Schwab v. Smith

44 S.W.2d 455
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 17, 1931
DocketNo. 10873
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 S.W.2d 455 (Schwab v. Smith) 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
Schwab v. Smith, 44 S.W.2d 455 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

This suit was instituted by appellee against appellant, a private corporation, to recover the sum of $945.25, comprising the following items: .Balance due on salary $600, on commissions $300, for expenses advanced for appellant $41.25, and for sale of snaps $4; that excepting .the item of $4, appellee’s demands are founded upon the following terms of the contract executed by appellant as first party, and appellee as second party, of date July 31, 1925, viz.:

“Said second party in consideration of the compensation to be paid him by said first [456]*456party as hereinafter provided, hereby agrees to enter its employ for a period of One Tear beginning on the first day of August 1925 and ending on the thirty-first day of July 1926, and said second party hereby further agrees that he will, during the term of such employment, devote his entire time and best energies and attention to the furtherance of the best interests of the business of said first party, and to its entire satisfaction, and further than in addition to said second party’s principal duties, hereunder, which it is agreed are to be those of a solicitor of orders for said first party, said second party will faithfully and to the entire satisfaction of said first party, 'perform such other services as may be required of him by said first party.
“Said second party further agrees while engaged in the performance of his duties as such solicitor, he will travel in such territory, visit such places and solicit such trade as he may be directed to do by said first party, and remain in said territory as long as may be deemed necessary by said first party.
“Said first party hereby agrees to and does employ said second party for said period of time above mentioned, and hereby agrees that it will pay to said second party for all services of said second party hereunder a commission of three (3) per cent, on all shipments as hereinafter defined, made by said first party for which second party is entitled to credit, payments to be made after the goods shall have been delivered By Selz, Schwab & Co., to and accepted by the customer, and said first party hereby agrees in addition thereto to pay said second party his reasonable traveling expenses while he is actually traveling for said first party performing the duties of such solicitor ‘of orders hereunder.
As to the item of $300, claimed as commissions, no further reference thereto will be made, as the trial court properly adjudicated that issue adversely to appellee, and of which no complaint is made. In so far as the items of $41.25 and $4, it is only necessary to state that same were properly pleaded, and that only the disposition made thereof will be reviewed. Appellee,, as to the item of $600,' claimed as balance due on salary, in part alleged: “That a't the time of the written agreement hereinbefore referred to and as a supplemental agreement made by and between said plaintiff and defendant the plaintiff agreed with defendant that defendant would ^ay' plaintiff a salary of $200 per month * * * ; that under the terms of said agreement plaintiff became entitled to said salary of $200 per month beginning with August 1, 1925 and ending with July 31, 1926; that plaintiff duly performed his services to defendant under said agreement and acted as solicitor for defendant and made sales and in all respects complied with the terms and conditions of said agreement, which was that
plaintiff would represent the defendant as set-out in the written contract hereinabove quoted during the term of same.”
Appellee further alleged that appellant paid him said salary for the months of July 31, 1925, to April .30, 1926, inclusive, but failed and refused to pay his salary for the months of May, June, and July of 1926. Appellant pleaded the following defenses to the $600 claimed as salary, viz.: (1) A general denial; (2) want of consideration for the making of the supplemental agreement alleged by ap-pellee to have been made with appellant for the' additional compensation of $200 per month to be paid appellee for his services, as contracted by- him to be performed by appellant under the written contract declared upon, “for the reason that the services called for by such purported supplemental agreement had already been covered by the written contract dated July 31, 1925, which contract was declared upon by plaintiff in his said Second Amended Original Petition.”
By way of cross-action, appellant sought to recover against appellee on three demands, of which it is only necessary to review one, viz.: “That on or about the’ 31st day of August A. D. 1922, defendant advanced original expense money to plaintiff in the sum of $100.00, that said expense money was advanced to plaintiff upon the written understanding that the same was to mature and become a debt to defendant from plaintiff upon demand by defendant; that a demand was made by defendant on or about the 1st day of June A. D. 1926; that plaintiff has failed and refused to pay said debt or any part thereof and still refuses to do so to defendant’s damage in the sum of $125.00.”

To this cross-action, appellee pleaded (1) a general denial, (2) statute of limitation of two years, and (3) payment.

This was a nonjury case, and judgment was rendered for appellee for the sum of $769.43, being principal of $645.25 and interest of $124.18, from January 1, 1927, to March 15, 1930.

At this juncture, it is well to dispose of the jurisdictional question presented by appellee, based upon the fact that appellant’s super-sedeas bond was filed 21 days after its motion for a new trial was overruled, viz.: (a) There is nothing in the record to show that the appellant is a nonresident; and, in the absence of affirmative showing that appellant is a nonresident, it would come within the 20-day rule requiring a supersedeas bond to be filed within 20 days after the overruling of its motion for a new trial; (b) there is nothing in the record to show that the term of the trial court extended over eight weeks; and, in the absence of such affirmative showing, the appeal bond should have been filed within 20 days. We believe the following statements from the record sufficient to-[457]*457dispose of said contentions adversely to ap-pellee, viz.: (1) The caption to the transcript affirmatively states that the term of the trial court during which this cause was heard “begun on the 3rd day of March A. D. 1930 and ended on the 3rd day of May A. D. 1930,’’ therefore extended for more than eight weeks; (2) appellee, in his second amended original petition, alleged that appellant “was a private foreign corporation, duly incorporated and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Illinois.” We therefore overrule said jurisdictional question.

By his first counter proposition, appel-lee contends that appellant had “filed no bills of exception”; therefore only fundamental errors should be reviewed.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W.2d 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwab-v-smith-texapp-1931.