Southern Badge Co. v. Smith

141 S.W. 185, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 399
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 141 S.W. 185 (Southern Badge Co. 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
Southern Badge Co. v. Smith, 141 S.W. 185, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 399 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

Appellants, plaintiffs in the court below, and as surviving partners in the partnership known and, doing business as Southern Badge Company, brought this suit against the appellee, R. E. Smith, on the following instrument: “At Sherman, March 21, 1905. Mr. B. Dixon Armstrong, Mgr. Emblem Bureau Southern Cotton Association, Atlanta, Georgia — Dear sir: Please send the Texas state division of the Southern Cotton Association, one hundred thousand official buttons, for which we agree to pay ten cents each, fifty thousand of these buttons to be delivered at Sherman, Texas, and the balance in lots of one to ten thousand' at such places as may by me be directed. Very respectfully, R. E. Smith, President, Texas State Division, Southern Cotton Association.”

It appears that in February, 1905, the cotton growers of the south organized what is known as the “Southern Cotton Association,” with subsidiary organizations in each of the cotton states, known as the Southern Cotton Association of said states, and further subsidiary organizations, known as parish or county divisions. The object of said organizations was to reduce the acreage of cotton, and thereby increase the price. The officers of the parent company of said Southern Cotton Association were: Harvie Jordan, president; E. S. Peters, vice president; Richard Cheatham, secretary; J. H. Latham, treasurer; T. J. Simmons, Jr., manager of press bureau; B. Dixon Armstrong, manager of emblem bureau. R. E. Smith, appellee herein, was president of the Texas state division of said Southern Cotton Association. On March 21, 1905, while Harvie Jordan, president, and B. Dixon Armstrong, manager of the emblem bureau, of the Southern Cotton Association, -were in Sherman, Tex., the matter of distributing buttons, the emblem of the association, in the state of Texas was taken up by said officers with appellee, as president of the Texas state division.

The order sued on was written upon a letter head of the Southern Cotton Association, and was, as shown thereby, addressed to B. Dixon Armstrong, manager of emblem bureau, Southern Cotton Association. The name of the said Armstrong appears on this letter head as manager of the emblem bureau of the Southern Cotton Association. On February 23, 1905, the Southern Cotton Association, the parent company, through its president, Harvie Jordan, and its secretary, Richard Cheatham, entered into a contract with the Southern Badge Company, a firm composed of A. V. Buck, M. S. Carmichael, andB. Dixon Armstrong, whereby said Southern Badge Company was authorized to sell to the various branches of the Southern Cotton Association the buttons in controversy, upon terms set forth in said contract. Appellee knew nothing of said contract, and it seems to have been kept a secret from him until after there was a failure to sell the buttons, and the Southern Badge Company had probably sustained a loss by reason of its contract. It was then for the first time that ap-pellee, according to his testimony, learned that the Southern Badge Company, of which he knew nothing at the time he made the order for the buttons, was the owner of the emblem bureau, and was undertaking to hold him personally responsible on the order for the buttons. Prior to the date of the order, signed by appellee, reguesting the sending of the buttons to the Texas division, he had received letters, purporting to be written by Harvie Jordan, president of the Southern Cotton Association. Some, if not all, of these letters informed the appel-lee, in effect, that the Southern Cotton Association, of which the writer was president, had prior thereto adopted an emblem, and established the emblem bureau of the Southern Cotton Association and located the same at Atlanta, with Mr. B. Dixon Armstrong as manager, and that the price of the emblem was fixed by the New Orleans convention at 25 cents each. These letters, or some *187 of them, urged that each member of the association purchase and wear the emblem adopted, as the funds to be derived from their sale “are needed by the association to aid in carrying on the great battle we are now waging in behalf of the entire cotton-producing section of our country.”

It is alleged that upon receipt of the instrument sued on and set out above the plaintiffs delivered to the defendant 50,000 of said buttons, and at the request of said Smith, defendant, plaintiffs canceled and accepted a countermand of 20,000 of said buttons; that plaintiffs had at all times been ready and willing to deliver 25,000 buttons, not delivered to defendant, and still had them on hand, but that defendant had failed and refused to give directions for their shipment, according to the terms of the agreement between plaintiffs and defendant, and that the same became and are worthless to plaintiffs; that, after said instrument was executed and delivered by the defendant, the said Armstrong transferred his interest in the said partnership to his partners, A. V. Buck and M. S. Carmichael; that said Armstrong died in August, 1908, and the said Buck died in October, 1908, leaving surviving him his heirs, as stated in the petition.

riaintiffs further alleged that the Southern Cotton Association and the Texas division is and were a voluntary association of persons, not incorporated, and having no legal status or existence, and that it had not and never did have any capital or assets, and that it was and always had been an irresponsible association, and that the defendant had no right to buy said buttons on the credit or pretended credit of said association, and did not do so, but that he did give said order and promised to pay for said buttons, as in said order set out; that defendant had refused to pay for said buttons, and they prayed for judgment for 80,000 buttons, at 10 cents each, hearing interest at 6 per cent, from March SI, 1905.

Defendant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and special answer, alleging, in substance, that the Southern Cotton Association was composed of numerous bureaus and divisions, among which was the emblem bureau of the Southern Cotton Association; that on the date of order upon which suit is based, B. Dixon Armstrong and the plaintiffs were members of the Southern Cotton Association, and that said Armstrong was manager and in control of said emblem bureau, and defendant Smith was president of its Texas state division, and a member thereof; that the defendant signed said order at the personal solicitation of said Armstrong, after it had been discussed and distinctly understood and agreed that said order would and should in no manner bind defendant personally; that it simply was an order on one division of the Southern Cotton Association upon another division or bureau of the same association, and that defendant was only acting as an officer or agent of one of said divisions, and not in his own behalf or for his own benefit, and that such is the fact and in law the effect and meaning of said order on its face; that, if' said instrument had any other meaning or effect, then defendant was caused and induced to sign the same by the deliberate and willful fraud of said B.

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.W. 185, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-badge-co-v-smith-texapp-1911.