Rotan Grocery Co. v. Tatum

149 S.W. 342, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 895
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 342 (Rotan Grocery Co. v. Tatum) 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
Rotan Grocery Co. v. Tatum, 149 S.W. 342, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 895 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This suit was instituted by the appellant, a corporation created by the laws of Texas and having its principal place of business at Waco, in McLennan connty, Tex., against the appellees on a verified open account for the sum of $208.25. The petition complains of Jim Tatum, a resident of Tarrant county, Tex., and of Tatum & Co., which is alleged to be a firm composed of “Jim Tatum and H. Bledsoe, or Jim Tatum, H. Bledsoe, and D. P. Fearis, the latter two residing in Grayson county, Tex.,” and of the Bledsoe-Birge Company, a corporation, and charges that, on or about the 20th day of July, 1909, and prior thereto, the plaintiff, Botan Grocery Company, sold and delivered to “Jim Tatum or Tatum & Co. goods, wares, and merchandise for a balance in the sum of $208.25,” as shown by the itemized and verified claim or account filed and made a part of the petition. It is further alleged, in effect, that plaintiffs had been selling goods to Jim Tatum, who was then carrying on and conducting a business in his own name; that he afterwards sold out to said Tatum & Co., who continued the business, with Jim Tatum as its managing partner, without its knowledge; that Tatum & Co., without its knowledge, sold out in August, 1909, to the defendant Bledsoe-Birge Company; that said Bledsoe-Birge Company bought the old stock of goods belonging to Tatum & Co. and mingled a new stock of goods with the same “and sold the mingled stock and appropriated the proceeds to its benefit.” The defendants answered by general demurrer and general denial, and, specially, that they never assumed the indebtedness of Jim Tatum or any part thereof; that the defendants Tatum & Co. bought only $141.50 worth of goods from plaintiff; that amount, which was all they had ever bought or assumed, had been fully paid; that the check of Tatum & Co. for $160 had been sent to plaintiff and collected by plaintiff, leaving an excess in plaintiff’s hands of $18.50, which belonged to Tatum & Co.; that Bledsoe-Birge Company had bought no goods of plaintiff, had never become indebted to plaintiff in any way, but had bought out Tatum & Co. and all claims and debts owing to or belonging to Tatum & Co. Defendants alleged that they never authorized or consented for Jim Tatum to give the cheek of Tatum & Co. in payment of his individual debts or any part thereof, that they had no knowledge that he had done so, and had never ratified it; and Bledsoe-Birge Company, by way of cross-action, asked judgment for said excess of $18.50. Plaintiff, by first supplemental petition, excepted specially and generally to defendants’ answer, and alleged that the $160 was paid in the usual course of business, in the usual way, and it was applied to the oldest items of the account due; that it had no knowledge or notice that Jim Tatum had been succeeded by Tatum & Co., composed in any way; that said payment of $160 having been paid and without notice in the change of members in said firm in due course of trade and applied to the oldest items of account, which was right and proper and according to law, and that the payment having been made by one not only a member of said firm but one who had control and management of the business, defendants are estopped from claiming a fraudulent application of said amount, but that same was applied according to law; that defendants bought and continued the business and are each liable to plaintiff. The case was tried before the court and a jury, and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff against Jim Tatum for the sum of $208.25, in favor of Bledsoe-Birge Company on their cross-action against plaintiff for the sum of $18.50, and that plaintiff take nothing against Tatum & Co., H. Bledsoe, and D. P. Fearis. The plaintiff’s motion for a new trial being overruled, it appealed.

[1,2] The first and second assignments of error are grouped in the brief. The first complains of the court’s refusal to instruct' the jury to find for plaintiff against all of the defendants for the sum of $208.25 with interest from October 2, 1909. The second charges that the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury at plaintiff’s request as follows: “You are instructed that as Tatum & Co. succeeded Jim Tatum, and that Jim Tatum represented himself and Tatum & Co., that plaintiff had the right to apply the $160 to account of Jim Tatum or Tatum & Co., and, having applied same to the oldest items, you are instructed to find for plaintiff against all defendants for $208.25, with interest at 6 per cent, from October 2, 1909.”

The two propositions presented under these assignments are to the effect that, where a partial payment is made by a debtor to a creditor who holds more than one claim, or a continuous account against him, and there has been no actual appropriation of the payment by the debtor at or before the time of payment, the creditor may apply it to whichever debt he pleases, or to the items of the account according to their priority of time, if such appropriation does not operate to the prejudice of the debtor. The propo *344 sitions embody substantially a correct general rule of law, and we presume, as the assignments are not accompanied by a proposition to that effect, that the charges in queS: tion were asked upon the theory that the evidence introduced conclusively established all the facts, necessary to plaintiff’s right of recovery, as the giving of the charges would not have been otherwise warranted. For, as has been repeatedly said, it is only where reasonable minds cannot differ as to the conclusion to be drawn from the evidence that the case, or the particular issue to which it relates, may be withdrawn from the jury. Such was not the conclusive character of the evidence in this case. On the contrary, if the evidence did not conclusively show that plaintiff was not entitled to recover against the defendants Tatum & Co. and Bledsoe-Birge Company, it was amply sufficient on every fact essential to plaintiff’s right of recovery to require the submission of those facts to the jury for their determination. If the evidence did not conclusively establish it; it was abundantly sufficient to authorize the jury to find the existence of the following facts: That the co-partnership firm of Tatum & Co. was formed June 4, 1909, and was composed of Jim Tatum, H. Bledsoe, and D. P. Eearis; that said firm bought only three bills of goods from the plaintiff, amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $141.50; that these bills bore date, respectively, June 26, 1909, July 15, 1909, and July 30, 1909; that at the date of the first of these bills .of goods plaintiff knew, or was from the facts and circumstances then known to it chargeable with notice, that there had been a change made in Jim Tatum’s mercantile business, and that they were selling that bill of goods not to Jim Tatum alone, but to the firm of Tatum & Co.; that each of the three bills of goods purchased by Tatum & Co. from plaintiff, above referred to, shows upon its face that the goods specified therein were sold to “Tatum & Co.,” and the first bill, or bill dated June 4, 1909, shows the following: The Ro-tan Grocery Company sold to Tatum & Co. Sue. to Jim Tatum, Sherman, Tex. That the sum of $160 was paid by Tatum & Co. by check dated July 19, 1909, on the Merchants’ & Planters’ National Bank of Sherman, Tex., which was signed “Tatum & Company,” with instructions to apply said sum to the payment of their account, and that it was so applied.

In reference to this payment, H. J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 342, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rotan-grocery-co-v-tatum-texapp-1912.