Planters' Compress Co. v. Howard

92 S.W. 44, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 348
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 92 S.W. 44 (Planters' Compress Co. v. Howard) 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
Planters' Compress Co. v. Howard, 92 S.W. 44, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 348 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

CONjSTEB, Chiee Justice.

On a former appeal a judgment in appellee’s favor was reversed because of the submission of an erroneous charge, as will be seen by a reference to the 80 S. W. Rep., 119. The case is again before us and the only assignment of error we deem material is that under which appellant asserts that the testimony does not sustain the verdict and judgment in appellee’s favor now under review. Briefly stated the facts show that appellee rented certain lands in Bosque County to P. A. Holt for the year 1902, upon which said Ilolt and a son raised, among other things, a crop of cotton. Appellee furnished his tenant certain supplies to enable him to make a crop, and by the terms of the rental contract was entitled to one-fourth of the cotton as rent. This suit was instituted upon the 11th of May, 1903, by appellee against appellant to recover the value of certain cotton alleged to have been raised on the rented premises, upon which he alleged he had a lien to secure several hundred dollars for advances made to said tenant, and which said cotton, it was alleged, had been sold to and converted by the appellant company. On the trial appellee recovered judgment for the sum of $331.80 and, as before stated, it becomes our duty to determine the' sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and judgment.

It is undisputed that the premises described in appellee’s petition were rented as alleged, and that the tenant Holt, together with his son, raised about twenty-two bales of cotton, and that appellee furnished advances substantially as alleged. It must also be held from the evidence, in deference to the verdict of the jury, that appellee gave the tenant no authority to sell the cotton, but on the contrary, that some time about the 15th of October, 1902, he forbade the sale of any more cotton until the advances made by him had been paid, it appearing from the evidence that some six or seven bales of cotton had been sold by Holt prior to this time without having discharged the lien thereon for advances. It is also undisputed that appellee gave no notice to appellant of the existence of his lien or of his notice to Holt not to sell. The crucial point however in the case, is whether the evidence conclusively shows that appellee waived his lien as against appellant notwithstanding the circumstances hereinbefore stated. Upon this point the evidence is substantially as follows: Appellee lived some nine or ten miles from Valley Mills where appellant was engaged in business. Holt made sales of cotton to the appellant company after October 19 as follows:

*287 Oct. 24, 2 bales, 1,600 lbs. each, for which it paid to Holt $81.00
29, 1 CC CC CC « CC cc 47.00
N"ov. 1, 1 cc CC CC CC CC cc 43.44
12, 1 cc cc cc cc cc cc 41.00
19, 1 cc cc cc cc cc cc 42.36
29, 1 cc cc cc cc cc cc 40.00
Dec. 10, 1 cc cc cc cc cc cc 41.80
18, 1 cc cc cc cc cc cc 33.36
26, 1 cc cc cc cc cc cc 20.48
30, 1 cc cc cc cc cc cc 24.80
Total, 11 $415.24

Previous thereto, during October, Holt had sold to the appellant company some five bales and to others six or seven bales. "Upon all cotton sold, Holt regularly reported sales and paid to appellee the rent money. We quote the following from appellee’s testimony: “The defendant, Planters’ Compress Company, has its plant at Valley Mills, where it had been buying cotton for two or three years. The sales made by Holt to defendant were shown by tickets issued to him on their printed stationery, and these tickets were brought or sent by Holt to me, and the calculations of my part (rent) were made on the back of the tickets, and the rent was paid to me according to the weights and prices shown by the tickets. I have none of these tickets; Holt kept them, but they were exhibited to me. According to the tickets, Holt sold the cotton at from forty to forty-five dollars a bale in the seed, and I was entitled to one-fourth of the proceeds as rent. The supplies which I furnished the Holts have never been paid for except as shown by the credits on the accounts attached to my petition, amounting to fifty-two or fifty-three dollars. . I called on P. A. Holt several times for a settlement of this account. Up to about the 10th or 15th of October, Holt had sold six or seven bales.’ He had paid or sent me the rents out of the bales. I called on him after he had sold four or five bales to defendant and he had not paid me any money on these accounts, but he put me off at different times when I would present the matter to him. He would keep putting me off with first one excuse and then another, and I began to get uneasy. Several times during the year I called Holt’s attention to the fact that I had a landlord’s lien on three-fourths of the cotton to secure this supply account. I never at any time consented for said Holt to sell the cotton to the defendant, Planters Compress Company. He sold it without my consent. About the 10th or 15th of October I forbade him selling any more cotton. . . . After the cotton was removed from the rented premises, it was sold within a day or two after such removal, and as fast as a bale or two was gathered. . . . Sometimes it would be a day or two after he sold the cotton and sometimes two or three days before he would bring me the tickets and pay my rent out of the cotton sold.” On cross examination he testified, among other things, as follows: “I think Holt sold two bales to the Schow Brothers before he sold any to the defendant. . . . Holt gathered 'the cotton and carried it off and sold it without my knowing anything about it.

*288 “I was busy there in the store. I got the rent from the cotton Holt sold ' to Schow Brothers. Holt brought and sent the rent to me and paid it to me in my place of business. He generally brought or sent the rent to me pretty soon after he sold the cotton. I knew soon after he had sold the cotton to Schow Brothers of its sale to them and received the rent for it from Holt. I have not sued Schow Brothers for that cotton. I wanted to be sure of my money and they did not buy enough to pay this account and I wanted to sue the party that bought the bulk of it. The next cotton was sold to the defendant. I think some of the cotton was sold to the defendant in September. All the cotton that defendant bought was in the seed. Think Holt made about twenty different sales of cotton to the defendant. I received the rent. Holt paid me rent on cotton sold to the defendant about twenty times. I knew after Holt had sold the cotton to defendant, and from what he said that he had taken it to Valley Mills to sell. When Holt paid me the rent I knew he had sold the cotton. I knew when each successive sale was made to the defendant by Holt- bringing me the tickets for the sales made to the defendant, and knew from that that defendant had bought cotton from Holt. The sales were shown to have been made to defendant by their printed stationery and tickets showing amount of sales, which Holt exhibited to me, showed the weights of the cotton and the prices paid for it, and that the sale was made to the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.W. 44, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/planters-compress-co-v-howard-texapp-1906.