Merchants & Farmers Cotton Oil Co. v. Lufkin National Bank

79 S.W. 651, 79 S.W. 653, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 551, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 615
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 79 S.W. 651 (Merchants & Farmers Cotton Oil Co. v. Lufkin National Bank) 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
Merchants & Farmers Cotton Oil Co. v. Lufkin National Bank, 79 S.W. 651, 79 S.W. 653, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 551, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 615 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinions

This suit was brought by the Lufkin National Bank to recover of the Merchants and Farmers Cotton Oil *Page 552 Company, a corporation, an indebtedness of $5000 alleged to have been evidenced by a promissory note for that amount which was made the basis of the suit and which purported to have been executed for the corporation by its general manager and attested by its secretary with the seal of the corporation affixed.

The defendant oil company answered by plea of non est factum. That the general manager, Pearson, whose name was signed to the note had no authority to execute notes for the company, and further that his signature was a forgery. There was no answer for the defendant Wettermark.

The bank by supplemental petition pleaded in substance that it purchased the note in due course of trade from the Wettermark Bank, paying a valuable consideration therefor and without notice of any vice therein. That the oil company had held out its general manager as having authority to issue negotiable paper in the corporate name and was estopped now to deny such authority. That if Pearson's name was in fact signed to the note without his authority it was nevertheless attested by Allan Seale, the secretary of the oil company, as the genuine signature of Pearson and the note as the act of the company, and the company was bound by the representation of its secretary, the plaintiff having no notice of the fraud.

Further, that whether or not Pearson had authority to issue notes for the company and whether or not Pearson's signature was affixed to the note without his authority, the act was nevertheless done by B.S. Wettermark, the oil company's treasurer, clothed with full authority to issue such paper and done in behalf of the company, wherefore it became immaterial that Pearson's name was signed instead of Wettermark's.

Further, that the bank of Wettermark Son is bankrupt. That the oil company is indebted to said bank in the sum of $20,000 carried by said bank as an overdraft, and that for this reason the oil company has the right to offset the note in question against the indebtedness to the bank, wherefore it ought to be held bound in any event.

Then follow allegations with reference to the course of dealing between the oil company and the Wettermark Bank and between it and B.S. Wettermark, its treasurer, and with reference to the negligence of the oil company in failing to supervise its officers, which need not be set out in this connection. A trial before the court without a jury resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff from which the oil company has appealed and by appropriate assignments of error presents the questions hereinafter discussed.

The note sued on was for the sum of $5000 with interest and the usual collection stipulation. It was dated Nacogdoches, Texas, November 6, 1902, and was payable to the order of A. Wettermark Son ninety days after date. It purported to be signed by the Merchants and Farmers Cotton Oil Company by W.B. Pearson, its general manager. B.S. Wettermark for the firm of A. Wettermark Son, bankers at *Page 553 Nacogdoches, Texas, sold the note to the appellee bank for value and indorsed it to them before maturity, they having no notice of any fact that would render it invalid. Before its due date the Wettermarks became insolvent and B.S. Wettermark left the country. The note was presented to the oil company at maturity for payment, but payment was refused on the ground that the note was a forgery as to Pearson's name and that it was in no respect the act of the company.

The facts leading up to and attending the execution of the note are as follows:

The oil company had been organized as a trading corporation in 18__, and was engaged in the manufacture and sale of cotton seed oil and other cotton seed products. Its domicile was Nacogdoches, Texas, and all its directors and officials lived in that town. It did about $40,000 worth of business each milling season, but kept no record of its transactions except the entries on the check stubs, and invoices and bills of lading. At the end of the season this data would be checked up and compared with their bank statement and thus would the result of a season's business be disclosed. Notwithstanding these loose methods a 20 per cent dividend was declared in 1900, 10 per cent in 1901 and 20 per cent in 1902.

E.A. Blount was its president, Allan Seale its secretary, B.S. Wettermark the treasurer, and W.B. Pearson its general manager. As it was necessary for the concern to borrow large sums of money during the busy season its directory arranged that Wettermark should finance the concern through his bank and otherwise. For this purpose he was authorized by the board of directors by a by-law to issue negotiable paper in the name of the company, signing his name as treasurer, attested and sealed by the secretary. This he did from a time prior to the appointment of Pearson as manager until the failure of his bank. At the date of the issuance of the note in question and at the date of his failure the oil company owed his bank in the form of an overdraft the sum of $20,000, and at times during the season as much as $30,000.

It had been his custom, with the knowledge of the company, to procure the issuance of company notes payable to his bank or to others and discount same at other banks whenever the company's overdraft became too heavy for his bank to carry, and this he had done several times during the season in question.

At a prior meeting of the board of directors it had been determined orally that as B.S. Wettermark was a heavy stockholder in the company, and was expected to finance the concern, the promissory notes necessary to be issued to that end, when payable to his bank, should be signed by Pearson, their general manager, who under his general powers as such issued all checks upon company funds.

During the season in question and prior to the issuance of the note in question Pearson had signed several notes for the company which were taken to the secretary by Wettermark, duly attested and sealed, thereafter negotiated to others by Wettermark and duly paid when presented. *Page 554 Seale, the secretary, testified that since Pearson became manager nearly all of the notes he had attested as secretary had been signed by Pearson, the note in question being the first unauthorized use of his name.

The plaintiff bank had during the season in question handled four or five notes of the company signed by Pearson and attested by Seale and they had all been duly paid at maturity except the one in question. All having been negotiated through B.S. Wettermark.

The transactions of a similar nature with other banks need not be stated, as they are not shown to have been known by or to have influenced the plaintiff bank in the purchase of this note.

B.S. Wettermark drew the note in question, signed the oil company's name by a stencil usually used for that purpose, "per Pearson, General Manager," signing the name of Pearson thus without his knowledge or authority. He, Wettermark, then took the note to Allan Seale, the oil company's secretary, and had him attest and seal it as secretary of the company. Seale did not know that Pearson's signature was not genuine. The money procured by Wettermark on this note does not appear to have been placed on his bank books to the credit of the oil company, but the company through its general manager continued thereafter to draw upon the Wettermark Bank, the amount of the overdraft varying but never falling under $20,000. It is not made to appear that in any way was the oil company given credit for this note or its proceeds.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 651, 79 S.W. 653, 34 Tex. Civ. App. 551, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-farmers-cotton-oil-co-v-lufkin-national-bank-texapp-1904.