O. C. Robitzsch & Son v. Taliaferro

237 S.W. 637, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 226
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 8, 1922
DocketNo. 6683.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 237 S.W. 637 (O. C. Robitzsch & Son v. Taliaferro) 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
O. C. Robitzsch & Son v. Taliaferro, 237 S.W. 637, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 226 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

As executor of the estate of Jake Wolf, deceased, George B. Taliaferro sued O. C. Robitzsch & Son (Harold Robit-zseh) and Ed. F. Meleher for an alleged balance of $450 due upon a note executed by them in favor of Wolf, for the sum of $1,000, In their answer the defendants admitted the-plaintiff had a good cause of action against them, except in so far as it might be defeated by a plea of accord and satisfaction, which they set up. By their admission the defendants were permitted to take the offensive and to open and close the case. A jury found against them in the special issues submitted, and judgment was rendered against them, in favor of Judge Taliaferro, .as executor, in the amount sued for. It appearing that Meleher was an indorser, and not a mak-n0^e’ -^e W&s given judgment over aSaiust his codefendants,

The defendants’ plea of accord and satisfaction was founded upon a check which O. C. Robitzsch had caused to be delivered to Judge Taliaferro for $550, and which at the time of the trial contained a stipulation on its back, above the indorsement thereon of Taliaferro, that “This pays Jake Wolf note fulL” was alleged by the defendants in their plea that this indorsement was on the check at the time it was delivered to and ac-eepted and cashed by Taliaferro, and Robit-zsch so testified upon the trial, while Talia-ferro denied this, both in his sworn pleadings, and in Ms testimony. The jury found ¿ , aSamst Robitzsch on tins issue. Robitzsch Aa<l written the check m El Paso, and mailed it, together with the following letter, to his codefendant, Meleher, at San Antonio:

“Hotel Orendorf, George J. Thomas, Manager.
“El Paso, Texas, March 21, 1919.
“Mr. Ed. Meleher, San Antonio, Texas — Dear Friend: Inclosed you will please find check for ($550.00) five hundred and fifty dollars, payable to George Taliaferro to cover the balance due on the Jake Wolf note. I hav.e written on the back of the check that it pays the. Jake Wolf note in full.
“I called on Mr. Taliaferro in his office after I saw you before I left for El Paso - and told him that I had paid Jake Wolf the $450.00 long before his death.
“He informed me that he could find no record, of it on the note, he then asked me about interest, on the note of which he could also find no record on the note.
“I told him that I most certainly did pay him. the interest on the note long before it was due, which was before I paid him the $450.00 and told him that Wolf made a memo of it in a little vest pocket book.
“Taliaferro looked for the book, and did find' where I had paid Wolf the interest.
“Mr. Taliaferro informed me that there was no question in his mind but that I had paid the $450.00 dollars since he saw the memo of. the interest. Mr. Taliaferro advised me to. give him a check for the $550.00 dollars and he would write Mr. Wolf’s brother recommending taking the $550.00 dollars in full payment. I am mailing you this check, that you may know that it was paid. When you give it to Talia- *638 ferro get a receipt or the note hold same for me.
“Thanking you for the many favors,
“Your friend, O. O. Robitzsch.”

[1, 2] Some, time after the receipt of this letter and accompanying check, Melcher turned over the check to Taliaferro, but it is ■ not contended that the latter knew anything of the letter or its contents, or that such knowledge was at any time communicated to him. Robitzsch testified that when he wrote the check he placed thereon the indorsement that it “paid the' Wolf note in full.” • Melcher, who had the check in his possession 12 or 15 days before turning it over to Taliaferro, testified that he “couldn’t swear that this little indorsement was on the back of this check at the time, that I gave it to Mr. Taliaferro,” this being the only reference in his testimony to the issue. Judge Taliaferro testified that the indorsement was not on the check at the time he received and indorsed it for collection. When it was paid, the check, it is presumed, went back into the hands of Robitzsch, and remained in his custody until produced upon the trial. By order of the court below the orginal check accompanies the record here. An inspection of the instrument discloses that the number originally written on the face of the check has been changed, and the new number written in apparently different ink,- and that the indorsement on the back that “This pays the Jake Wolf note in full” is apparently written in a different ink from that in whch the check itself is written, and in the same ink in which the substituted number is written. It is not clear that the new number, and the indorsement, were written by the same person who wrote the body of the check, nor is the contrary clearly apparent. When appellants, defendants below, offered the Robitzsch letter in evidence, it was excluded upon the objections of appellee that—

“It contained self-serving declarations, and that it was hearsay and constituted a transaction between Robitzsch and Melcher, of which the plaintiff, George B. Taliaferro, had no notice, and that there was no evidence that the contents of said letter were communicated to said Taliaferro at any time by said Melcher.”

The letter was offered in its entirety, and for every purpose it could serve. No particular part of it was segregated from the whole and offered; nor was it offered for any .particular purpose. This being the ease, if any particular matter in the letter was subject to the objections made, the court did not err in excluding the whole letter, since it was offered in its entirety. Robinson v. Stuart, 73 Tex. 267, 11 S. W. 275; Ry. Co. v. Washburn, 184 S. W. 580; McBride v. Kaulbach, 207 S. W. 576; Nevill v. Ry. Co., 187 S. W. 388. It may be said, too, that, if the .letter was admissible for a particular purpose only, but inadmissible for any other,.still it should have been excluded upon appropriate objection, since it was offered for every purpose it might serve. It is by these rules the admissibility of the letter in question must be first tested.

[3] In general terms, appellants’ position is that the material issue in the case was whether or not the indorsement, “This pays the Jake Wolf note in full,” was put on the check at the time the latter was sent to Melcher, and that the letter, written at the same time and sent to Melcher along with the cheek, “was a part of the transaction of the execution and delivery of said check, being a part of the res gestas of said transaction, which constituted the basis for defendants’ plea of accord and satisfaction” — that the letter was admissible as a part of the res gestas, as corroborative of Robitzsch’s testimony that at the time the check was executed by him, and delivered to Taliaferro by Melcher, it bore the indorsement. In their brief appellants’ discussion and argument in support of this position is narrowed down to the proposition that the statement of fact in the Robitzsch letter that “I have written on the back of the check that it pays the Jake Wolf note in full” is res gestae of the fact there stated, and admissible as such for the purpose of corroborating Robitzsch’s testimony to the same effect.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hammonds, Inc. v. Flanders
191 A. 925 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1937)
Hood v. Robertson
33 S.W.2d 882 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 637, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/o-c-robitzsch-son-v-taliaferro-texapp-1922.