McDonald v. Watkins

353 S.W.2d 905, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1962
Docket16281
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 353 S.W.2d 905 (McDonald v. Watkins) 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
McDonald v. Watkins, 353 S.W.2d 905, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2167 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Suit was by R. M. Watkins as plaintiff against Raymond McDonald on sworn account. Additionally, suit was for damages for breach of the same contract under which the course of dealing gave rise to the action on account. Judgment was for the plaintiff and defendant appealed.

Judgment reformed and affirmed in so far as it was based upon the action in account. Judgment reversed and rendered in so far as it awarded damages for breach of contract.

Watkins was a farmer who occasionally raised chickens. McDonald was in the business of purchasing eggs, hatching them, and selling baby chicks. There was a certain breed of chickens which would grow into desirable birds for meat purposes. The parties contracted whereby McDonald sold some two thousand baby chicks to Watkins, at the same time agreeing to take all the eggs produced from them for an eight month period, said period was to date from the time the chicks matured and began laying eggs of satisfactory size and character. McDonald further agreed to pay Watkins the price of 60‡ per dozen for said eggs, a departure from the usual contract McDonald made with producers. He ordinarily “pegged” the price to be paid at the time of delivery of hatching eggs upon the current market price of baby chicks. There was nothing provided by the terms of the parties’ contract which prescribed the time for McDonald’s paying Watkins the agreed price of 60‡ per dozen.

It developed during the trial that McDonald considered it proper to pay Watkins on the basis of the current market price of eggs delivered (not to exceed 60¾⅜ per *907 dozen) at the time Watkins made each delivery, with accounting to be made at the end of the eight month contractual period. Watkins considered that McDonald should pay upon delivery for eggs accepted at the agreed 600 price. In any event McDonald only paid the current market price as of the time of each delivery, and Watkins began keeping account of the number of eggs delivered, the amount paid per dozen therefor, and the arrears between the amount so paid and the calculable figure at 600 per dozen. The price paid upon delivery, undoubtedly based upon the current market, never amounted to as much as 600 per dozen.

Shortly before date of September 12, 1959, Watkins had a conversation with McDonald in which he told McDonald that he was in financial straits. He wanted McDonald to pay him the balance owing on the egg transaction under the 600 per dozen computation. McDonald advised him that he could not then pay him because the price of chicks was down. Evidently Watkins could not obtain a commitment as to when the balance owing would be paid. He told McDonald that he could not continue deliveries with payments as were being made by McDonald because he felt he was losing money. McDonald told him to “do whatever you want to with the chickens”, and to “sell them or do whatever you want to”. Accordingly, and having a prospective purchaser, Watkins sold his flock on or about date of September 12, 1959. No eggs were delivered by Watkins to McDonald after the flock was sold. Both Watkins and McDonald knew that there would be no more deliveries under the contract after sale of the flock.

Watkins continued in his insistence that McDonald pay him the balance owing according to a price of 600 per dozen for the eggs delivered. He brought suit and obtained judgment awarding such to him, plus attorney’s fees. Judgment also assessed damages against McDonald for breach of contract.

By certain points presented on appeal McDonald attacks the propriety of the judgment in respect to the indebtedness and the attorney’s fees. He attacks the propriety of attorney's fees allowed to Watkins by the judgment in this case upon the theory that the liability of McDonald to Watkins, if any, was based upon special contract and not upon a “sworn account” within the meaning and intent of Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes, Art. 2226, “Attorney’s fees”. Watkins had plead his case as provided by Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 185, “Suit on Sworn Account”.

In support of his contention McDonald cites language from the leading case of Meaders v. Biskamp, 1958, 159 Tex. 79, 316 S.W.2d 75. That case does not define the term “account”, within the contemplation of Art. 2226, but cites the case of McCamant v. Batsell, 1883, 59 Tex. 363, in which may be found language which does do so and which distinguishes an “account” from a “special contract”. It is necessary to examine the entire opinion beginning with the premise that there must be some kind of contractual relation between the parties, else there would be no sale, purchase, or transfer of title to personal property and creation thereby of the debtor-creditor relationship of the parties. The 1883 court says that an open account results when some one or more elements of the contractual agreement between the parties remains open, that is, remains to be ascertained, whereas in a special contract situation all the terms of the contractual agreement are fixed and certain. We have concluded that the circumstances of the instant case establish its character as a suit on open account for indebtedness thereunder accrued to date of September 12, 1959.

The material element of the contract by reason of which the transaction was one of “account” was the absence of any specification of the time McDonald was obliged to make payment for the eggs delivered. It is true, of course, that on the aforesaid *908 date Watkins was privileged to make demand for the full payment of the balance owing for the delivery of the eggs, but McDonald was not obliged by any specific agreement on his part to' make payment at such time. The want of any requirement of the contract that he do so, coupled with the antecedent course of dealing by the parties under the preliminary agreement by which an account was opened, en-grafted the character of “open account” upon the entire transaction. When Watkins swore under oath and under the provisions of T. R. C. P. 185 that his account was true and just, the open account became a verified open account, or, to use the terminology of the Rule and Art. 2226, a “sworn account”.

The only attack upon the propriety of the allowance of attorney’s fees was based upon the want of qualification under the statute as an account. The attack must fail because it was an “account” upon which the suit was based.

In the evidence, wherein the matters relative to the contract and transaction between the parties were fully developed, McDonald agreed that his obligation was properly calculable at the figure of $1,-712.00, if and in the event he was not to be relieved of liability therefor because of Watkins’ failure to deliver eggs to him for the full contractual period of eight months rather than for the term, less than that number of months, up until Watkins sold his flock of chickens and ceased to deliver the eggs produced by such flock. Essentially it is McDonald’s contention that he actually paid the going market price for the eggs delivered to him by Watkins, making payment in said amount at the time each delivery was made by Watkins, and deferring any additional payment (to make iip the full contract price of 60‡ per dozen) until the end of the eight month period.

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Bluebook (online)
353 S.W.2d 905, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-watkins-texapp-1962.