Moritz Pincoff v. Adoue Lobit

138 S.W. 1140, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1086
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 12, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 138 S.W. 1140 (Moritz Pincoff v. Adoue Lobit) 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
Moritz Pincoff v. Adoue Lobit, 138 S.W. 1140, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1086 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

REESE, J.

This is an action by Moritz & Pincoff, residents of Hamburg, Germany, against B. H. Young and B. Adoue and Joseph Lobit, partners, doing business under the firm name of Adoue & Lobit, to recover the value of certain cotton seed meal, alleged to be $50,000. Plaintiff dismissed as to E. H. Young.

The trial court sustained a general demurrer and certain special exceptions of Adoue & Lobit to the petition, and, the plaintiffs declining to amend, dismissed the cause, from which judgment plaintiffs appeal.

The first assignment of error complains of the action of the court in sustaining the general demurrer to the petition. So much of the plaintiffs’ petition as is necessary to be considered in disposing of the questions arising upon the general demurrer and exceptions is as follows:

“That heretofore, to wit, on and about the 11th and 17th days of January, 1907, the defendant E. I-I. Young was indebted to the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company, a then corporation engaged in the business of exporting cotton seed products in the city of Galveston, in a large amount of cotton seed meal, to wit, 10,000 or more sacks, of the value of $50,000, and that on and about said dates the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company demanded of and from the said defendant E. I-I. Young repayment of said cotton seed meal in kind. That said Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company desired to export at least a part of the cotton seed meal owed to it by the said E. H. Young, and upon informing the said E. H. Young of its desires in the premises the said E. H. Young, for the purpose of repaying the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company in kind, procured and delivered to the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company what purported to be negotiable ocean bills of lading, representing 6,770 sacks of cotton seed meal, of the value of $16,000, such bills of lading purporting to have been signed by the master of the steamer Narlyn, as receiving from the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company the said 6,770 sacks of cotton seed meal for shipment to the order of the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company to Hamburg, Germany. But the xilaintiffs allege that each and all of the said bills of lading were false, fictitious, and forged, that the signatures thereto were not the signatures of the master of said vessel, and that the cotton seed meal purporting to have been received by said vessel for shipment was not so received, and had never been delivered to said vessel for shipment, statement of which bills of lading is hereto attached, marked ‘Exhibit A,’ and made a part hereof.
“That the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company, by its indorsement in blank, negotiated said bills of lading to Adoue & Lobit, defendants herein, who in turn negotiated same, and the plaintiffs ultimately became purchasers and are now holders of same for value, and without notice of the forgeries, and in the manner hereinafter stated. That *1141 plaintiffs had. sold to other persons, for the account of the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company, a large quantity of cotton seed meal, deliveries to be made at Hamburg, Germany, and that to fulfill such contracts and to make such deliveries the said Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company procured these bills of lading from the said E. I-I. Young; but that by reason of a delay in shipment the persons for whom the alleged cotton seed meal was ordered refused to accept the said bills of lading purporting to represent such shipments; whereupon the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company proposed to plaintiffs to allow - them an extra margin on the price thereof and a cash bonus of $4,000, if they would accept said negotiable bills of lading and pay to the persons to whom Adoue & Lobit had forwarded same the full value thereof. And plaintiffs would show to the court that the said negotiations, while they were conducted by the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company, were in truth and in fact for the sole use, benefit, and advantage of Adoue & Lobit. That said Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company was largely indebted to said Adoue & Lobit, and were insolvent, which was well known to all of said defendants, and that said Adoue & Lobit well knew that their only hope for payment of their debt against the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company was the sale by them of said negotiable bills of lading hereinbefore mentioned. That the bonus of $4,000 which was paid to the plaintiffs, as an inducement to purchase said false and fraudulent, bills of lading, was furnished and paid by Adoue & Lobit, defendants herein, with a full knowledge of the dishonor of said bills of lading by the persons on whom they were drawn, and was made by the said Adoue & Lobit for the sole purpose of persuading these plaintiffs to purchase said false and fraudulent bills of lading, in order that the said Adoue & Lobit might receive the benefits of said purchase, which plaintiffs here charge the said Adoue & Lobit to have received for their sole use and benefit. Plaintiffs would show to the court that upon purchasing said negotiable bills of lading, for which plaintiffs paid 64,765 marks, money of the empire of Germany, which “mark” is here alleged to be of the value of 24 cents in currency of the United States of America, the money so paid for the same was received by said Adoue & Lobit, and the same was by them applied as a general credit to satisfy in part an indebtedness of the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company to the said Adoue & Lobit not arising out of this transaction, and though often requested the said defendants, Adoue & Lobit, have failed and refused to pay to plaintiffs the sum of money so received, to their great damage, $35,000.
“That the defendants, Adoue & Lobit, upon becoming apprised of the fraudulent and fictitious character of the transaction and of the forged bills of lading, as hereinbefore set forth, they (the said Adoue & Lobit) procured from the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company, to idemnify them against loss by reason of these premises, a great quantity of assets, consisting of goods, wares, and merchandise, cotton seed meal, negotiable bills of lading, and other bills, assets, and evidences of assets, a detailed statement of which has been carefully concealed by the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company and Adoue &’ Lobit, and is unknown to plaintiffs. But the plaintiffs allege that the value of the goods, wares, and merchandise so taken as indemnity is largely in excess of the plaintiffs’ debt and is at least of the value of $35,000.
“That the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company is openly and notoriously insolvent, and its stockholders, officers, and directors have abandoned the said corporation and have suffered its franchise to be forfeited for nonpayment of franchise tax. That in cause numbered 26,851, pending in this court, entitled Moritz & Pincoff v. Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company, your honor granted and appointed a receiver for said corporation at the instance of these plaintiffs, and upon such receiver being appointed the officers of the Galveston Cotton Seed Meal Company fraudulently and feloniously shipped its books and papers out of the state of Texas, and at least one of the officers of said company removed from this state for the purpose of placing himself beyond the jurisdiction of this court, in an effort to perpetuate the wrong and fraud which had been practiced upon these plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
138 S.W. 1140, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moritz-pincoff-v-adoue-lobit-texapp-1911.