Slayden v. Palmo

194 S.W. 1103, 108 Tex. 413, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 101
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1917
DocketNo. 2501.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 1103 (Slayden v. Palmo) 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
Slayden v. Palmo, 194 S.W. 1103, 108 Tex. 413, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 101 (Tex. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The action was one in damages my Mi Palmo against S. W. Slayden & Co., a partnership of Waco, Texas, for the breach of a written contract executed on ¡November 23, 1897, in the name of the latter firm by T. B. Slayden, a member of the firm as charged, by the terms of which Palmo was to convey a certain farm belonging to him to S. W. Slayden, or to whom Slayden should direct, for a stated consideration. This is the third appeal. The case, on former appeals, is reported in (Civ. App.) 90 S. W., 908, 100 Texas, 13, 92 S. W., 796, and 53 Texas Civ. App., 227, 117 S. W., 1054.

On the second appeal it was held by the Court of Civil Appeals that the transaction to which the contract related was not within the ordinary scope of the business in which Slayden & Co. were engaged, and no right of action could be predicated upon it unless its ratification was established. It was remanded for the settlement of that issue. On the trial following, recovery was had against S. W. Slayden, the effect of the verdict being that he had ratified the contract. The judgment was reversed by the Court, of Civil Appeals on the original hearing, but on rehearing was affirmed.

W. H. Lastinger was the general manager both of Slayden & Co. and S. W. Slayden, individually, invested, it appears, with a general authority as to their respective affairs. Slayden was away from Waco when the contract was executed, and most of the time.thereafter to the filing of the suit in July, 1901. In the intervening period Lastinger had different dealings with Palmo, in which he acted for the firm or Slayden, some of them having relation to the farm, the subject of the contract. He wrote the contract, itself, though, according to his testimony, T. B. Slayden, alone, acted in the negotiation with Palmo leading to it. It was in proof that following the contract one transaction,—which after-wards failed, for the sale of the farm, in attempted fulfillment and in recognition of the contract as Palmo claimed, was effected partly through him as Slayden’s manager or agent. Whatever the exact scope of his powers, he is shown to have sustained a confidential and important relationship to Slayden, and to have been largely entrusted with the management of his affairs.

An important defense in the case was that Palmo had abandoned the contract. Upon this issue Lastinger was a principal witness for Slayden. The abandonment of the contract was sought to be established, in part, by his testimony1, to the effect that after he notified Palmo of Slayden’s repudiation of it, shortly after its execution, “Palmo dropped it; that he never insisted any more on any rights under the contract, and went on for three years and a half before he brought" any suit upon it; and that he had no recollection of Palmo’s ever alluding to the contract afterwards, or claiming any right under it.”

*415 Judge Bichard I. Munroe was Palmo’s attorney and represented him in the filing oí the suit. He was a witness in Palmo’s behalf in rebuttal, and" was permitted to testify, over the defendant’s objection, that Lastinger, in a conversation had between them concerning the contract, in June, 1899, stated that he would advise Slayden to settle the controversy in the manner then proposed by Judge Munroe. One part of the question to which this answer was made Avas whether Lastinger stated that “he thought Slayden ought to settle with Palmo under the contract.” In detailing, however, the statement made by Lastinger, it was, in substance, that “he would advise” Slayden to make the settlement proposed. The objection urged to the question was that it was immaterial in that opinion of the agent was not admissible for the purpose of impeachment. The admission of this testimony was one of the grounds for the reversal by the Court of Civil Appeals on the original hearing. It is the question upon which the writ of error was granted, and is the only one Avhich we deem it necessary to discuss. Our jurisdiction of the case, we should say, is not governed by the Act of 1913,

On rehearing, the Court of Civil Appeals indicated, though not so affirming, that the testimony was admissible for the purpose of disproving the averment of the defendant in respect to Palmo’s abandonment of the contract. It held it to be competent as an admission, since it appeared that Lastinger was the agent of Slayden, invested with plenary - powers. It furthermore held that testimony from Palmo to the same effect was admitted without objection, and for that additional reason refused to reverse the judgment. The record does not disclose that any objection was made to the testimony of Palmo to which the Court of Civil Appeals referred. In Slayden’s motion for rehearing affidavit was made by his counsel that the Palmo testimony was in fact objected to, and a certiorari was praAred for that the record might be completed! in order for this to be shown. The motion was overruled. The prayer for a certiorari was denied,—we assume upon the ground that it was not timely.

We think the answer of the witness was competent in rebuttal of Lastinger’s testimony offered by Slayden upon the issue of Palmo’s abandonment of the contract. Whether it was admissible upon the issue of ratification, in view of the character of Lastinger’s agency, it is unnecessary to determine. That issue was distinct from that of the contract’s abandonment. Lastinger’s testimony, that after a certain time Palmo never asserted to him any rights under the contract and that he had no recollection of his ever thereafter alluding to it, was relied upon by the defendant as proof that Palmo had abandoned the contract. It tended to establish that defense, and could have been offered for no other purpose. It derived its force as such proof purely from the fact that Lastinger stood in such relation to Slayden as that Palmo’s failure to make to him further claim under the contract was tantamount to his abandoning it as against, Slayden. Slayden’s tender of Lastinger’s testimony upon the issue amounted to, an affirmance of such relation., *416 Otherwise, the effect of Lastinger’s testimony was that Palmo had merely failed to claim under the contract, to one as to whom there could be no reason for its assertion, and to whom, therefore, its affirmation could hot'be regarded as in anywise natural or-owing.

If Lastinger represented Slayden to such extent as to render Palmo’s failure to make claim to him under the contract competent proof of its abandonment, as Slayden in effect affirmed by the tender of his testimony upon the issue, we think he necessarily stood in such relation to him as to make his own recognition of the contract equally competent rebuttal proof of its continued assertion. Slayden, in other words, could not in our opinion make use of Lastinger as a means of effecting an abandonment of the contract through a failure by Palmo to make claim to him under it, without being'bound, upon that issue, by acts and statements of Lastinger which, evidenced his own understanding that, whatever the force of the contract, Palmo still relied upon it. His statement, as testified to by Judge Munroe, was evidence that he recognized that Palmo was still insisting upon the contract. It was in direct rebuttal of his own testimony which had been adduced by Slayden for the purpose of showing that through the nature of his conduct with him Palmo had abandoned it.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 1103, 108 Tex. 413, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slayden-v-palmo-tex-1917.