Rountree Motor Co. v. Smith Motor Co.

109 S.W.2d 296, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 4, 1937
DocketNo. 3054.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 296 (Rountree Motor Co. v. Smith Motor Co.) 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
Rountree Motor Co. v. Smith Motor Co., 109 S.W.2d 296, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1120 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinions

This suit arose out of an automobile agency contract whereby appellee, L. O. Smith, doing business as the Smith Motor Company, represented the appellant, Rountree Motor Company, a corporation, Houston, Tex., as its automobile sales agent in the town of Conroe, Tex. Claiming a breach of the contract the appellant, as plaintiff, instituted this suit for possession of ten secondhand automobiles of the alleged total value of $2,130 which had been taken in by Smith as part payment on the purchase of new cars.

The contract was oral. However, there is little dispute about the terms of it. So far as material, the contract as pleaded by the plaintiff was: The defendant, Smith, acted as plaintiffs agent and broker in the sale of new Plymouth and De Soto automobiles in Conroe, Tex.; the defendant was to receive a commission of 10 per cent. of the net sale price of new cars after deducting freight, taxes, and the trade-in allowance of any old car traded in on the purchase. With reference to the old cars the defendant was to recondition them at his own expense to make them salable, and upon resale the defendant was to net the plaintiff the amount at which such used car had been taken in, which trade-in price is referred to in the pleadings and testimony as the inventory price; plaintiff was to pay the defendant, as commission for the sale of used cars, 10 per cent. of the inventory or trade-in price, unless such used car sold for less than the inventory price, in which event the defendant was to receive 10 per cent. of the resale price. If the used car sold for more than inventory price the defendant was to receive the excess, but if it sold for less than inventory price he was to be charged with the difference. It will be observed that under such contract the defendant had to look to such excess of sale price over the inventory for repayment for his labor and replacements but he was entitled to receive all of such excess of the sale price over the inventory.

The plaintiff charged a breach of the contract by the defendant in a number of respects, including his failure to operate the agency business in a good and businesslike manner, in failing to furnish the plaintiff with a full and complete inventory of the stock of cars on hand and failing to render a full and correct accounting, etc., and also in failing to surrender possession of the cars when demanded by the plaintiff. The plaintiff sequestered the used automobiles and on failure of the defendant to replevy them in accordance with the statute the plaintiff replevied them and took possession of them.

The defendant answered by numerous exceptions and by denial of the material allegations. By way of cross-action the defendant alleged a breach of contract by the plaintiff and that plaintiff had acted wrongfully and without probable cause in suing out the sequestration and taking the cars from his possession. He sued the plaintiff (1) for the reasonable value of repairs and parts made by the defendant on the used cars which were so taken possession of by the plaintiff; the alleged *Page 298 repairs and replacement parts and the value thereof were alleged in detail in the total amount of $741.66; (2) unpaid commissions on cars sold, $186.80; (3) repairs and replacements on cars turned over to the plaintiff, $166.90; (4) repairs on cars sold by the plaintiff and not accounted for, $257.21; (5) amount of the excess of sales price over inventory price of certain cars named, $181.20; (6) he also alleged that the plaintiff was entitled to credit on certain items enumerated in the amount of $361.93. The different claims, as above enumerated, were separately alleged and fully and definitely set out.

The case was submitted to a jury on special issues, all of which were answered in favor of the defendant. The trial court, on the verdict of the jury, entered judgment against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant in the amount of $1,359.24.

Opinion.
Appellant's brief presents 100 assignments of error. We will not undertake to discuss the individual assignments, but all of them are disposed of by the holdings discussed below.

Appellant contends by several assignments that the appellee was not entitled to recover for repairs and replacements made on the used cars for the reason that under the contract as pleaded and proved he was to be repaid only from the excess of the sale price of the cars repaired over the inventory or trade-in price, and that since the cars were not sold he could not recover on such items.

The contention overlooks the fact that under the findings of the jury the appellant breached its contract and wrongfully sequestered and took possession of the cars from the appellee. He was thereby denied his right to retain and make sale of the used cars which he had repaired and reconditioned. Having taken the cars into its possession, the appellant reaped the benefit of the repairs and replacements made by the appellee and thereby became obligated to pay him the reasonable value of them. Fayette County v. Faisin's Executors, 44 Tex. 585; Erwin v. Victory Motor Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 33 S.W.2d 867.

It was not necessary for the appellee to plead and prove that said cars could have been sold for a price in excess of the inventory sufficient to pay the amount of the repairs and replacements. The recovery is not on the contract nor for damages for the breach but on an implied promise to pay the value of the benefits so received. It is not material that the appellant did not in fact agree to pay for the repairs and parts. The promise is one which arises by implication of law. The appellee pleaded the facts and specifically alleged the value of the repairs and replacements and sought payment for them on the ground that the cars were wrongfully taken from his possession by the plaintiff.

The appellee claimed that plaintiff owed him $181.20 as the result of the sale of used cars for an amount in excess of the inventory. This was a controverted issue in that the appellant contended that the sales in question were in some instances not consummated and in some were simulated, and that the cars did not in fact sell for an amount in excess of the inventory. The controverted matter was submitted to the jury by special issue No. 6, which was as follows:

"Special Issue No. 6
"What amount of money, if any, do you find from a preponderance of the evidence is due to L. O. Smith by the Rountree Motor Company as a result of used cars being sold for an amount of money in excess of the inventory price?"

Appellant objected to the issue on the grounds:

"1. (b) Because it assumes that there is an agreement as to such excess covering all cars sold without qualification; (c) Because same is a comment on the evidence and on the weight of the evidence."

"2. (c) Because same assumes that there was an agreement by the Rountree Motor Company to pay an excess on all cars sold, including cars that were in deals that were not accepted by the Rountree Motor Company; (d) Because same assumes that there was an excess on certain cars."

We think the issue was not subject to the objections urged against it. It submitted the ultimate issue, which was as to the amount of money, if any, due by the plaintiff to the defendant by reason of the cars being sold in excess of the inventory price. The question of whether or not any such sales had been made was but an element of the broader issue and was merely evidentiary in nature. The *Page 299 appellant did not request the submission of it.

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 296, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rountree-motor-co-v-smith-motor-co-texapp-1937.