McGee v. McGee

237 S.W.2d 778, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1834
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 23, 1950
Docket6113
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 237 S.W.2d 778 (McGee v. McGee) 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
McGee v. McGee, 237 S.W.2d 778, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1834 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice..

This action was instituted by the appel-lee,-Claude McGee, on August 22,. 1949, *780 against the appellants, ,P. E. Roddy and Perry J. Leverett, to recover $2120.07, the value of 15 bales of cotton which appellee alleged he sold and delivered, to Roddy and Leverett. He alleged that Roddy and Lev-erett issued and ■ delivered to him ■ their cheque or draft on a bank in Lubbock for the agreed purchase price of the cotton and that, although -they had received the cotton and appropriated it to their own use, they instructed the bank not to honor or pay the cheque when it. was, presented. He alleged that the bank observed the instruction of Roddy and Leverett and, when the cheque was presented to it, payment thereof was denied. He prayed for judgment against Roddy and Leverett, jointly and severally, for. damages in the sum of $2120.07, the agreed value- of the cotton, together with 6% interest thereon from -February 3, 1949, the alleged- date of- the 'sale, for costs of suit and general relief.

On September 7, 1949, appellants Roddy and Leverett requested leave of the court to implead the appellant Taft McGee as a party .defendant, which request was granted 'by, order of the court entered on the same date.. Appellants Roddy and. Leverett then filed their answer to appellee’s cause of action,, consisting o.f a general denial and a cross-action over and against the appellant Taft McGee. In their cross-action, they admitted they agreed .to purchase the 15 bales-of cotton from appellee and to pay him therefor the sum of $2120.07. They alleged, however, that appellee represented and warranted to them that he was the owner of the cotton and, that, shortly after they purchased it, they were notified that appellee ■ did, not own the cotton and that the compress where it was stored refused to deliver it to them upon the compress’ warehouse receipts therefor which they had received from appellee. They further alleged that they notified appellee; of the refusal of the compress and, after waiting several days and not having heard from him, they delivered the purchase price of the cotton to Taft McGee upon his warranty that he, and not Claude McGee, owned the cotton. They alleged further that, as a matter of fact, appellee did not own the cotton at the time he sold it to ■them and that they were in the position of stake-holders and, as such, were entitled to have adjudicated in this cause the controversy between-Taft McGee 'and appellee as to the ownership' of the cotton. ■ '•

'' The record shows that Taft McGee was the owner of the Hereford gin and that appellee was employed by him as manager thereof during the' year 1947 and until October ' 1948. As compensation for his services during that time, appellant, Taft McGee, agreed to pay appellee 49% of the net earnings of the gin. In-October 19‘48, the, ■ gin 'was , incorporated with a capital stock of $40,000, of which appellee became the -owner of one-fourth, and he continued as manager of the gin, at a-wage of 25% of the net earnings until December 17, 1948, when his employment and connection with the gin company and Taft McGee terminated.

On November 14, 1949, appellant Taft McGee filed his answer and was joined in it by the Hereford Giri Company, a corporation, as intervenor. This pleading was amended on March 6, 1950, and in the amended answer they made a general denial of the allegations of the appellee and pleaded specially'' that the có'tton warehouse receipts delivered by appellee to Roddy and Leverett belonged to the Hereford Gin Company; that they never at any time belonged to the appellee; that the appellee was, at all times during the transactions involved, only an employee of the Hereford Gin Company and had no right or authority to assert title to either the cotton or its proceeds nor. to the warehouse receipts evidencing the same; that neither the cotton nor the warehouse receipts were ever at any time lawfully transferred or assigned by the Hereford Gin Company to appellee; and that the appellee was, therefore, not entitled to recover of Roddy and Leverett, the Hereford Gin Company, nor Taft McGee the proceeds of the sale of the cotton.

Taft McGee and the gin company included in their answer an offset and counterclaim against appellee in which they alleged that, in the year 1947, Taft McGee arranged with the West Texas Cotton Oil Company of Plainview to advance loans *781 to him when they were heeded in the gin business; that it was agreed between Taft McGee and, appellee that all moneys belonging to the giri-afccount would -be placed in the Hereford State Bank and all accounts and business would be kept in, and transacted through, that bank and that all such funds pertaining to the operations of the gin would belong to Taft McGee until the net profits were ascertained. They further alleged that, without the knowledge or consent of Taft McGee, appellee represented to the West Texas Cotton Oil Company that he was acting for Taft McGee and procured from that company the sum of $3000 which he deposited in the First National Bank of Hereford and appropriated to his own use, instead of depositing it in the Hereford State Bank to the account of the Hereford Gin Company, as it was his duty 'to ’ do. They further alleged that, thereafter, appellee procured the additional sum of $2000 from the West Texas Cotton Oil Company in the same manner which he likewise appropriated to his own use and benefit and kept both of these transactions secret and unknown to his employer Taft McGee., They further alleged that the gin operated at a loss of $3200 in the year 1947 and that the loss was caused by the unlawful withdrawal of its funds by appellee; that, if he had not withdrawn such funds, the gin would .have made a profit during that year of $1800, of which appellee would have been entitled to approximately $900; and that Taft McGee was therefore entitled to judgment against appellee on these items for the sum of $4100.

The Hereford Gin Company and Taft McGee further pleaded that; during the year 1948, appellee took and converted to his own use one bale of cotton belonging to G. H. Whitaker of the value of $100, and that Taft McGee paid Whitaker that amount. They further alleged that, during that year, appellee withdrew from the account of Taft McGee and the Hereford Gin Company various sums, consisting of eleven items ranging from $22.35 to $375, amounting in the aggregate to $1562.62, which he unlawfully and wrongfully appropriated to his own use. The aggregate of the various items alleged to have been wrongfully acquired -by appellee was $9,-262:62, and appellant Taft McGee and the Hereford Gin Company prayed for jfidg-ttiént against appellee for .that amount.

Upon the motion of appellee, the court entered an order of severance, in which it was ordered that appellee’s cause of action against Roddy and Leverett and the-cross-action of Roddy and Leverett over- and against Taft M-cGee' for - indemnity against their - liability upon appellee’s cause - of action was -continued on the docket-under the-docket number of 17099, arid the cause of action asserted by Taft McGee and the Hereford Gi'n- Company against appellee was severed therefrom and entered upon the docket as cause number 17099-X.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.2d 778, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgee-v-mcgee-texapp-1950.