Mitchell-Greer Co. v. Mitchell

246 S.W. 690
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1922
DocketNo. 10053.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 690 (Mitchell-Greer Co. v. Mitchell) 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
Mitchell-Greer Co. v. Mitchell, 246 S.W. 690 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

Appellant thus states this case.

“This suit was filed April 18, 1917, by original petition to recover certain indebtedness claimed to be due the Mitchell-Greer Company, a corporation, by J. E. Mitchell, its former president. The plaintiff filed its first amended original petition September 26, 1921, and its second amended original petition September 27, 1921.

“To said second amended original petition the defendants interposed certain special exceptions, setting up the statute of limitations of two and four years against the cause of action alleged by the plaintiff. The court sustained the said special exceptions, setting up the statute of limitations of two years to the cause of action as pleaded by the plaintiff and dismissed the suit of the plaintiff, to which action and ruling of the court plaintiff took exception and gave notice of appeal to this honorable court, and thereafter, on September 29, 1921, _ filed its amended motion for a new trial in said cause which was by the court overruled on September 29, 1921, and thereafter plaintiff filed its appeal bond in due time, and on December 22, 1921, entered the record in said cause in this court, $nd now respectfully submits said cause to this honorable court on the errors committed in the court below and assigned in plaintiff’s motion for a new trial which are presented as follows, to wit.”

The plaintiff’s second amended original petition is quite lengthy, and we will not undertake to set it out. We think it sufficient to say that it develops the fact that the defendant J. E. Mitchell, together with J. H. Greer, who severally owned stocks of jewelry, consolidated their interests, and, together with one R. J. Rhome, formed the corporation of the appellant company; that the stock of defendant Mitchell totaled a net value of $68,158.42, for which there was issued to him $60,000 in paid-up capital stock of the corporation; for the remainder, to wit, $8,-158.42, the plaintiff corporation gave to Mitchell its note in the sum of $5,000, and credited him upon the books of the company with the sum of $3,158.42.

It was further alleged that at the time of the consolidation it was understood and agreed that the pldintiff corporation should receive all commissions which the defendant Mitchell might receive under the terms of *691 contracts with certain watchmakers and others for goods furnished and sold, and that during the conduct , of the business Mitchell had on this account received from watch manufacturers and others the sum of $1,388.-17, which the defendant Mitchell had appropriated to his own use without accounting therefor to the corporation. It was further alleged that in the inventory of the defendant Mitchell’s stock of goods he had included certain goods of the value of $1,194 that he did not own, but merely held on commission, and which were afterwards paid for by the corporation.

It was further alleged that Mitchell had been elected president of the corporation and had managed the business; that the fact that Mitchell had included within his inventory the goods on commission had not been discovered until in February, 1914, at which time the value thereof, to wit, $1,194, had been charged back to Mitchell on the books of the corporation; that the conversion of the commissions mentioned in the sum of $1,388.-17 had not been discovered until in November, 1914, at which time the defendant Mitchell severed his connection with the corporation, and for the aggregate of these two items, to wit, $2,5S2.17, plaintiff sought to recover.

In this state of the pleadings appellant presents the following propositions:

“First Proposition.
“The cause of action for $1,388.17 being founded upon collections by the defendant while he was president and managing agent of the plaintiff company and the $1,194 for unpaid stock subscription represents the balance upon mutual and current accounts between plaintiff and the said defendant concerning the trade of merchandise between merchant and merchant, their factors or agents, and the dealings thereon ceased November, 1914, and said suit was instituted April 18, 1917, and said cause of action was not barred.
“Second Proposition.
“The cause of action of plaintiff for $1,194, being evidenced by, or founded upon, a contract in writing, to wit, the defendant’s subscription for the capital stock of the plaintiff company, which was payable under the law two years thereafter and was not due at least until the discovery by plaintiff of the fraud and deceit alleged in February, 1914, and said cause of action therefore was not barred until February, 1918, whereas the suit was instituted April 18, 1917.
“Third Proposition.
“Said suit is a suit in equity to reform the accounting and settlement had between the parties to correspond with the true facts, based upon the fraud and deceit of defendant, and the four-year statute of limitations applies thereto.”

We conclude that the court did not err in sustaining the general and special exceptions to the petition. The original ■petition, made part of the record before us, contains allegations to the effect that after the inventory above mentioned had been taken the capital stock of the corn-pay had been reduced to $100,000, and there is no contention that any part of the capital stock subscribed for by the defendant Mitchell is-unpaid, except it is insisted that the $1,194 at which the goods on commission was valued must be construed as an unpaid part of the written subscription of the defendant Mitchell, but we think this cannot properly be so construed. This error in the inventory was discovered in February, 1914, and there is no allegation that thereupon Mitchell was called upon to complete his subscription by the payment of a further sum. On the contrary, the matter was treated as an error in the inventory, and the amount charged to Mitchell on the books of the company.

Under the allegations of the petition at the time of the correction of the error — the wrongful inclusion of the commission goods in the inventory — Mitchell transferred to the company .goods far in excess of the amount of his total subscription, for which excess the company gave its note for $5,000 and a credit on its books for $3,158.42. Attached to the plaintiff’s petition is an account marked Exhibit A, consisting of items charged to and credited to the defendant Mitchell, extending from October 1, 1912, to November 30, 1914. The account as exhibited shows that on March 31, 1914, Mitchell was charged $1,194 as an “error in inventory, Or. 10-1912,” and the debits as a whole exceed the credits as a whole by only $1,194, which is stated as the “balance.” It would thus seem to conclusively appear from the allegations as a whole that the item of $1,194 is but a mere balance of the account existing between the defendant Mitchell and the plaintiff corporation, and hence but a simple debt instead of an unpaid part of a written obligation. If so, the indebtedness and the cause of action arising therefrom certainly existed as early as November, 1914, at which time Mitchell severed his connection with the corporation.

We think the same must be said of the item, of $1,388.17 of commissions alleged to have been wrongfully converted by the defendant Mitchell.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-greer-co-v-mitchell-texapp-1922.