Smith v. F. W. Heitman Co.

98 S.W. 1074, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 358, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 511
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 98 S.W. 1074 (Smith v. F. W. Heitman 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
Smith v. F. W. Heitman Co., 98 S.W. 1074, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 358, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 511 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

F. W.Heitman Company sued Fort Smith upon a' promissory note for $1,500 and to recover also the amount alleged to be due upon open account, partly for goods sold and delivered by Heitman Company to Fort Smith and partly for money alleged to have been paid by said company for account of storage of certain machinery belonging to him. The open account was verified by affidavit under the statute.

Defendant in his answer, after a general denial, alleged that under a contract with plaintiff he had returned to it certain articles of machinery consisting of nine Morris pumps- and two Moore pumps and of the aggregate value of $1,515, for which he was entitled to credit under said agreement, after deducting from the same what the missing parts of said machinery would cost. It was alleged that Heitman Company agreed to receive and- accept said machinery and to credit defendant with the purchase price of the same on his indebtedness to plaintiff; that it was further agreed that as some of the parts of said pumps were missing plaintiff should supply the same and charge defendant with the price thereof; that the missing parts were worth $45, leaving $1,470, for which defendant is titled to credit.

As to the open account, defendant under oath denies the items of cash paid for storage, as charged in the account, - amounting to $120, and avers that he had tendered to plaintiff $53.75 on the note and $74.78 on'the open account which is all that was due at the date of the tender, after allowing him credit for the $1,470 on account of the pumps returned by him, and deducting the overcharge for storage, which plaintiff refused to accept, and defendant in his answer renews the tender.

By supplemental petition plaintiff denied the alleged agreement that the pumps referred to in defendant’s answer were to be returned to plaintiff "and that the same ivere so accepted and received by them to be credited upon defendant’s indebtedness. It is alleged that the first intimation that plaintiff had that the machinery was to be shipped was the receipt of a notice from the railroad company that there was a carload of machinery at the station which had been shipped by defendant to plaintiff; that plaintiff at once endeavored to get into communication with defendant and after making numerous inquiries learned that *360 he was out of the city (of Houston); that defendant was at that time a heavy customer of plaintiff and desiring to protect him from demur-rage charges plaintiff finally received said car of machinery, and not having room in his warehouse to store the same, stored it at the warehouse of Street & Graves who refused to accept the same, for storage unless plaintiff wo-uld agree to pay the storage charges. It is averred that plaintiff in receiving and storing the machinery acted purely for the accommodation of defendant, and that defendant never intimated to plaintiff that he considered the property to belong to plaintiff, but on the contrary repeatedly stated to- plaintiff that he expected to - use the property himself. Plaintiff claims the further sum of $25 for storage charges for the months from June to- October, inclusive, paid- by him since the filing of its original petition.

The execution of the notes and the indebtedness upon the open account, with the exception of the storage charges, were admitted by defendant and the receipt of the machinery was admitted by plaintiff.

The issue was as- to whether there was any agreement that the pumps referred to in defendant’s answer should be returned to ¡ilaintiff by defendant, and the price thereof, less the price of the missing parts, credited upon his indebtedness, and' whether plaintiff received and accepted them in pursuance of this contract. If defendant’s contention with regard to this agreement be true he would not be liable for the storage charges.

The issues were submitted to the jury and a verdict returned for plaintiff for the full amount of its demand. Prom the judgment defendant appeals.

Appellant requested the trial court to give the following charge, which was refused, and the refusal is here assigned as error: “You are charged that if yon believe from the evidence that defendant and plaintiff agreed that defendant might return any machinery he might have bought of plaintiff, and which he did not use, and that same would be taken back and credited, as alleged in the answer, then if you further believe that defendant returned the machinery set out in his answer, and that it was part of machinery bought of plaintiff, then you are instructed that plaintiff would no-t have a right to reject same because he had gone out of the machinery business.”

The agreement under which tire pumps are alleged by appellant to have been returned is thus stated in appellant’s answer:

“And for further answer, this defendant says that on or about the — day of December, 1902, he delivered to the plaintiff in Houston, Texas, the following described machinery, which defendant had previously bought of the plaintiff, to wit: Nine 8" Morris Vertical Suction Pumps numbered as follows: 30031, 30013, 30373, 30405, 30030, 30404, 30014, 30378, 30377; also two 3x2x3 Moore Oil pumps; and this defendant delivered said property to plaintiff, and it agreed to receive and accept said pumps and to credit defendant with the purchase price of the same on his indebtedness to the plaintiff.

“Defendant shows that at the time of the making of said agreement he was largely indebted to plaintiff, and said pumps were taken with the express agreement and understanding that the purchase price thereof should be credited against this defendant’s indebtedness to plaintiff.”

*361 It thus appears that appellant did not rely, so far as shown by his pleadings, upon a general agreement that defendant might return any machinery he might have bought of plaintiff and which he did not use, and that the same should be taken back and credited, as stated in the requested charge, but upon a particular agreement that the pumps set out in the answer might be returned, and that under this particular agreement they were received and accepted by appellee.

We have examined very carefully the pages of the record referred to in appellant’s brief for the evidence of any general agreement that appellant was to return any goods bought of appellee which he could not use. The evidence so relied upon is very vague and indefinite as to any particular agreement. Appellant testified that in August or September, 1902, he spoke to F. W. Heitman about returning some pipe and possibly other things which he had bought and could not use, to which Heitman replied: “Don’t we always take it back?” This appears to be really the basis for the alleged general agreement and it appears that the pipe, etc., referred to was in fact taken back, but at some discount from the cost price. It is doubtful if the testimony tends to establish such a general agreement to return any machinery sold which appellant did not use, as stated in the requested charge, but if it dota, this is clearly not the agreement pleaded, and it was not error to refuse the charge referred'to.

The second and third assignments of error, which are based upon the refusal of other requested charges in substantially the same language present the same question and, for the same reason, must be overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W. 1074, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 358, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-f-w-heitman-co-texapp-1906.