Martin, Wise & Fitzhugh v. Johnson

33 S.W. 306, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 628, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 1895
DocketNo. 817.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 33 S.W. 306 (Martin, Wise & Fitzhugh v. Johnson) 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, Wise & Fitzhugh v. Johnson, 33 S.W. 306, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 628, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 328 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

FINLEY, Associate Justice.

Appellants make the following statement of the nature of this suit which is accepted as substantially correct by appellee:

Appellee originally brought three suits, one against each of appellants, claiming damages from each of them for substantially the same cause set out in his fourth amended original petition. They were instituted in March, 1887. Subsequently (April 18, 1890), by an order made in the cause against Martin, Wise & Eitzhugh, both of the other causes were consolidated with it.

On September 4, 1893, plaintiff (appellee) filed his fourth amended original petition, alleging, in substance: (1) The consolidation above mentioned.

(2) That the appellants, Martin, Wise & Eitzhugh, and Johnson and Long, were then and were when the suit was brought, members, stockholders, officers and directors of the Lamar Warehouse Company, and that each and all of the defendants would he styled and treated and charged as joint tort feasors in the matters thereinafter set forth; that Lamar Warehouse Company was chartered June 4, 1883, and its business, as expressed in its charter, was to do a general warehouse and commission business, “to receive, store, house and ship cotton or other goods.”'

(3) That “sometime in August, 1883, in order to protect the sellers of cotton, the Commissioners’ Court of Lamar County made, passed and entered of record an order providing for the appointment of a publicweigher for Paris and Blossom Prairie in said county of Lamar, to act until the next general election thereafter and for the election of four-cotton weighers in said county of Lamar, at the general election next thereafter, as provided by law, who should he elected by the qualified *631 voters of said county, thereby establishing the office of public weigher in said county, and made the same elective at the next election thereafter.”

(4) That on or about November 4, 1884, he was by the legal voters, etc., duly and legally elected to the office of public weigher in and for said county of Lamar, for the term of two years after said election next following, to act as such in the city of Paris in said county and State; that immediately thereafter he qualified as such public weigher as the law provides, by talcing the oath and giving the bond required by law, that he at once entered upon the discharge of his duties, etc.

(5) That he was then and there, and up to the 5th day of November, 1886, ready and willing to weigh all bales of cotton, etc., which were required or were necessary to be weighed in said Lamar County, and

which were brought to said city for sale by the owners or producers thereof or their agents.

(6) That immediately after his election and qualification, and on divers days since then, and while he was public weigher as aforesaid, he offered to defendants his services as public weigher and offered to weigh by himself and by deputies, all bales of cotton which they or either of them might buy or desire weighed; that they each refused to allow him or any deputy of his to weigh any cotton for them, or for any person from whom they bought or received cotton.

. (7) That Martin, Wise & Fitzhugh and Johnson and Long were on November 4, 1883, and have ever since been engaged in the business of buying cotton in the city of Paris.

(8) That from September 1, 1885, to February 1, 1886, Martin, Wise & Fitzhugh so bought in the city of Paris as many as nine thousand bales of cotton, none of which was weighed by the public weigher or deputy public weigher, and was bought from the owners and producers thereof by them, and that all the cotton so bought by them during that time was weighed by P. M. Speairs or A. B. Long, neither of whom was a public weigher or deputy public weigher, and both of whom were employed and paid by defendants to weigh cotton bought by them from the owners and producers thereof and delivered at Paris by wagons, and the said Speairs and Long were employed by the defendants to weigh all the cotton bought by them and each of them, and they did so weigh under said employment all cotton bought by each and all of the defendants during said time.

(9) Substantially the same allegations are made as to the defendants Johnson and Long, except that it is charged that they so bought, etc., five thousand bales of cotton.

(10) That during the time from September 1, 1885, to the last day of January, 1886, the defendants Martin, Wise & Fitzhugh and Johnson & Long and Lamar Warehouse Company acting together, employed and paid P. M. Speairs and A. B. Long to weigh, and they did weigh, all the bales of cotton bought by either and all of the defendants during the time plaintiff was public weigher aforesaid, and the said P. M. Speairs and A. B. Long, under and by virtue of said employment, did weigh *632 all the cotton purchased by either of the defendants, or which was stored in or passed through the Lamar warehouse, and that said cotton was so weighed without the request of owners thereof, or either of them, and when so weighed was not the property of the defendants, or either of them, nor of the said P. M. -Speairs or A. B. Long.

(11) That during that time Martin, Wise & Fitzhugh and Johnson & Long bought from the owners and producers thereof, from to-wit, J. F. Fleece 33 bales, from Dan Wisely 13 bales, from C. A. DeWitt 13 bales, from P. M. Estes 17 bales from W. Marehbanlcs 18 bales, from J. R. Wooldridge 35 bales; that he is not able to state the precise day on which defendants purchased any of said cotton, nor can he state the names of any other persons from whom defendants or either of them bought cotton, except as hereinafter shown, so as to locate the precise time the same was purchased or weighed, or the names of the persons from whom it was bought, or the number of bales bought from each person, for the following reasons, to-wit: — During all of said time all of the defendants were buying cotton in the city of Paris brought there from all parts of Red River, Lamar, Fannin, Delta, Hopkins, Franklin counties in Texas, and from the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations, Indian Territory, which constitute a large territory, a very small number of the citizens whereof are known to plaintiff — besides there were all the time many other persons buying cotton in Paris, who bought a large number of bales in said market; that he has made diligent inquiry to ascertain the names of the persons from whom said defendants bought said cotton, and the precise date of each purchase; that he has propounded interrogatories under articles 3339 and 3340 of the Revised Statutes of Texas to John Martin, Frank Fitzhugh and T. W. Johnson, in order to discover the number of bales bought by or for them, the names of the persons from whom they bought, and the precise date of each purchase, but has been unable to get the information desired; that he has exhausted all the means at his command to ascertain the facts above referred to so as to be able to plead them more specifically, but is unable to get the necessary information, and if the defendants or any of them have such information (which they ought to have, if any one), they conceal it from plaintiff for the purpose of trying to defeat the ends of justice in this suit by preventing a fair trial and full investigation into the merits of this case.

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.W. 306, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 628, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-wise-fitzhugh-v-johnson-texapp-1895.