Robert Schaer v. First Nat'l. Bank

124 S.W.2d 108, 132 Tex. 499, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 240
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1939
DocketNo. 7126.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 124 S.W.2d 108 (Robert Schaer v. First Nat'l. Bank) 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
Robert Schaer v. First Nat'l. Bank, 124 S.W.2d 108, 132 Tex. 499, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 240 (Tex. 1939).

Opinion

MR. Judge Taylor

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

This is a suit by Robert Schaer as plaintiff against the de *501 fendant, First National Bank of Brenham, Texas; for $2628.30. Upon trial without the aid of a jury a judgment was awarded in Schaer’s favor against the bank for the amount sued for. Appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals resulted in a reversal of the trial court’s judgment and a rendition of judgment in favor of the bank. 94 S. W. (2d) 272. Writ of error was granted upon Schaer’s application as plaintiff in error.

Schaer’s first allegation upon the merits of the case is that on October 31, 1934, he was the owner and holder of an instrument designated as a “Bill of Exchange.” The instrument, which was set out in full in the petition, reads:

“The First National Bank no. 3463
“Brenham, Texas, 1031, 1934 “60 Days after Date
“Pay to the Order of The First National Bank, Brenham, Texas, $2,628.30.
CO CO S i .y O I1 o5 o X H O '■a o 4-3 ft. y <1> t> ft}
“W. A. Weimann
-cotton- $2,628 Dol’s. 30 Cts Dollars
“For 29 B. C.
“Value Received and Charge to
fV> T. ^ JD J_J .T3.UUaU.Ll~U. (A~f~Í~ D p.lnprl \ JL 1UZVULO -T3. U UUVI1UU
“Account of
“To W. A. Weimann “Brenham, Texas.”
(W. E. Schaer & Co. ( ‘ Seller ( C. E. S.”

It is alleged concerning the instrument that it was executed by W. E. Schaer & Company and evidenced a.sale of cotton by the company to W. A. Weimann made on the date of its execution for a purchase price of $2628.30; and is alleged in this connection that Weimann had been for many years engaged in the purchase and sale of cotton, and on the date evidenced by the instrument purchased 37 bales of cotton for which the bill of exchange was issued; that Schaer & Company upon the faith of the instrument and the instruction of Weimann shipped the cotton to Frierson & Company of Houston for Weimann’s account; that the amount of the purchase price of the Schaer cotton covered by the bill of exchange was paid by Frierson & Company to the bank. There were allegations concerning other cotton handled in connection with the 37 bales, and concerning a mistake in noting on the bill of exchange an incorrect number of bales, but it is not necessary that they be further referred to.

Schaer further alleged among other things not necessary to state that on November 10, 1934, he presented the bill of ex *502 change to the bank “the defendant herein upon which * * * said bill was drawn, and that defendant paid to plaintiff the sum of $2628.30 * * *; that he made a deposit of said sum * * * paid to him as the purchase price of said bill of exchange and cotton * * (Italics ours.) He further alleged his subsequent demand upon the bank for the amount deposited, and the bank’s refusal to pay.

The bank in addition to a general demurrer and numerous special exceptions pleaded a general denial and special defenses. The principal defense appears to be that the bank followed what it alleged to be “the general custom in use in the country” of giving tenative credit in a pass book or on deposit slip for the amount of “checks, drafts and bills of exchange presented for collection” and of exercising the right to cancel the deposit slips tentatively given, and of charging “the same to the party to whom the tentative credit had been given.”

The trial court after awarding judgment in favor of Schaer filed findings of fact to the effect, so far as is material here, that W. A. Weimann & Company were cotton brokers of Brenham, Texas, and had been engaged exclusively in that business for a number of years; that Schaer Bros., a partnership, had been engaged in the general mercantile business at Sealy, Texas, and in buying cotton from the farmers of Austin County; that the way in which Weimann bought cotton, and had been buying it for several years, was by giving sixty day bills of exchange drawn on defendant bank; that there had never been a deviation from that rule; and “that the farmers take this bill of exchange to the First National Bank and the bank takes up the bill of exchange”; that Weimann carried an account with the bank and that during the time he had been doing business with the bank it had “cashed two or three million dollars of these bills of exchange,” all of which were on “bank bills of exchange furnished by Weimann, and all drawn on” the bank; “that during all the years * * * none of them have ever been refused when presented for payment at said bank”; that about October 31, 1934, Schaer Bros, sold to W. A. Weimann 37 bales of cotton; that he issued the usual and customary bill of exchange in the sum of $2628.30 to Schaer Bros.; that Schaer Bros, was a partnership of which Robert Schaer is not a member, but that Robert Schaer was. a banker at Chapel Hill and furnished the money, to the firm for the payment of all cotton bought by them; that they paid the farmers with checks drawn on Robert Schaer at Chapel Hill *503 and that he paid the drafts and was the owner of the cotton; that Weimann & Company requested Schaer Bros, to ship the 37 bales of cotton together with fifteen other bales to Frierson & Company at Houston, which was done as requested, the shipper immediately forwarding to the company a bill of lading covering the shipment; that Weimann on the date the cotton was purchased drew a draft on Frierson & Company payable to the First National Bank of Brenham covering the shipment; that attached to said draft was a certificate showing the 37 bales of cotton that was bought from Schaer, and that about November 4th payment was made to and received by defendant bank; that about November 8th Weimann was indebted to the bank in the sum of about $40,000.00, and on that date made settlement with the bank and closed his account. The court further found that Robert Schaer on Saturday November 10th presented the bill of exchange to the bank; that the teller asked “Mr. Schaer how he wanted it and Mr. Schaer told him he could give him credit for it; that the teller at once issued him a deposit slip for $2628.30 and this amount was the correct figure of price for the 37 bales.” The court also found that the deposit slip was given Mr. Schaer without any reservations or restrictions, and that as Mr. Schaer started out of the bank the teller called him back and asked him to sign a signature card so that the bank would know how to cash his checks.

The trial court concluded “the defendant bank accepted and paid off the bill of exchange covering the cotton in question” and that “this was a closed transaction between plaintiff and defendant,” and further that “there is no proof authorizing a rescission of said transaction or cancellation of the payment made to plaintiff by defendant bank.”

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W.2d 108, 132 Tex. 499, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-schaer-v-first-natl-bank-tex-1939.