Parks v. Schoellkopf Co.

230 S.W. 704, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 27, 1921
DocketNo. 1803.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 704 (Parks v. Schoellkopf Co.) 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
Parks v. Schoellkopf Co., 230 S.W. 704, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 221 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HUFF, C. J.

F. T. Parks, appellant, sued the appellee Schoellkopf Company to recover a balance alleged to be due him on a salary contract and for a small remnant of goods, totalling $529. The appellee answered by general denial and by cross-petition. As the facts stated in the cross-action are substantially proven, we will set out the cross-petition:

“(1) That in the year 1916 the plaintiff (Parks) claimed to have individually a contract with the Batavia Company of Batavia, N. Y., a manufacturing concern, granting him the right to sell its. products, comprising automobile tires or casings, and other automobile supplies and accessories, within the state of Texas, for a period ending December 31st of that year. He applied to defendants (Schoell-kopf Company), proposing to enter its employ and give his personal service to the defendant in case the defendant and said Batavia Rubber Company should enter into a contract for the purchase, handling, and sale by the .defendant of the said Batavia Rubber Company’s products aforesaid within the states of Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas, stating that his contract with Batavia Rubber Company would be canceled^ The defendant thereupon, in connection with plaintiff, entered into negotiations with said Batavia Rubber Company, looking towards the termination of plaintiff’s said contract with it, and looking towards the execution of a contract between defendant and said Batavia Rubber Company, which should provide for defendant’s becoming the distributor of the Batavia Company’s products within said four states, in which event the plaintiff was to be employed in defendant’s automobile tire department. These negotiations resulted in a contract between defendant and the said Batavia Rubber Company, evidenced by an instrument executed by the parties of date November 1, 1916, to continue in force until November 1, 1918, with the option and privilege of the defendant to continue the same for an additional period of not to exceed 10 years, upon certain conditions and under the terms of which the said Batavia Rubber Company constituted defendant its distributor within said four states, for the handling and sale of its automobile tires and accessories pertaining thereto, which products the Batavia Company agreed to ship upon order of the defend *705 ant. The prices to be paid therefor by the defendant then to be the prices named in Batavia Company’s price list dated June 28, 1916, with a trade discount from said list of 25 per cent.-, and 5 per cent., and an additional special discount of 1*% per cent.,' allowance for reshipment in territory, and a cash discount of 5 per cent, on settlement date. These prices, however, subject to change of Batavia Company without other notice than the sending out to defendant of new prices, and defendant, under said contract, was bound to make monthly cash' settlement for all purchases from Batavia Company on or before the 15th day of each month. There are other provisions in said contract, but same are not necessary here to be set out, a true copy thereof being attached hereto as a part hereof, and marked Exhibit A.
“(2) The plaintiff was an active participant in -the procuring by the defendant of this contract from Batavia Rubber Company, and was familiar with all its terms.
“(3) In anticipation of the execution of said contract, Exhibit A, the plaintiff and the defendant had also entered into a written contract, but which specially provided that- same should become «effective only in the event that the defendant and the said Batavia Rubber Company should execute a contract substantially in terms as was thereafter done, in which contract between plaintiff and the defendant, which is dated October 14, 1916, after reciting that: ‘Whereas, plaintiff (Parks) then had a contract with.Batavia Rubber Company, under which he had exclusive right and privilege to sell automobile tires or casings within the state of Texas for the period ending December 31, 1916, and which was contemplated that said contract should be surrendered by the parties thereto and a new and substantial similar contract entered into between defendant and said Batavia Rubber Company, for the handling and sale by defendant of said Batavia products for a period of not less than two years within the states of Texas, .Arkansas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana: Therefore, subject to the surrender by Parks to the Batavia Rubber Company of his said contract with it, and subject to the execution of said new contract by the defendant and said Batavia Rubber Company, that the defendant company, by said contract of date October 14, 1916, employed the said Parks to solicit sales and take orders in behalf of defendant, and generally to represent it in the handling and taking of orders for and sales of Batavia automobile tires or casings and other Batavia products as may be handled by defendant under its contemplated contract with the Batavia Company. This contract of employment to continue during the life of the contract between defendant and Batavia Rubber Company, but not to exceed three years from November 1, 1916’ — said employment contract recites that plaintiff shall give his entire time and personal attention and efforts and best service to the successful carrying on, promotion, and development of - the sales of said Batavia products in behalf of defendant, and as it was contemplated that defendant might also handle other lines' of like products in addition to said Batavia products, the contract provides that in such event Parks shall alsd, in like manner, solicit orders for such additional products under the terms of said contract, applicable, however, only to tires and tubes, and for his compensation for his personal service thus to be rendered to defendant, it contracted to pay him commissions on all sales of the aforesaid products made by the defendant to purchasers in the territory aforesaid, as follows: Four per cent, on all sales made at the maximum selling price of such products; 3 per cent, on all sales made at the medium selling prices of said products; and 2 per cent, on all sales made at the lowest selling price of said products, and the same commission as his compensation; were to be received by the said Parks under said contract upon all payments actually made to defendant on sale of consigned goods; that is, the products aforesaid, which might be placed by defendant upon consignment with consignees within the territory aforesaid; but said contract specially provides that the compensation of Pax’ks for his said personal services during the first year of his said contract with defendant should not be less than §5,000, and with the further mutual agreement that Parks might draw and receive during said year the sum of §5,000 in equal monthly installments, beginning the 1st day of December, 1916. There are other provisions in said contract, which was duly executed and mutually delivered by plaintiff and defendant, not necessary here to be set out, but a true copy thereof is hereto attached, marked Exhibit B, as a part hereof, to which reference is made for all of its terms.
“(4) This contract, Exhibit B, became effective when the said contract between the defendant and the Batavia Rubber Company became effective, to wit, the 1st day of November, 1916, and said contract continued in force until during the spring of 1918, when the defendant, for good cause, as hereinafter set out, terminated its said employment contract with plaintiff for this:

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 704, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-schoellkopf-co-texapp-1921.