Nichols v. Acers Company

415 S.W.2d 683, 4 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 591, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2558
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 17, 1967
Docket11501
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 415 S.W.2d 683 (Nichols v. Acers Company) 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
Nichols v. Acers Company, 415 S.W.2d 683, 4 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 591, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2558 (Tex. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

In this case a Dallas meat company sued for meats delivered to the food operation of the Grayson Hotel in Sherman during the months of July, August, and October, 1964. The suit was filed against Dr. Rhea Nichols, a medical doctor in Dallas, termed sole proprietor of the hotel and “doing business as Grayson Hotel.”

*685 The cause was pleaded as a sworn account, with invoice exhibits attached, and sworn to by R. A. Acers, one of the partners in The Acers Co., who brought the suit.,

Dr. Nichols answered denying that he purchased or agreed to purchase, or agreed to pay for, any of the items specified in the invoices attached to the petition. He further pleaded, in effect, that at the time the purchases were made in July and August he did not own or operate the hotel, and that in the month of October he was the owner but had the hotel leased out. The answer did not deny the claim under oath.

At the outset of the trial, Acers moved for judgment under Rule 185, Vernon’s Ann.Rules Civ.Proc., for the reason that Dr. Nichols had not answered under oath. The court overruled the motion, and the parties proceeded to trial.

At the conclusion of the trial before the district court, without the aid of a jury, the court entered judgment for The Acers Co. in the amount of $1,461.90, for meat sold in the month of October, with interest from November 1, and attorney’s fees for $487.31. Dr. Nichols has perfected appeal to this Court.

Appellant Dr. Nichols assigns two points of error, the first directed at the award of attorney’s fees and the second challenging judgment on the account.

Dr. Nichols bought the Grayson Hotel in July, 1961, with the Merchants and Planters National Bank of Sherman financing the purchase, at least in part. Two years later, in July, 1963, Dr. Nichols sold the hotel to John Gilmartin, subject to the outstanding indebtedness to the original vendor and to the bank.

From July, 1963, when Dr. Nichols sold, until September 1, 1964, the hotel and the restaurant operated in connection with the hotel were managed and operated under Gilmartin. Sometime late in 1963 it appears that Gilmartin placed James E. Smith in charge of the hotel and its food service. About this time Smith started buying meat from The Acers Co., after being solicited by Roy Cobb, salesman for Acers.

Cobb testified that Smith kept the account current until the summer of 1964 when the account ran into trouble. July and August deliveries were not paid for, and later became a part of the sworn account sued on in this lawsuit.

Dr. Nichols reacquired the Grayson Hotel on September 1, 1964, from Gilmartin, and found Smith, whom he had never met before, in charge of the hotel and restaurant, acting for Gilmartin. At the time Dr. Nichols took over from Gilmartin, Smith and Dr. Nichols entered into an arrangement, evidenced by a written memorandum, by which Smith undertook to lease the hotel and restaurant from Dr. Nichols for $2,000 a month, effective the first day of September. The memorandum also recited intention of the parties to continue the lease arrangement or negotiate a sale of the hotel to Smith.

Smith paid the rent for September in advance by check, but the check did not clear the bank and was never paid. Smith continued in charge of the hotel and restaurant through September and until near the end of October, when Dr. Nichols assumed control of the hotel and its food service and put his own manager, Frank Berger, in charge. The last purchase of meat from Acers in October consisted of an order of strip sirloins, in the amount of $317.75, which Smith ordered for a party at the hotel on the night of Friday, October 27.

During the month of October, Smith conferred several times with Dr. Nichols as part of negotiations to buy the hotel. Smith apparently made efforts, without success, to obtain financial backing in the purchase. It appears that sometime during the weekend of October 28-30 Smith decided to give up his operation of the hotel and so advised Fred Holland, president of the bank, and Tip Newell, one of the lienholders.

Dr. Nichols was informed by telephone of Smith’s intentions by Holland and Newell. Dr. Nichols was told that Smith was going *686 to sell the food inventory around town and leave the same day, unless Dr. Nichols agreed to buy the inventory. Through Holland and Newell, Dr. Nichols arranged to buy the food inventory from Smith for the sum of $2,234.82, which included some meat, and bought three stoves for $600.

Appellee filed suit grounded primarily on a sworn account, with nineteen invoices attached. This phase of the lawsuit embraced, in addition to claim of an account directly with Dr. Nichols, alternative claims of an account with an agent for Dr. Nichols, or an account with the agent subsequently ratified by Dr. Nichols.

In addition to the three alternative theories under sworn account, appellee pleaded four other theories of recovery: (1) violation of the Bulk Sales Act, (2) constructive trusteeship of accounts receivable, (3) reliance on promise by appellant’s agent account would be paid, and (4) as third party creditor beneficiary of contract under which appellant acquired accounts receivable and inventory of the hotel.

No findings of fact and conclusions of law were made by the trial court, and apparently none was requested. If there is evidence to support the judgment on any theory of the case, the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed, and every issue raised by the testimony must be resolved in support of the judgment. 4 Tex.Jur.2d, Appeal and Error—Civil, sec. 747, pp. 244-5, and cases cited.

Appellee Acers contends that its suit, being on a sworn account, stood admitted by appellant at the outset of trial through his failure to deny the claim under oath; and that, under the ruling of the trial court, appellant was limited in his defense to proof only of matters in confession and avoidance. We cannot agree with these contentions.

We believe that appellee’s theory of recovery under a sworn account fails and is controlled by the rule stated in McCamant v. Batsell, 59 Tex. 363. Under the facts of this appeal, Acers sold meat to Smith, lessee of the hotel, and not to Dr. Nichols, the owner and lessor of the hotel. In the absence of a relationship between the parties under which Acers sold meat to Dr. Nichols and Dr. Nichols bought the meat, with title passing to Dr. Nichols, resulting in Acers becoming the creditor and Dr. Nichols the debtor in a general course of dealing, suit on a sworn account against Dr. Nichols may be defended without necessity of denying the claim under oath.

In McCamant v. Batsell, supra, Justice Stayton, speaking for the Supreme Court, said:

“It

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Bluebook (online)
415 S.W.2d 683, 4 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 591, 1967 Tex. App. LEXIS 2558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-acers-company-texapp-1967.