Rhodes v. Smith
This text of 230 S.W. 227 (Rhodes v. Smith) 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.
Opinion
This is a suit brought by defendant in error against O. O. Bhodes and the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Eé Bailway Company to recover $386.98, alleged to have accrued to him ns damages by reason of a failure to deliver to him at Humble, Tex., “a carload of No. 1 alfalfa, consisting of 345 bales, weighing 22,690 pounds.” It was alleged that on October 23, 19Í6, the said railway company gave to B, E. Levers & Co. a bill of lading for said carload of alfalfa for shipment from Boswell, N. M., to Bessmay, Tex.; that said firm sold the alfalfa to Bhodes, and indorsed the bill of lading to him, and the latter sold the alfalfa to defendant in error, who delivered the bill of lading to the railway company, with the indorsement thereon to divert the car to Humble; that said road failed to make said diversion, but diverted it to De Bidder, La., and delivered it to B. E. Levers & Co. The cause was submitted to a jury on special issues, and on the responses thereto judgment was rendered in favor of appellee as against both plaintiffs in error, for $311.98, with 6 per cent interest from November 5, 1916.
The jury found that the car had not been diverted by B. E. Levers & Co., from Bess-may, Tex., to a point in Louisiana; that defendant in error purchased the bill of lading from Bhodes; that the alfalfa was worth $35 a ton; that the agent of the railway company, at Houston, prior to the diversion of the car to Louisiana, told defendant in error that the car could be diverted to Humble, Tex.; that relying on those representations, defendant in error bought and paid for the bill of lading of the car of alfalfa.
“(1) That the law indulges in no bare presumptions that an agency exists — it must be proved or presumed from facts; (2) that the agent cannot establish his own authority, either by his representations or by assuming to exercise it; (3) that an authority cannot be established by mere rumor or general reputation; (4) that even a general authority is not an unlimited one; and (5) that every authority must find its ultimate source in some act or omission of the principal.”
It might be well to keep these basic principles of agency in view on another trial.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
230 S.W. 227, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rhodes-v-smith-texapp-1921.