Provident National Bank v. C. D. Hartnett Co.

97 S.W. 689, 100 Tex. 214, 1906 Tex. LEXIS 198
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1906
DocketNo. 1580.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 97 S.W. 689 (Provident National Bank v. C. D. Hartnett Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Provident National Bank v. C. D. Hartnett Co., 97 S.W. 689, 100 Tex. 214, 1906 Tex. LEXIS 198 (Tex. 1906).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Certified questions from the Court of Civil Appeals of the Third Supreme Judicial District. The statement and questions are as follows:

“The above-styled and numbered cause, pending in. this court, has been submitted, and is now under consideration by the court. The appellant, Provident National Bank, brought this suit against appellee and appellants, Early, Foster & Co., alleging in substance, as follows:. That on or about the 4th day of October, 1904, Early, Foster & Co., brokers at Waco, Texas, sold a carload of packery products to C. D. Hartnett Company, at Weatherford, Texas. Said carload of packery *216 products was duly shipped and billed to Early, Foster & Co., at Weatherford, Texas, for C. D. Hartnett Co., and C. D. Hartnett Co. refused to receive and pay for the same, after which Early, Foster & Co. proceeded to sell said carload of packery products on account of C. D. Hartnett Co., at Weatherford, Texas, and did sell the same to Webster, Hill & Baker. The contract price at which C. D. Hartnett Co. bought said carload of packery products was, in the aggregate, $4,332.75; the same was sold to Webster, Hill & Baker a.t $3,972.15, that being the highest market price obtainable therefor, leaving a difference chargeable to C. D. Hartnett Co., of $360.60; that on the 31st day of December, 1904, Early, Foster & Co. came to the appellant, the Provident National Bank, which was doing a banking business at Waco, Texas, and informed it that C. D. Hartnett Co., of Weatherford, Texas, was indebted to them in the sum of $360.60, and asked appellant to cash a draft for them on the said C. D. Hartnett Co., with an account attached, for said sum of $360.60, which appellant did, and accepted said draft with said account attached, and paid said Early, Foster & Co. the full amount of $360.60 therefor, whereby appellant became the assignee of the claim of said Early, Foster & Co against said Hartnett Co., and the owner and holder thereof; that immediately upon the execution of said draft, with said statement of account attached, appellant forwarded the same to a bank at Weatherford, Texas, for collection, and upon presentation of said draft to the C. D. Hartnett, Co., with the statement of account attached thereto, towit, on the 4th day of January, 1905, the C. D. Hartnett Co. refused to pay the same or any part thereof, whereupon the draft was duly protested according to law, and returned to appellant unpaid; that the cost of said protest was $3, which was paid by appellant bank, whereby and in consideration of the premises the defendants, the C.. D. Hartnett Co. and Early, Foster & Co., are both indebted to the plaintiff in the said sum of $360.60, and the additional sum of $3 protest fees; that the defendant, the C. D. Hartnett Co., is liable as the payee of said draft and debtor of Early, Foster & Co., in the amount of said account, which was duly assigned, as aforesaid, to appellant, and defendant Early Foster & Co. are indebted by reason of being assignors of said indebtedness due them by the said C. D. Hartnett Co., and drawers of said draft; that said draft was drawn on a special specific fund, due by the C. D. Hartnett Co. to Early, Foster & Co. being the amount due by-said account, and being the only amount owing by the said C. D. Hartnett Co. to Early, Foster & Co. Appellants’ petition also sets out an itemized account as to quantity and price of the carload of packers’ products alleged to have been sold by Early, Foster & Co. to appellee, being the same attached to said draft, showing the aggregate amount of the price at which same was sold to be the sum of $4,332.75 with a statement at the foot of said account, as follows:
‘Less resale to Webster, Hill & Baker,’ 3,972.15
$ 360.60
Appellant prayed for judgment against both appellee and appellant, Early, Foster & Co., for the amount of said draft and account, and protest fees, together with interest and costs of suit. *217 “The answer of appellee, insofar as same is pertinent to the question certified, is: A plea of privilege to be sued in the county of its residence, which plea negatives, by proper averments, all matters which would give the courts of McLennan County jurisdiction over it without its consent, except the residence of its codefendants in said county, and then averred that its said codefendants, Early, Foster & Co., were neither proper nor necessary parties to this suit against it; that if appellant’s petition showed, or if appellant had any cause of action against said Early, Foster & Co., it was on a general draft drawn by them on this defendant company, and same had never been accepted by it; that if appellant had any cause of action against defendant company, which was not admitted, that the same was an action for damages for breach of alleged contract, and that said Early, Foster & Co. were neither necessary nor proper parties to such suit. Said plea further denies that Early, Foster & Co. had any account against appellee, but that Early, Foster & Co. had elected to treat the alleged and pretended executory contract as set out- in appellants’ petition as breached, and had elected to treat this appellee as liable in damage from breach of contract, and not on account for goods, wares and merchandise sold and delivered; that said two independent causes of action, one against Early, Foster & Co. on the draft alleged to have been drawn, and one against this defendant for said pretended account, or for damages for alleged breach of such pretended executory contract, were improperly and fraudulently joined for the purpose of attempting to defeat the plea of privilege of this defendant to be sued in the county of its domicile. Said plea further alleged that there was no special fund in its hands out of which said draft should be paid, and that it had repudiated and denied liability thereon at the time appellant acquired the draft, and that the same was known to appellant at that time.
“Appellants, Early, Foster & Co., answered in the court below, admitting liability to the bank, and set up the agreement between them and appellee for the sale of the carload of packery products, itemizing same in their pleadings, and alleged that the appellee agreed to pay $4,332.15 for said carload of packery products, and refused to receive and pay for the same when it arrived at Weatherford, Texas, and that they afterwards took charge of the same and proceeded to dispose of the same for the best market price at the time, and did dispose of the same to Webster, Hill & Baker, leaving a balance due on account of said purchase by appellee of $360.60; that appellant, Provident National Bank, accepted the draft and account attached from Early, Foster & Co., and paid them $360.60 therefor, and prayed that if judgment should be rendered against them, in favor of the bank, that they have judgment over against the appellee.
“There was a trial before a jury, and judgment in favor of the bank against Early, Foster & Co. for the amount sued for; and a verdict in favor of appellee on its plea, of privilege to be sued in the county of its residence under a peremptory instruction of the court to so find.
“Appellants assign error upon the action of the court below in taking the case from the jury on the plea in abatement of appellee, C. D.

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Bluebook (online)
97 S.W. 689, 100 Tex. 214, 1906 Tex. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provident-national-bank-v-c-d-hartnett-co-tex-1906.