Satterthwaite v. Loomis & McLachlen

16 S.W. 616, 81 Tex. 64, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1312
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1891
DocketNo. 7123.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 616 (Satterthwaite v. Loomis & McLachlen) 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
Satterthwaite v. Loomis & McLachlen, 16 S.W. 616, 81 Tex. 64, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1312 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

MARR, Judge, Section A.

“Appellant on the 5th day of September, 1888, filed his first original petition against A. M. Loomis and W. B. McLachlen, who compose the firm of Loomis & McLachlen, defendants (appellees). In said petition the plaintiff substantially alleged, that on the 6th day of September, 1887, the defendants were his agents in the city and county of El Paso; that as agents it was the duty of said defendants to look after and attend to the business and property of plaintiff, consisting of what is known as the Satterthwaite addition to the city of El Paso, Texas, and to do any and all things appertaining thereto or anywise connected therewith, and especially to guard and protect the title of plaintiff thereto, and to protect said property or any part thereof from forced sale, and to buy for plaintiff such as might be forced to sale; that defendants were provided with authority to sell said property or portions thereof for plaintiff’s use at stipulated prices, and were the general agents of plaintiff in and about the sale, management, and protection of said property; all of which plaintiff trusted defendants would discharge faithfully, fairly,' and honestly, and would so account to plaintiff; but that on the day and year aforesaid a portion of said Satterthwaite addition was, without plaintiff’s knowledge and during plaintiff’s absence from the State, by sheriff of said county seized and sold under execution issued upon a judgment obtained by J. A. Buckler and Millard Patterson against plaintiff, which judgment with costs aggregated $260; that said property was allowed by defendants Loomis & McLachlen to be sold at public vendue, and at said sale the defendant McLachlen appeared and bid in said property for said sum of $260 for plaintiff, as the said McLachlen then represented and stated; but afterward the defendants, in violation of good conscience *66 and honorable dealing, acting, colluding, and conspiring together to injure, cheat, and defraud plaintiff of said property, caused the sheriff afterward to make the deed of said sale to the defendant A. M. Loomis, and that afterward on the 4th day of August, 1888, the said defendant A. M. Loomis sold and conveyed said property to one Eva M. Smith for the sum of $600; that the property was of the value of $1000, and this sum by reason of the premises the defendants became liable to pay to plaintiff, which they promised and failed and refused to do. Plaintiff prayed judgment for $1000 with costs aiid for general relief.

“The defendants by their first amended original answer filed February 4, 1889, pleaded a general denial.

“On the 8th day of February the cause was submitted to a jury and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment thereon for defendants.”

There are but two of the appellant’s assignments of error that require notice, and they may be considered together. The others, relating to omissions in the charge of the court, may be dismissed with the remark that if the charge was not sufficiently comprehensive in the opinion of appellant’s counsel they should have requested appropriate instructions, which, however, they did not do in these particulars. The assignments which we think demand attention and present the controlling question on this appeal are the following:

“1. The general charge of the court was erroneous in this, that said charge virtually restricted the jury to a consideration of the question as to whether at the time of the purchase of the alleged lands at execution sale the defendants were the agents of the particular land sold, and required them to find for defendants if they should believe from the evidence that defendants were not such agents.

“2. The court erred in refusing to give the special instruction asked by plaintiff and in failing to include in its general charge the subject matter or issue or phase of the case presented by such special instruction.”

The first is important only as giving additional weight to the second. We will therefore devote our attention mainly to the last of these assignments. - The special instruction asked by plaintiff, omitting the caption, etc., is as follows, viz.: “If thedealings betweenthéplaintiff and defendants at and before the sale of the land in question under the judgment in favor of Patterson & Buckler against the plaintiff were of a character to justify the defendants in assuming to act for the plaintiff in preventing the sacrifice of plaintiff’s land by the alleged execution sale, ’ and if the defendants did so assume to act for and on behalf of plaintiff, and did for and on behalf of plaintiff buy the alleged land to' protect plaintiff’s interest therein, then so far as the purchase of said land is concerned they are to be regarded as plaintiff’s agents, and the law in such case would regard them as holding the title to the land for plaintiff’s benefit.”

*67 Ought this instruction to have been given by the District Court? The plaintiff proved, or at least introduced much testimony tending strongly to establish, all of the material averments of his petition. There was, however, a conflict of evidence as to several of the allegations. The chief conflicts in the evidence relate to the controverted points, whether the appellees were still the agents of the plaintiff at the time they bought in his land at the sheriff’s sale, in reference to that land or any of the lands that had been previously confided to them by the appellant; and secondly, whether they in fact purchased the land in the name of one of them but for the benefit of the plaintiff as alleged by him (even supposing the agency to have terminated) or on their own account and for themselves. The appellees claim that the agency had terminated several months before their purchase, and they bought the land for their own use and benefit, unfettered by any trust restraints or obligations, and it is not disputed, but admitted by plaintiff, that they paid for the land with their own money. The main fact that was proved, however, tending with any force to indicate that the agency was terminated with reference even to the lands, is the fact that appellant took his lands off the market for the time being, upon his leaving the State, about the time he was served with citation in the suit of Buckler and Patterson against him; but this is by no means absolutely incompatible with the continuance thereafter of the appellees in his employment as agents to look after and protect his interest, even in the lands, during his absence, though their power to negotiate sales of the lands no longer existed. There is no proof discoverable by us in the record that plaintiff expressly discharged or dismissed the defendants from his employ. On the contrary, there is proof that the fiduciary relation was recognized by the appellees for some time after the purchase of this land, in their business intercourse with the appellant, though it may not have extended to the sales or management of such lands of the plaintiff as they had not previously contracted to sell for him.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 616, 81 Tex. 64, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/satterthwaite-v-loomis-mclachlen-tex-1891.