Pearlstone-Ash Grocery Co. v. Rembert Nat. Bank of Longview

135 S.W.2d 559
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 28, 1939
DocketNo. 5395.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 135 S.W.2d 559 (Pearlstone-Ash Grocery Co. v. Rembert Nat. Bank of Longview) 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
Pearlstone-Ash Grocery Co. v. Rembert Nat. Bank of Longview, 135 S.W.2d 559 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

! JOHNSTONE, Chief Justice.

, Pearlstone-Ash ; Grocery Company brought this suit against W. R. Wickham, Carrcjl,.Wickham, Ivenneth'Wickham a.nd *560 Roy Wickham (called “the Wickham defendants), against the Rembert National Bank of Longview, and against Dublin Grocery Company. Plaintiff alleged against Wickham defendants that it had sold said defendants, on open account over a period of some thirty-two months, goods of an aggregate value, and at an aggregate agreed price, of $281,721.77, less discounts totaling $5,235.56, that the Wickham defendants had paid on said account only $266,597.02, leaving a balance due of $9,-889.19, for which judgment was sought. Against the Dublin Grocery Company plaintiff alleged that the Dublin Grocery Company had purchased the stock of merchandise and fixtures of the Wickham defendants’ stores without compliance with the Bulk Sales Law of ,Texas (R.S.1925, Article 4001) and by reason thereof was accountable to plaintiff for such merchandise and fixtures and the proceeds thereof, to the amount of plaintiff’s claim against the Wickhams. Against the bank, in the alternative, it was alleged that plaintiff’s salesman, A. C. Numsen, Jr., had received from the Wickham defendants from time to time during the period in question, checks drawn by said defendants and payable to the plaintiff aggregating $14,566.65 (fifty-one of which, aggregating $11,027.18, were drawn on the Rembert National Bank itself, and twelve of which, aggregating $3,539.47, were drawn on Everett Banking Company) ; that said salesman without authority endorsed said checks, which were the property of plaintiff, and the proceeds were paid to him by the defendant bank upon such unauthorized endorsement, and were misappropriated by him. It was further alleged, as against the bank,» that said salesman, A. C. Numsen, Jr., had received •from the Wickham defendants eighteen other checks, payable to himself individually, aggregating $4,654.27, the proceeds of which were paid to said Numsen by the bank with knowledge that they belonged to plaintiff. Plaintiff sought judgment against the bank for the total amount of all of the above-mentioned checks “or such sum as the evidence shows its loss to be.’’

The Wickham defendants denied plaintiff’s allegation generally and specifically; alleged that they had not only paid plaintiff in full for all goods purchased but had overpaid. By way of cross action these defendants alleged that during the period in question they had operated several grocery stores in Longview, Gladewater and Greggton, Texas, and purchased from plaintiff through two salesmen, A. C. Num-sen, Jr., and another, groceries and merchandise in the total amount of $281,721.-77; and had paid plaintiff in checks and cash $285,710.69, for which they had received . credit on plaintiff’s books for only $266,597.02, the difference of $19,113.67 having been paid by the checks above referred to, for which they had not received credit; that taking into account said checks and the discounts of $5,235.56 allowed by plaintiff, they had overpaid their account $9,224.48. The Wickham defendants further alleged that plaintiff's salesman Num-sen, within.the scope of his authority, had allowed them discounts totaling $12,496.03 in addition to the $5,235.56 allowed as discounts by the plaintiff; and that plaintiff had falsely notified the Dublin Grocery Company (to whom said defendants had made a sale of one of their stores) that defendants were indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $9,889.19, and thereby induced it to withhold said amount from them, whereby they were entitled to legal interest from the date of such notice. The Wickham defendants sought judgment against the plaintiff for the alleged overpayment and unallowed discounts, totaling $21,720.51, with interest; and for said item of interest on the $9,889.19 which plaintiff caused the Dublin Grocery Company to withhold from the Wickhams.

The defendant Rembert National Bank answered by general denial and alleged specially that A. C. Numsen, Jr., was actually or impliedly authorized to endorse the checks which he did endorse, and to receive the proceeds thereof, or if not, that he-was apparently so authorized, and was held out by plaintiff as having such authority; that he was given wide latitude and plenary authority in handling plaintiff’s business, and his acts, including those here in question, were ratified and adopted by the plaintiff; that plaintiff knew of the course of conduct whereby Numsen endorsed the checks and received the proceeds, or, if it did not, its ignorance was the result of its own negligence.

By supplemental petitions plaintiff alleged (as to the defendant bank) that the bank was negligent in not determining that Numsen had no authority to endorse checks and receive the proceeds thereof, and in not making inquiry as to the extent of his authority; and (as to the Wickham defendants) that the discounts allowed said de *561 fendants, aggregating $5,235.56, were usual and customary; denied the authority of their salesman to allow any other or additional discounts; alleged that said defendants had paid only $266,597.02; and that the additional amount claimed by said defendants to have been paid was represented by the checks endorsed and cashed by Numsen without authority, which checks did not constitute any payment to plaintiff; and that if said defendants suffered loss thereby, it was occasioned by their own negligence in not determining the amount of merchandise which they had received, and the correct amount owed therefor.

The case was tried to a jury. After all parties announced ready for trial, the Dublin Grocery Company was dismissed from the case on motion of plaintiff. The evidence for the most part was undisputed. It appears without controversy that during the period from March 26, 1932, to December 1, 1934, plaintiff delivered groceries to the Wickham defendants, to the amount (before discounts) of $281,721.77, allowed usual and customary discounts aggregating $5,235.56, and charged said defendants the net total of $276,486.21. It further appears that the dealings between plaintiff and said defendants were handled, on behalf of plaintiff, by its salesman A. C. Numsen, Jr., who was authorized to, and did sell groceries to said defendants, deliver to them invoices or “settlement statements,” and make all collections from them for the groceries so sold; that in making these collections he had authority to accept cash or checks; that during said time said defendants had made payments to plaintiff totaling $279,545.01, thereby overpaying plaintiff in the sum of $3,058.-80; that all payments made by said defendants were by checks delivered to said salesman; that all the checks except $4,654.27 were payable to the order of Pearlstone-Ash Grocery Company, the last-mentioned amount being the aggregate of eighteen checks issued on and after July 7, 1934, and which were made payable to the salesman, A. C. Numsen, Jr.; that sixty-three of the checks made payable to the plaintiff, over a period beginning February 10, 1933, and ending June 23, 1934, aggregating $14,566.65 in amount, were endorsed in plaintiff’s name by A. C.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W.2d 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearlstone-ash-grocery-co-v-rembert-nat-bank-of-longview-texapp-1939.