Southwestern Bell Media, Inc. v. Trepper

784 S.W.2d 68, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 3247, 1989 WL 180366
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 20, 1989
Docket05-88-01473-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 784 S.W.2d 68 (Southwestern Bell Media, Inc. v. Trepper) 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
Southwestern Bell Media, Inc. v. Trepper, 784 S.W.2d 68, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 3247, 1989 WL 180366 (Tex. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

LAGARDE, Justice.

Southwestern Bell Media, Inc. (Bell) sued Elliot L. Trepper, doing business as Dallas Building Systems, for breach of contract. Trepper attempted to avoid liability on the contract by claiming that he was the agent for Innovative Metal Building Concepts, Inc., doing business as Dallas Building Systems. Bell now appeals an adverse judgment and raises six points of error. We sustain Bell’s first two points of error.

Prior to the making of the contract in question, Southwestern Bell Telephone Company 1 entered into at least one written Yellow Pages advertising contract with “Dallas Building Systems.” That contract was dated January 23, 1984, and was signed by Michael Irvin on the line marked “Applicant (Customer or Authorized Agent).” Irvin showed his title to be “P. Owner,” as appears underneath the signature line marked “Title” beside Irvin’s signature. Above the line marked “Title” and next to the preprinted word “Contract” appeared the typed words “J. Gonzales & M. Irvin.” Near the top of the contract appear the words “Dallas Building Systems, 2511 N. Walton Walker, Steel Fabricators” alongside a telephone number “688-1698.”

The two contracts on which Bell sued Trepper contained the wording “Dallas Building Systems, 2511 N. Walton Walker, Steel Fabricators” alongside a telephone number “688-1698” near the top of the contracts. The first of the two contracts was dated May 8,1985, and the second was dated April 15, 1986. Trepper signed his name on the two contracts on the line marked “Advertiser,” showing his title to be “President.” Below Trepper’s signature on both contracts appears preprinted language stating that the “advertiser warrants that he personally or as agent has the authority to request and agree to pay for such advertising.” At trial, Bell judicially admitted that this contract language was an acknowledgement by Bell that the person signing the contract form in the space above the word “advertiser” could sign the contract solely as an agent for the advertiser without agreeing to be personally liable for the cost of the advertising.

At the time of the execution of the two contracts on which Bell sued, Dallas Building Systems was a name being used by a corporation called Innovative Metal Building Concepts, Inc. Innovative Metal Building Concepts, Inc. also did business under the name Dallas Building Systems Co., as evidenced by an assumed name certificate filed in the Dallas County assumed name-records on January 27, 1986. 2 Innovative Metal Building Concepts, Inc. was incorporated on October 29, 1984. Mike Irvin was president of Innovative Metal Building Concepts, Inc. Dallas Building Systems was also a name being used by a partnership calling itself both Dallas Building Systems Company and Dallas Building Systems Co. Its partners included Mike Irvin.

Trepper was part owner and president of Pebcor Corporation. In approximately March 1985, Dallas Building Systems, through Michael Irvin, requested Pebcor Corporation, a company of which Trepper was part owner and president, to act as a consultant to Dallas Building Systems. It was through this consulting relationship between Dallas Building Systems and Peb-cor that Michael Irvin, the president of Innovative Metal Building Concepts, Inc., gave authority to Trepper to sign the Yellow Pages contracts as President of Dallas Building Systems. Trepper testified at trial that he believed he was signing the contracts on behalf of Innovative Metal Building Concepts, Inc. doing business as Dallas Building Systems.

*70 At trial, Trepper further testified that he indicated he was signing on behalf of Dallas Building Systems by writing the word “President” above the line marked “Title” alongside his signature. Trepper stated that he did not intend to be personally bound when he signed the contracts for Dallas Building Systems and signified that to Tom Gilmour, the sales representative of Bell, by signing the contracts as “President.” Trepper testified that he signed the contracts in question and designated his title on the contracts as “President” in the presence of Gilmour. At the time the contracts were executed, Gilmour met with Trepper at Pebcor’s office at 2002 Quincy in Dallas, which was a different address than Dallas Building Systems’ office at 2511 N. Walton Walker. Trepper stated that at the time of the signing of the first contract in May 1985, Gilmour asked why the meeting was at Pebcor’s office and that he explained to Gilmour Pebcor’s consulting relationship with Dallas Building Systems.

Gilmour testified that he did not know that Trepper was an agent for Innovative Metal Building Systems, Inc. He stated that he understood that Dallas Building Systems was buying the advertising but that he did not consider whether Trepper was agreeing to be personally liable because “it’s not something that a sales rep usually worries about when he’s out in the field.” Gilmour testified that although Trepper wrote his title on the contracts as “President,” Gilmour thought that Dallas Building Systems was probably incorporated, but that it was also possible that Dallas Building Systems was a partnership or a sole proprietorship. Gilmour stated that if Trepper had written “Owner” on the line used to identify the signing party’s “title”, he would have thought that Trepper was personally responsible. Gilmour further testified that in connection with the first contract Trepper signed, Bell must have obtained a credit application which asked whether the advertiser was a sole proprietorship, partnership, or corporation because the contract represented a substantial increase in the cost of advertising over the previous year’s contract; however, Bell did not produce a credit application in response to a request for production calling for such documents.

Bell’s billing records show that the billing account for the Dallas Building Systems’ advertising charges was maintained by Bell under the name and address “J. Gonzales & M. Irvin, Ptnrs dba Dls Bldg Sys, 2511 N. Walton Walker, Dallas, TX 75212.” The wording “Ptnrs dba Dls Bldg Sys” meant partners doing business as Dallas Building Systems. Bell never sent any bill or invoice to Trepper for the Dallas Building Systems Yellow Pages advertisements, and Trepper’s name does not appear in Bell’s billing records for the Dallas Building Systems’ advertising. During several meetings between Trepper and the Bell representative in approximately May or June 1987 about the 1987-1988 Yellow Pages advertisement for Pebcor Corporation, the Bell representative inquired of Trepper about the Dallas Building Systems account (which was almost a year delinquent) but neither asked nor demanded that Trepper pay the account nor suggested to Trepper that Bell considered Trepper to be liable for the account.

In its first two points of error, Bell asserts that the trial court erred in overruling its objection to the submission of jury question number one because it improperly placed upon Bell the burden to negate Trepper’s affirmative defense of agency and because it omitted material elements of that defense. Specifically, Bell maintains that Trepper, to avoid liability for his signature on a contract, must have disclosed to the other contracting party both his intent to sign as a representative and the identity of his principal. Bell also contends that the use of a trade name is not a sufficient disclosure of the identity of the principal or of the fact of agency.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
784 S.W.2d 68, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 3247, 1989 WL 180366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwestern-bell-media-inc-v-trepper-texapp-1989.