Masterson v. Mansfield & Root

61 S.W. 505, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 262, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 412
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 61 S.W. 505 (Masterson v. Mansfield & Root) 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
Masterson v. Mansfield & Root, 61 S.W. 505, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 262, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 412 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinions

GILL, Associate Justice.

Appellant, H. Masterson, sued H. P. Mansfield and W. B. Root as partners and makers of two promissory notes payable to their own order and indorsed by them and one J. L. Hudson, to the appellant.

The appellee W. B. Root filed a separate answer in which he denied the execution of the notes sued on, and denied the partnership as alleged by the plaintiff, and also denied the authority of Mansfield to bind him or the alleged partnership by the execution of the notes.

A trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff against defendants Mansfield and Hudson for the amount sued for, but that plaintiff take nothing against the defendant W. B. Root. The plaintiff alone has appealed.

The facts about which there is no dispute are briefly these: In 1898, *263 Kuhner, Mansfield and Neese were operating a bank at Laporte, Texas,, under the firm name of “The Bank of Laporte.” They also engaged in. the real estate business under the firm name of the South Texas Land: Company. In February, 1898, W. B. Root bought the interest of Kuhner, both in the bank and real estate business, and thereafter, on May 7, 1898, Reese withdrew from both enterprises. Reither the bank nor the real estate business had prospered, and at the date of the withdrawal of Reese the bank was in difficulties on account of the demands of depositors. After Reese’s withdrawal, Mansfield and Root, after some difficulty, borrowed from T. W. House the sums of $500 and $503.65 upon notes signed “Bank of Laporte, Mansfield & W. B. Root.” Ro other sums were borrowed by the firm in aid of the bank. Mansfield did not put in his pro rata in the bank while it was owned by Mansfield, Reese and Root, so the latter induced Mansfield to go to Fort Worth and borrow money on his own responsibility to make his deficit good. Mansfield went to Fort Worth about the-day of June, 1898, and succeeded in borrowing $2500 by pledging collateral belonging to his wife. This relieved the necessities of the bank and enabled them to meet the demands of depositors. The deposits had never averaged more than two thousand dollars, and in all its history it made only two small loans to customers. The only money ever borrowed on the bank’s account was that procured from T. W. House on the two notes above mentioned. All the business of the bank was done in the name of the “Bank of Laporte,” Mansfield being cashier, and Root occasionally acting as assistant cashier.

The real estate concern did no business after the withdrawal of Reese, but its business had theretofore been done sometimes under its own firm name and sometimes in the name of the partners composing the firm.

The testimony of Mansfield and that of Root is conflicting as to whether any partnership actually existed between them after the withdrawal of Reese, but the circumstances strongly support the statement of Root that they proceeded at once to wind up the affairs of the old partnership, and that their association thereafter had no other object.

The notes sued on were drawn by Mansfield, and were dated the 13th day of June, 1898. Mansfield signed them “Mansfield and Root,” and they were payable to the order of “Mansfield & Root.” They were each for the sum of $2500, due respectively twelve and eighteen months after date, bore 8 per cent interest, and contained the usual 10 per cent attorney fee clause. Mansfield wrote across the back of these notes “Mansfield and Root,” and turned them over to one J. L. Hudson to procure money thereon. Hudson, who officed in the same building as Master-son, negotiated them to Masterson for $4000, of which $2500 was paid in cash, and Masterson gave his due bill without interest, due in thirty days, for $1500. Masterson had Hudson to indorse the notes also.

According to the testimony of Masterson and Hudson the due bills were paid at the end of the thirty days. According to Mansfield they were paid in a week or two from the negotiation of the notes. Certain *264 statements in the ex parte deposition of Masterson and other facts and ■circumstances appearing in evidence were sufficient to require the court to submit the issue as to whether the notes were made and negotiated subsequent to the publication of notice of dissolution of the partnership, which occurred on June 22, 1891.

Mansfield had no express authority from Boot to issue the notes, and •Mansfield borrowed the money for his own purposes, and not for the benefit either of the banking partnership or the real estate concern. According to his own testimony he held the money to protect himself against his individual note made at Fort Worth, and none of the money borrowed ever went to the use of either partnerships. He did not advise •Boot of his acts, nor did Masterson advise Boot of the existence of the notes, or of the fact that he held them,' until fourteen months after their date, and this though there was published notice of, the dissolution of the partnership on June 22, 1898, in the Houston Post and other papers, and though Mansfield sued Boot for $30,000 damages on account of the dissolution of the partnership about the 1st of July of that year in the District Court of Harris County. Masterson resided in Houston, Harris County, and was a lawyer. Laporte is within thirty miles of Houston, and is connected with it by telephone, telegraph, and rail. Masterson loaned the money on the notes without inquiry of Boot, and without consulting any person but Hudson and Mansfield. The latter was insolvent at the time, and Boot was amply solvent. Master-son knew that he was acquiring the notes direct from Mansfield, and that Hudson was not the owner, but a go-between.

. The controverted questions are: (1) Was the partnership in whose name the notes were issued of such a character as to clothe the partner Mansfield with the implied power to borrow money in the partnership name? (2) Were the notes acquired before the dissolution .of the partnership and the publication of notice to that effect? (3) Did Master-son loan the money on the notes in good faith, acquiring them in the nsual course of trade and without notice of Mansfield’s fraud or want of authority to issue them?

The facts of this case present some extraordinary features, but the rights of the parties must be measured by the rules ordinarily applicable to partnerships and which control the power of a partner to borrow money and bind the firm.

The assignment of error first urged in appellant’s brief complains of that part of the charge of the trial court which instructs the jury that there is no evidence of Mansfield’s express authority to issue the notes sued on, and directing them to address their investigation to the question of implied authority resting upon the nature of the partnership for the benefit of which the notes purport to have been issued. In this we think the court committed no error. It is insisted that certain portions of Mansfield’s evidence present the issue, but after a careful examination of his entire testimony we are of opinion that, considered in its entirety, it negatives the idea that he had express authority. The *265

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W. 505, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 262, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masterson-v-mansfield-root-texapp-1901.