Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Daniel Motor Co.

149 S.W.2d 979, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1941
DocketNo. 2117.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 149 S.W.2d 979 (Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Daniel Motor 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
Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Daniel Motor Co., 149 S.W.2d 979, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 207 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Justice.

Phillips Petroleum Cpmpany sued Daniel Motor Company for $1,118.56. Plaintiff and defendant are corporations. In the first count of plaintiff’s petition it was al7 Ieged, in substance, that on all the dates mentioned in the petition plaintiff was engaged in distributing gasoline, oil, etc., through W. M. Mitchell, its bulk station agent at Wichita Falls. There followed allegations that on certain dates Mitchell sold and delivered to defendant certain products shown by Phillips Petroleum Company’s invoices attached to the petition; that on January 19, 1939, plaintiff presented its statement to defendant and defendant, acting through its bookkeeper, Mr. Luddington, at the instance and request of Mr. Padgett, defendant’s manager and secretary-treasurer, certified plaintiff’s statement of the account was correct. That the certification' constituted the account sued upon an account stated.

In an alternative count, plaintiff alleged it was engaged in distributing gasoline, etc., through its bulk station agent, W. M. Mitchell; that beginning in March, 1935, and continuing through January, 1939, monthly statements were mailed to defendant by plaintiff, which, beginning with June, 1935, and continuing through January, 1939, reflected balances due by defendant to plaintiff for gasoline, etc., delivered to defendant by Mitchell; that defendant neither objected to the correctness of the balances shown by the statements, nor made any inquiry into the manner in which the account was being handled by Mitchell, although during all of said time defendant was paying for the gasoline, etc., delivered to it by Mitchell; that by reason of the fact that the invoices shown in the monthly statements sent to defendant varied from the invoices delivered by Mitchell, or his driver, to defendant, at the times defendant bought and paid for petroleum products, the defendant had actual notice that deliveries of gasoline, etc., were being made by Mitchell to someone other than defendant, and that Mitchell was invoicing such deliveries in the name of defendant by fictitious credit invoices forwarded to plaintiff, thus enabling Mitchell to dispose of gasoline, etc., reflected in said monthly statements, either to the defendant or to some other person and to appropriate the proceeds derived therefrom to Mitchell’s use and benefit. Plaintiff again alleged in this count the certification to the correctness of the account in the sum of $1118.56 by defendant January 19, 1939. Plaintiff alleged, in the event defendant did not have actual knowledge that Mitchell was appropriating the balances reflected in the statements to his own use and benefit, defendant had constructive notice thereof by reason of the circumstances and facts alleged and was, therefore, under a duty to object to the correctness of the statements mailed to defendant, or to inquire into the manner in which the account of defendant with the plaintiff was being handled by Mitchell; that if defendant had objected to the accounts, or had inquired into the manner in which they were being handled, plaintiff would have been apprised of the fact that Mitchell was diverting the balances reflected in the statement to his own use and benefit and would not have sustained the damages alleged. That by reaJ son of said acts of the defendant plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $1,118.56, the amount misappropriated by Mitchell.

Defendant, among other things, answered by general denial. It denied the account sued upon constituted an account stated because it was not founded upon any previous transactions creating the relation of debtor and creditor between the parties. It alleged defendant did not owe plaintiff anything; that no account existed between the parties that could be stated; that the certification by Luddington on January 19, 1939 was without consideration; that there had been no previous transaction between the parties creating the relation of debtor and creditor, and there existed no account between the parties to be compromised or stated; that it had not sold or delivered to the defendant any of the merchandise listed in the account certified; that defendant had paid cash for all gas, etc., purchased from plaintiff and never asked for, nor received, credit from it; that, therefore, the account sued upon did not constitute a stated account and the certificate as to its correctness was void, being without consideration, and could not create an original liability where no liability previously existed. That beginning in January, 1935, and continuing through January, 1939, defendant purchased certain merchandise from plaintiff's bulk station agent, Mitchell, who was acting within the scope of his employment; that the invoices, copies of which were at *981 tached to plaintiff’s petition were forgeries; that the only purchases made by defendant from plaintiff were evidenced by certain invoices of the Phillips Petroleum Company delivered to defendant by Mitchell at the time he delivered products to the defendant, and at which times the defendant paid for all the products received. That payments were made by check of the defendant, or partly by such check, partly by the ••defendant’s coupons and courtesy card invoices, or defendant’s employees’ invoices, and at each such time defendant received from plaintiff a receipt acknowledging payment for all the products delivered to the defendant, said receipt being indorsed on plaintiff’s invoices by plaintiff’s employee making delivery of said products. That defendant was not indebted to plaintiff in any amount.

Defendant then alleged, in substance, that with the knowledge and consent of plaintiff there was an agreement between defendant and Mitchell that defendant would pay Mitchell one-half cent per gallon more than the tank price for gasoline to induce Mitchell to deliver the gasoline to defendant one hundred miles from Wichita Falls. That Mitchell and the bulk station at Wichita Falls were in plaintiff’s Tulsa Division, and defendant was in plaintiff’s Amarillo Division. That plaintiff used a system of double-billing for the products sold to defendant; that plaintiff would deliver to defendant an invoice acknowledging payment for goods delivered to defendant at the time the products were delivered, and thereafter at the end of the month defendant would receive a statement from plaintiff; that beginning with June, 1935 defendant received a statement from plaintiff showing a balance due; that defendant objected to said statement and pointed out that defendant had paid for all purchases; that defendant’s agent, Mitchell, represented that said statement did not mean anything; that defendant need not pay attention to said statement; that by reason of the one half cent additional paid to Mitchell for his long haul in delivering gasoline to defendant, and by reason of the location of Mitchell and plaintiff’s bulk sales station and defendant in different Divisions of plaintiff’s system that plaintiff used this system of double-billing ; that for a period of about eighteen months, either before or about the time of the arrival of a statement from plaintiff’s Tulsa office showing an indebtedness owing by defendant to plaintiff defendant received from plaintiff’s agent, Mitchell, a receipt therefor. That defendant continued to disregard the statements from the Tulsa office; that defendant never made any payment in response to the statements from plaintiff’s Tulsa office, or otherwise to the .plaintiff, except to Mitchell, or his truck driver, who delivered the petroleum products to defendant, at the time the products were so delivered.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W.2d 979, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-petroleum-co-v-daniel-motor-co-texapp-1941.