Planters' Cotton Oil Co. v. Guaranty State Bank of Mertens

188 S.W. 38, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 861
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1916
DocketNo. 1592.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 188 S.W. 38 (Planters' Cotton Oil Co. v. Guaranty State Bank of Mertens) 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' Cotton Oil Co. v. Guaranty State Bank of Mertens, 188 S.W. 38, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 861 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

The appellant is a private corporation, organized under the laws of Texas to engage in the operation of an oil mill and cotton gins, with-its principal office at Frost, in Navarro county, Tex. In connection with its oil mill located at Frost the appellant owned and operated a cotton gin located at Mertens, Tex., only a few miles distance from Frost. This gin plant was commonly known as the “Planters’ Gin Company,” and was from some time in 1906 to March, 1914, under the management and control of an agent, Joe R, Read. From 1903 till about the first of the year 1913, G. L. White was the appellant’s president and general manager, and appears to have been given by the board of directors general supervision of the affairs of the company. As such manager he had the supervision of the appellant’s gin plant at Mertens, and hired the local manager, and fixed his salary and the terms of his employment. In 1906 White •employed Read to take charge of the gin plant at Mertens at a salary of $100 per month during the business season, which extended over six months of each year. This contract appears to have been renewed annually without any express agreement. Read was given the general authority to supervise the Planters’ Gin, including power to hire and discharge subordinate employés, make repairs, buy cotton seed, pay off the em-ployés, and make the necessary financial arrangements with banks for the money - required in carrying on the business of operating the gin. It also appears that White while manager permitted Read to purchase for the gin company cotton in the seed, and, to a limited amount, lint cotton in hales. However, it is not shown that any definite limits had been fixed to the amount of cotton which Read might purchase. In the spring of 1913 White and his associates, who owned 51 per cent, of the stock in the appellant company, sold their interest to John R. Griffin and his associates. Griffin then succeeded White as president ánd general manager. Read was soon thereafter employed by Griffin for the season beginning in the sum *40 mer or fall of 1913, apparently upon tlie same terms embraced in his contracts with White. It does not appear that there was at that time any understanding between Read and Griffin that Read should carry on the business of buying cotton, as had been done under the management of White. There is no satisfactory evidence that Griffin then knew that Read had theretofore purchased cotton in bales for the account of the appellant and as an incident to the business of operating the gin plant. The evidence shows that for several years it had been the custom of Read, as the local manager of the gin plant, to carry accounts in the name of the Planters’ Gin Company with one of the local banks of Mer-tens, and to borrow money on the credit of the appellant when needed to pay the current expenses of operation, in making repairs, and also for purchasing cotton in the seed and in bales. His accounts were divided into what he calls the “overdraft account” and a “bill of acceptance.account,” which were kept separate on the books of the bank. The overdraft account represented money advanced Read on checks drawn by him to pay for the purchase of cotton seed and the general expenses of operating the plant, including his salary and the wages of other employés. The “bill of acceptance” account represented money advanced to Read by the bank to pay for cotton purchased by him for the Planters’ Gin Company. The dealings with reference to that account were explained as follows: When Read bought one or more bales of cotton a draft was drawn by the seller on the Planters’ Gin Company for the agreed price, in favor of the local bank, and the weigher’s certificate was attached. Upon the margin of the printed draft Read would write his name under the printed word “accepted.” The bank would then cash the draft for the seller of the cotton, and enter the transaction upon its books in proper form. When the cotton was sold the proceeds were applied as a credit on that account. The ap-pellee bank was organized as a state banking institution a year or two before Griffin became appellant’s manager, and R. O. Hooks was its cashier in the active management of its affairs. J. R. Read was one of the stock-' holders; and immediately upon the organization of the bank he opened with it accounts for himself and the gin company, which he represented. In August, 1913, Read began to buy for account of the appellant in the name of the Planters’ Gin Company lint cotton in bales, which was paid for by the appellee bank under a special arrangement for cashing drafts accepted by Read in the manner above described. Between that date and some time in the early part of January following the aggregate amount of money advanced by the appellee to Read for the purchase of cotton, including interest and some other small charges, was $40,552.11. Nearly all of this cotton purchased was in bales, only a few purchases being in the seed. The aggregate amount realized from the sale of the cotton thus purchased amounted to $36,-901.20, which was applied as a credit on this account, leaving a balance due appellee of $3,650.91. This balance remained upon the appellee’s books as a charge against the appellant, and is one of the items sued for by the bank. In November, 1913, before all of the cotton was disposed of, the price of cotton having depreciated, Hooks, the cashier of the appellee bank, demanded of Read that he place to the credit of the “bill of acceptance” account the sum of $1,000. In order to secure the money for that purpose Read drew a draft in favor of the appellee against the appellant for that sum. This1 draft was aft-' erwards collected by the appellee, after passing through the usual commercial channels, and the proceeds applied as a credit on the “bill of acceptance” account. 'During the same month, 1913, Read drew a check on the appellee bank in favor of M. W. Lovell for the sum of $400, which was paid and charged to the appellant’s “overdraft” account. There is some conflict in the evidence as to the nature of the debt for the payment of which this check was drawn. About the close of the ginning season in 1914 the books of the appellee bank showed a balance due from the Planters’ Gin Company on the “overdraft” account of $606.30, and $3,650.91 due on the “bill of acceptance” account, the latter for money which had been advanced to pay for the purchase of cotton. Payment of the last-mentioned sum was demanded of Read, who referred the matter to Griffin. Griffin claims that this was the first intimation he had that Read had been engaged in buying and selling cotton in bales. This led to an inquiry by Griffin into the dealings of Read with the appellee bank, and a controversy arose as to whether or not the appellant was liable for the advances made to Read to enable him to buy cotton. Upon his request Griffin granted time to confer with his board of directors in order to determine whether or not payment should be made. Later it was decided by Griffin and his associates that they would not pay the sum demanded, but instead would claim reimbursement for money which had theretofore been paid out on the draft drawn by Read against the appellant for $1,000 and for the check of $400 which Read had given to Lovell. Accordingly this suit was instituted by the ■ appellant against the appellee, seeking the recovery of those two items.

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Bluebook (online)
188 S.W. 38, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/planters-cotton-oil-co-v-guaranty-state-bank-of-mertens-texapp-1916.