Penick v. Castles

144 S.W. 297, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 74
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 144 S.W. 297 (Penick v. Castles) 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
Penick v. Castles, 144 S.W. 297, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 74 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

GRAHAM, C. J.

On June 20,1911, appellee filed in the district court of Jones county his second amended petition, in lieu of his first amended petition, filed therein on June 5, 1909 ; it being in lieu of his original petition, filed on October 26, 1908, for the recovery of $650, with interest and court costs paid by the estate of J. D. McGaughey to the First State Bank of Larned, Kan.

Allegations being made, in substance, that on June 13, 1903, C. W. Clarke drew a check on the First State Bank of Larned, Kan., payable to J. D. McGaughey, for the sum of $8,850; that same was paid by said bank, and that J. D. McGaughey appropriated $8,-250 thereof, $7,200 of which was to cover the purchase price for certain cattle sold by Mc-Gaughey to Clarke, and $1,000 of said $8,250 was appropriated by McGaughey as a forfeit on a certain, cattle trade Clarke had made with him, and which was not carried out by Clarke; that said $8,250 check was, by the First National Bank of Stamford, Tex., collected for said McGaughey, and $650 of the proceeds thereof, with the consent of Mc-Gaughey, deposited to the credit of Penick-Hughes Company, for the use and benefit of Penick & Hughes, who appropriated the same; appellant being the Penick in said firm of Penick & Hughes. Allegation being also made that said Clarke had also contracted to purchase certain cattle from Pen-ick & Hughes, and, having failed to carry out said contract, said $650 was paid as a forfeit on said contract.

Appellee also alleged that the First State Bank of Larned, Kan., had sued J. D. Mc-Gaughey for $1,650, represented by the proceeds of said draft, and recovered same and interest and court costs on allegations that that amount had been paid by the said bank under a mistake of fact; that, during the pendency of said suit and before judgment was recovered in said cause in the trial court, J. D. McGaughey having died, and appellee having qualified as administrator of his estate, appellee notified appellant that he intended making him a party to that suit as a means of protecting McGaughey’s estate in the event of a recovery therein by the bank, and that appellant requested that the suit be proceeded with without his being made a party thereto, and agreed that if he was not made a party he would, in the event of a recovery by the bank, pay his pro rata of such judgment as should be recovered, including all costs; that at the time of said conversation appellee did not know that the firm of Penick & Hughes had appropriated said $650, or that even such a firm had existed, but supposed that appellant alone had appropriated same; that after said conver *298 sation appellee employed counsel and defended said suit in all the courts to which it was carried, but that judgment was finally rendered for the bank against McGaughey’s estate, and that said estate had been compelled to and has paid off said judgment; that appellant, though often requested, had failed to pay his pro rata or any part thereof, which amounted to $1,250.

On January 20, 1911, appellant filed in this suit his second amended answer, consisting of a general demurrer; special exceptions, to the effect that appellee’s pleadings showed the cause of action sued on to be barred by the two-year statute of limitations, the suit, according to the allegations in the pleading, having been filed more than two years after the cause of action sued on accrued, and the promise to pay not being alleged to be in writing, that said pleading showed.the cause of action sued on was barred by the four-year statute of limitations, and that no original liability is shown to have existed in favor of the First State Bank of Earned, Kan., against appellant, that the pleadings showed the suit to be based on a promise to answer for- the debt, default, or miscarriage of another, and it is not alleged to be in writing; a general denial; a special plea setting up the two-year statute of limitation; a special plea setting up the four-year statute of limitations; a special plea setting up the statute of fraud against the alleged promise to pay, alleging a dissolution by settlement of the affairs of the firm of Penick & Hughes long before the alleged promise; a special defense, to the effect that such cause of action, if any, as the First State Bank of Earned, Kan., ever had against McGaughey, grew out of the fact that McGaughey had, before accepting from Clarke the $8,850 check, wired said bank to know if it would pay Clarke’s check for cattle, and received a reply from the bank that it would; that if it be a fact that appellant received any of the proceeds from said check he was not aware of it for many years thereafter, had no knowledge of the kind of contract Mc-Gaughey had'made with Clarke, and had no interest therein.

Judgment was rendered in the court below on the verdict of the jury for .the sum of $1,038.80 and costs of suit in favor of Mc-Gaughey’s estate and against appellant, from which judgment appellant has appealed to this court.

The evidence shows the following facts:

On and prior to May 30, 1903, R. E. Pen-ick and Ed S. Hughes owned a bunch of cattle together, handling them under the name of Penick & Hughes. There was also at the same time a mercantile corporation, doing business at Stamford under the name of Pen-ick-Hughes Company, of which corporation appellant was apparently manager. On May 30, 1903, appellant, acting for himself and Ed S. Hughes, “made a sale of the cattle owned by Penick & Hughes to C. W. Clarke,” and Clarke made a partial payment on the cattle in the sum of $650 by executing and delivering to appellant a check on a live stock commission company of Kansas City. The check was by Penick properly indorsed and delivered to the First National Bank of Stamford, with instructions to place to the credit of the account of Penick-Hughes Company, which was done by the bank, and the check forwarded by it for collection. About this time, Clarke also purchased certain cattle from J. D. McGaughey at a price of $7,-200, and in a separate contract agreed to purchase from J. D. McGaughey certain other cattle, and to bind the trade last mentioned agreed to pay $1,000 as a forfeit or earn-nest money.

Prior to June 13, 1903, the cheek given Penick by Clarke on May 30, 1903, having been returned to the bank at Stamford unpaid, and McGaughey, on June 12, 1903, having wired the First State Bank of Earned, Kan., as follows, “Will you pay C. A. Clarke’s check for cattle?” to which the bank replied, “Yes,” Clarke made his check on said bank for the sum of $8,850, payable to J. D. Mc-Gaughey, who indorsed and delivered it for collection to the First National Bank of Stamford, which forwarded it for payment, and it was duly paid.

It appears from the testimony that, at the instance of Clarke and with the consent of the bank and McGaughey, Clarke included in the McGaughey cheek the $650 he had tried to pay Penick in the check on the commission company, and that when the proceeds arrived from this $8,850 check the First National Bank of Stamford, with the consent of McGaughey, placed $650 to the credit of Penick-Hughes Company’s account. When the $650 check was returned unpaid, the bank at Stamford charged the account of Penick-Hughes Company with $650.

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.W. 297, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penick-v-castles-texapp-1912.