Martin v. Hemphill

221 S.W. 333, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 446
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1920
DocketNo. 6179.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 333 (Martin v. Hemphill) 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
Martin v. Hemphill, 221 S.W. 333, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 446 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BRADY, J.

Appellant filed this suit against the appellees, G. W. Hemphill and the Central State Bank of Coleman, a state banking corporation, to recover damages for the breach of certain contracts for the sale of cotton by appellees to appellant. The appel-lees filed separate answers, and the trial court sustained exceptions of the appellee Central State Bank, which eliminated that defendant from the suit.

The case was tried before a jury, and the court peremptorily instructed a verdict in favor of the remaining defendant, C. W. Hemphill. Judgment was rendered upon the verdict for such defendant, from which this appeal has resulted.

Appellant’s cause of action was based upon certain contracts for the purchase of cotton made at different dates during the month of September, 1917, which contracts were each evidenced by written confirmations. The confirmations were signed with the printed name, McDonald Bros., by T. W. Martin, the latter name being written. It was alleged that the confirmations were each delivered *334 to O. W. Hemphill and accepted by him, andv that, at the time of the making of the contracts and the issuing of the confirmations, appellant was engaged in the business of buying and selling cotton in the town of Qoleman, in Coleman county, Tex., for himself, but was transacting business under the name of McDonald Bros. It was further alleged that these facts were well known to the defendant C. W. Hemphill. These allegations were denied both generally and specially.

Appellant offered to prove the facts as alleged, but, upon objection by the appellee Hemphill that the proof tendered was an attempt to. vary,and contradict by parol the terms of written contracts, the court excluded such testimony.

The bill of exceptions upon this point shows that appellant testified, in substance, that he resided in Coleman, Coleman county, Tex., during the cotton season of 1917-1918, and had been following the business of buying and selling cotton for 15 or 20 years, sometimes buying for himself and sometimes for other people; that during the cotton season of 19ÍL6 he was engaged in buying cotton at Sweetwater, Tex., for McDonald Bros., of that place; that during the season of 1917 and 1918 he was engaged in buying and selling cotton at Coleman.

When it was attempted to show the manner and name in which he did business during the season of 1917, objection was made, and the jury was retired. During the retirement of the jury, appellant testified that he did business at Coleman during 1917, under the name of McDonald Bros., and that he was the sole constituent member of such firm. He testified that he made the purchases in question from appellee C. W. Hemphill, and that in each instance he issued a written confirmation, which correctly stated the date, the amount, and the price and terms of the contract. The first confirmation is typical of all, and is as follows:

C. W. Hemphill. Dear Sir: We heg to confirm herewith purchase from you as follows:
100 B/C at 19% B/M
Differences as Follows:
Good middling.%.On
St. middling.%.On Addling .
St. low middling.%.Off
Low middling.10.Off
St. good ordinary.Off
Spots . Off same grade white
Tinges .Off same grade white
Terms: Oct: 15th.
Reimbursement,
E. & O. E. Yours very truly, McDonald Bros.,
By. T. W. Martin.

It was also testified by appellant that he had previously had. a conversation with ■Hernnhill, concerning the use of the name of McDonald Bros, in the contracts. The substance of this testimony was that local merchants had run a garnishment against appellant’s bank account, and that he suggested running the cotton account in the name of McDonald Bros., to avoid the garnishment of his funds, to which Hemphill assented.

Appellant also testified that Hemphill never delivered the cotton upon any of these contracts, but requested an extension of time, to which he consented, provided Hemphill would pay any overdrafts created by the purchase of other cotton to fill the contracts. It was not claimed that there was any definite period of extension.

As stated, the court excluded this testimony, and in the bill of exceptions qualified the same as follows:

“This suit was brought by T. W. Martin on written confirmation signed ‘McDonald Bros., by T. W. Martin,’ T. W. Martin having testified that during the season of 1916 he bought cotton for and represented McDonald Bros., which was a cotton firm engaged in buying and selling cotton, when he sought to testify that in the confirmations issued he was not acting for McDonald Bros., but for himself under the name of ‘McDonald Bros.,’ the defendant objected on the ground that the written confirmation, by the manner of its signature, showed that T. W. Martin was not' signing as an individual, but as the agent of McDonald Bros., and that Martin should not be permitted to vary the legal moaning and effect of the signature and of the written instrument, by parol testimony that he was acting for himself in so signing the instrument, which objections were by the court sustained under the decision of Heffron v. Pollard, 73 Tex. 96, 11 S. W. 165, 15 Am. St. Rep. 764.”

Appellant’s claim against the bank was based- upon the theory that Hemphill was the managing’ officer of the bank; and that he did not make the purchases from appellant for his own account, although holding himself out as principal; that since the making of the contracts appellant had learned that Hemphill was in fact acting for and on behalf of the bank, and that the latter was liable as the undisclosed principal.

To avoid the claim of ultra vires, which was urged by the bank, and sustained by the trial court, appellant alleged that the bank, a state banking corporation, as an incident of its authority to lend money and take security as collateral, including cotton in bales and public weighers’ receipts, had the authority to sell such collateral, and to realize therefrom.

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Related

Martin v. Hemphill
237 S.W. 550 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 333, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-hemphill-texapp-1920.