371 notify the defendants the place where the car of seed was to be shipped. * * *’

“The court finds that in pursuance of this oral contract the parties performed, as follows:

“ ‘That during the latter part of January, 1920, the plaintiff notified the defendants to ship the seed to Austin, Travis County, Texas, and that on or about the 14th day of February, 1920, the defendants, having loaded the sacked seed in the car at Bertram, procured from the railroad company at Bertram a “Shipper’s Order” bill of lading covering the car consigned “to shipper’s order, notify M. Armer, Austin, Texas,” and the defendants drew a draft on the plaintiff for the price of the seed, less one hundred dollars theretofore deposited, and endorsed said bill of lading and draft to the plaintiff upon his paying the amount stated in the draft, and that plaintiff paid the draft, got the bill of lading from the bank and presented same to the railway company at Austin and paid the freight charges and the car of seed was delivered to him.’

“And concludes as a matter of law :

“ ‘The court further finds that by causing said car of cotton seed to be shipped in the manner above stated the defendants became obligated upon a contract in writing, to-wit, the bill of lading and draft above referred to, performable in Travis County, Texas, and that said suit therefore falls within exception or subdivision 5 of the venue statute.’

“It is contended that although the contract for the purchase and sale of the cotton seed was made orally, and not in writing, the subsequent act of the seller, in consigning the seed to Armer on an ‘order’ bill of lading, and forwarding this bill of lading, with sight draft attached, through banks, to Armer at Austin, constituted a written obligation on the part of the . seller to deliver the seed in Travis County; that this act converted the original oral contract into one in writing, performable by the seller in Travis County, whereby the transaction was brought within the purview of said Subd. 5.

“Upon the recommendation of the Commission of Appeals'your Honorable Court has- issued its writ of mandamus requiring this Court to certify the question'involved, and in obedience to said writ we respectfully certify to your Honors for decision the following question:

“Did the trial court err in overruling the plea of privilege under the facts as alleged and proven?”

*372 Under the original oral contract, the sellers’ obligations were to be performed at Bertram in Burnet County. Under the contract the buyer was bound to pay the purchase price, less his deposit, in cash. Upon the specific seed contracted for being put aside in a deliverable state and the balance of the purchase price being paid, the property in the seed would have passed at Bertram to the buyer. Cleveland v. Williams, 29 Texas, 209, 94 Am. Dec., 274; Owens v. Clark, 78 Texas, 551, 15 S. W., 101. Any breach of the contract by the sellers, such as that arising from inferior quality of the goods shipped, would have arisen at Bertram. However, the parties had a perfect right, if they so desired, to change the original contract, and to provide for the cotton seed to be shipped from Bertram in advance of the payment of the full purchase price, and to bind the sellers to deliver the seed at Austin upon payment there of the balance of the purchase money.

While the question is one involved in much confusion of thought, we have concluded that we conform to .the real intention of the parties when we construe the shippers’ order bill .of lading and attached sight draft, in this case, as an offer in writing by the sellers, accepted by the buyer, modifying the original verbal agreement so as to make Austin the place of delivery of the cotton seed, and so as to prevent the title to the seed from passing to the buyer until payment of the draft.

We regard as unassailable the following conclusions of Mr. Benjamin:

“If A. in New York orders goods from B. in Liverpool without sending the money for them, B. may execute the order in one of two modes without assuming risk. B. may take the bill of lading, making the goods deliverable to his own order, or that of his agent in New York, and send it to his agent, with instructions not to transfer it to A. except on payment for the goods. Or B. may draw a bill of exchange for the price of the goods on A., and sell the bill to a Liverpool banker, transferring to the. banker the bill of lading ■ for: the goods, to be ¡ delivered to A. on due payment of the bill of ex- * change. Now in both these modes of doifig business, it is impossible'!1, to infer that B. had the least idea of passing, the property to A. at the time of appropriating- the goods to the. contract. So that, although he may write to'*A.,- and specify the packages and marks identifying the goods, and although, he may accompany this with an invoice, stating that these specific goods are shipped for A.’s account, and in accordance with A.’s order, making his .election final and *373 determinate, the property in the goods will nevertheless remain in B. till the bill of lading has been endorsed and delivered up to A.” Benjamin on Sales (6th Ed.), pp. 420, 421.

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