Rohrbough v. Leopold Bros. & Co.

4 S.W. 460, 68 Tex. 254, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 675
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1887
DocketNo. 5683
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 4 S.W. 460 (Rohrbough v. Leopold Bros. & 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
Rohrbough v. Leopold Bros. & Co., 4 S.W. 460, 68 Tex. 254, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 675 (Tex. 1887).

Opinion

Gaines, Associate Justice.

We think the court erred -in overruling the motion to quash the writ of sequestration on .the ground of the insufficiency of the bond. In Schrimpf v, McArdle, 13 Texas, 368, an attachment bond very similar to the one before us was held defective, because it did “not correctly describe the parties or the suit.” It is said by a recent text writer that the plaintiff in an attachment bond “should insert what is necessary to identify the bond with the suit.” (Waples on Attachment, 118.)

The writ of sequestration takes the property from the party in possession, to be held if not replevied during the pendency of the action, as is the case with the writ of attachment. The remedies are equally stringent, and no reason is seen why the same strictness should not apply to the procedure in the one case as in the other. In the bond under consideration, the title of the suit is defectively stated in the margin. The name of the plaintiff’s firm is given, but the place for the names of the defendants is left blank. The bond is made payable to J. E. Rohrbough and I. Franklin, without describing them as defendants; but is conditioned that plaintiffs “will pay to the defendants in said suit all such damages,” etc., without stating who the defendants are. This gives rise to the conjecture that Rohrbough and Franklin are the defendants, but the fact does not clearly appear from the face of the bond.

Tested by itself, the bond does not identify the suit, and fails to show that it complies with the statute in the essential requirement that it must be made payable to the defendants.

It is complained, also, that the court erred in admitting the testimony of defendant Franklin as to an agreement made by him with Leon & H. Blum, immediately after he executed the assignment, by which the latter promised to buy the goods if practicable, and, after getting their money out of them, to let him continue business with goods in their name—he receiving the profits. This occurred shortly after the purchase from plaintiffs, and tended to show that such an arrangement may have been contemplated by Franklin at the time he purchased, and thereby tended to establish plaintiff’s allegations of fraud and misrepresentation. For this purpose the testimony was admissible. (O’Neil v. Wills Point Bank, 67 Texas, 36.) The court gave a special instruction upon this evidence, so that the jury could not have misconstrued the purpose of its introduction.

The seventh and fourteenth assignments of error raise the [258]*258question, whether plaintiffs could recover the goods of the assignee, Rohrbough, although they may have been obtained by misrepresentation. The rule is that an owner who is induced by fraud to part with the possession (and not the title) of his goods, may recover them even from one who has paid value for them without notice of his right. But if he be so induced to sell his personal property to another, by proving the fraud he may recover of his vendee and of any one holding under him save a bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration. But in this case, Rohrbough merely held the goods under a deed of assignment made for the benefit of creditors and occupies no better ground than his assignor. That such an assignee is not a bona fide purchaser is well established by the authority of adjudicated cases.

The eighth assignment of error is not sustained by the record and is not well taken. The court, in the first paragraph of the charge, very fully and correctly instructed the jury as to what facts would entitle plaintiff to recover, and among other things, told them in effect, that Franklin must have known that the representations made by him were false; that they must have been such as would induce a prudent man to make the sale, and must, in fact, have led to its consummation. The instruction relied upon to support this assignment was, in substance, that if the sale was not effected through the false representations of' Franklin, defendant Rohrbough was entitled to a verdict. If counsel, in view of the entire charge, had desired further instructions to the effect that unless the representations were known to Franklin to be false plaintiffs could not recover against Rohrbough, they should have asked them.

The tenth assignment of error is that “the court erred in his second charge to the jury, in telling them that there must be a delivery of the goods to Franklin before the sale would be completed, without explaining to them what would constitute a delivery,- and leaving them to draw their own inference in this behalf.” The eleventh and twelfth assignments complain of the refusal of the following instructions asked by defendants:

1. “ The court instructs you that if you believe from the evidence that if a part of the goods were sold by Salinger to Franklin prior to any representations, and that the goods were selected and set apart for Franklin, and merely held for shipment because Franklin ordered them to hold the goods until he could inspect them, then you are instructed that the sale as to those goods [259]*259was complete, and that no subsequent representations of Franklin would enable Leopold to rescind the trade as to those goods; •and if you find that the sale was made in the manner above stated, you will find for J. E. Rohrbough as to those goods.

2. “If you believe from the evidence that all the goods were set apart for Franklin, and the terms and prices agreed upon before said representations were made, then you are instructed . that the sale was complete, and no subsequent representations •of Franklin would entitle plaintiffs to rescind the contract.”

These three assignments will be considered together. The evidence showed that Franklin, at bis place of business, in Denison, Texas, gave one Salinger, a traveling salesman of plaintiffs, who were merchants in Chicago, an order on them for about twelve "hundred dollars worth of goods some two weeks before the sale in controversy was effected. They sent Franklin an invoice of the goods, but did not ship them. Finding that some of the .goods were not what he had ordered, he, as he testified, telegraphed plaintiffs not to ship. One of the plaintiffs testified that the goods were not sent, because they knew nothing of Franklin’s commercial standing. The fact that the goods had not been shipped when the invoice reached Denison, tends strongly to show that this testimony was true. At all events, the sale was not consummated as to these goods, until Franklin went to Chicago. He then agreed to take these goods, and selected others of the value of about four hundred dollars, when Henry Leopold, one of plaintiffs, took him into his counting room and asked him for a statement. He then made a statement, which plaintiffs allege to be false, and upon the faith of this they shipped the goods. Henry Leopold further testified, in effect, that they never intended to deliver the goods until Franklin made a satisfactory showing of his financial condition. In this he is substantially corroborated by Soloman, the book keeper and confidential clerk of the firm. This is not contradicted by Franklin. He testified that the goods were selected and set apart, at prices agreed upon (including those previously invoiced), but admits that he was taken into the counting room immediately and asked for a statement, and that he finally gave one before the interview was ended.

The sale could not have been consummated until both parties .agreed that he should take the goods. The minds of both must have concurred in this final conclusion. That plaintiffs did not concur is evident from their testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W. 460, 68 Tex. 254, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rohrbough-v-leopold-bros-co-tex-1887.