McLendon Hardware Co. v. Black

264 S.W. 1011
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 8, 1924
DocketNo. 6783.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 1011 (McLendon Hardware Co. v. Black) 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
McLendon Hardware Co. v. Black, 264 S.W. 1011 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BAUGH, J.

The Brady & Black Hardware Company was a corporation, capitalized at $40,000, doing business in Temple, Tex. W. A. Brady was president and owned $21,-500 of this stock. D. A. Black owned the remainder. In the early part of 1923 the corporation became insolvent and made an assignment of all its assets for the benefit of its creditors. Amongst the assets was an account against D. A. Black, amounting to $3,753.57, as shown by the books of the corporation, purchased at open outcry by appellant, and on which this suit was brought in the district court of Bell county. Appellant also attached certain lands of D. A. Black in Bell county. Black, in addition to general and special exceptions, answered as follows:

“That the said W. A. Brady was complaining because of the fact that this defendant was indebted to said corporation, and was unable to pay off said indebtedness, or secure the payment thereof; and that about the last days of December, 1919, or during the early part of 1920, he and the said W. A. Brady held a conference *1012 concerning said indebtedness — the said W. A. Brady then holding a majority of the stock of said corporation, and being president and active manager thereof — for the purpose of considering the indebtedness due by this defendant to said corporation. And, after the matter had been discussed pro and con, it was finally verbally agreed by and between this defendant and the said W. A. Brady, as president of said corporation, that this defendant’s account with said corporation would be due and payable as of January 1, 1920; and that said account should not thereafter be increased by this defendant; and, further, that this defendant would repay to said corporation each year all amounts thereafter advanced to him by it; and that any amounts that might pay, over and above the amount thereafter be advanced to' him by said corporation, should be applied to the indebtedness of $7,039.35 accruing prior to January 1, 1920.
*‘(b) That it now appears from exhibit at-taehed to plaintiffs’ first amended original petition filed herein that his account with the said corporation for the year 1921 amounted to $3,-953.11; and that his account with said corporation from January 1, 1922, to April 1, 1923— the approximate date on which said corporation made the assignment for the‘benefit of its creditors — amounted to $3,851.10; and that the books of said corporation show charges against this defendant for the years 1921, 1922, and 1923, aggregating $7,804.20; that after said agreement was so had, and as shown by said exhibit attached to plaintiffs’ petition, this defendant paid Brady & Black Hardware Company, between the days of January 1, 1920, and the date it made its assignment, sums aggregating $9,276.91, and in excess of the value of all goods, wares, merchandise, etc., advanced to him by said corporation after said agreement was so had; that said sum of $9,276.91 was applied to the extinguishment of charges to his account made after January 1, 1920; and that the balance was credited to the said sum of $7,-039.35 accrued prior to January 1, 1920; and that, while his said account with Brady & Black Hardware Company up to January 1, 1920, was a continuing account under the agreement he had with the said W. A. Brady as president of said corporation, said account ceased to be a continuing account as of that date; and that all amounts charged to this defendant on the books of said corporation after January 1, 1920, and all amounts paid by him after that date were charged, paid, and credited in strict accordance with said agreement; and that if the books of said corporation do not so reflect, then he avers that said books have been improperly kept.”

Defendant then pleaded that all of said account, yet unpaid, had been due for a period of more than two years when suit was filed, and that it was barred by limitation.

For further statement of the case, we copy the following from plaintiffs’ brief, which is substantially correct:

“To the answer of the defendant, the plaintiffs replied by a supplemental petition, and after general and special demurrers to the entire defense as pleaded by defendant, and after a general denial, by way of response to said affirmative defense averred that, if there was any such agreement between the said Brady & Black Hardware Company and defendant, then that such agreement had been waived by defendant, Black, and that said defendant was estopped to assert the same. In such connection, plaintiffs alleged that if the defendant, D. A. Black, and the corporation of Brady & Black Hardware Company, of which the said defendant, D. A. Black, ’was an officer, had agreed that the credits and payments made by the defendant, D. A. Black, should be applied only on new indebtedness created subsequent to January 1, 1920, so as to allow the account to become barred by limitation, then that said agreement, if any so had, was not in any sense complied with, either by said corporation or said defendant, Black, but that, on the contrary, the said account had continued after January 1, 1920, the same as it had before said date, and had at all times been carried as a running or continuing account, and the credits and payments made by defendant, Black, had at all times been applied and credited thereon as to a running account and to the extinguishment of the oldest indebtedness on such account, so that the balance sued for was not barred by the statute of limitation; that the defendant, D. A. Black, had at all times known that the said credits had been applied on said account as to a running account, and to the extinguishment of the oldest items, and had at no time protested thereto, but had at all times acquiesced therein, and that the first time the defendant asserted said defense was the date of the filing of such answer; that by reason of the consent and acquiescence of the defendant to such application of credits made, the lapse of the long period of time without protest, said defendant had waived the contract and agreement, if any had been had, to apply the credits in the different manner from that in which they had been actually applied.
“Plaintiffs further averred that the defendant, D. A. Black, knew that the plaintiffs were purchasing said account, believing same to be true and to exist ,as shown by the books of the said corporation of which he was an officer and director, and had at no time given the plaintiffs notice that there existed any such character of defense as was asserted; that but for plaintiffs’ reliance on the correctness of said books, and the application of the credits as shown on said books, plaintiffs would not have purchased said account, by reason of which facts defendant was estopped in the premises.
“Plaintiffs further averred that the defendant, D. A. Black, was an officer of said corporation, and that, if any such agreement was .made by defendant with said corporation as was averred, then that same was invalid; that it was an unfair contract, made in bad faith, and in fraud of creditors and of said corporation, solely had and made for the personal gain and advantage of the defendant,'and wholly unenforceable.
“The defendant D. A. Black’s reply to the supplemental petition of the plaintiffs, by a first supplemental answer, was specially excepted to the pleading of waiver, acquiescence, and estop-pel.

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 1011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclendon-hardware-co-v-black-texapp-1924.