Stacy v. Raywood Canal & Milling Co.

196 S.W. 568, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 700
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 1917
DocketNo. 240.
StatusPublished

This text of 196 S.W. 568 (Stacy v. Raywood Canal & Milling 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
Stacy v. Raywood Canal & Milling Co., 196 S.W. 568, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 700 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

Appellee, Raywood Canal & Milling Company, declared on a draft given by William Stacy & Son in the sum of $431.71, alleging that said draft was given appellee in payment of a settlement made between appel-lee and William Stacy & Son, whereby, after the making of mutual concessions, there was had an accord and satisfaction, and by way of compromise it was mutually agreed that there should be due from William Stacy & Son to appellee the sum mentioned, appellee’s books showing due said appellee from William Stacy & Son a much larger sum of money.

The reply of appellants to appellee’s petition was: First, a general denial; second, a plea of the statutes of two and four years’ limitation ; and, third, as follows:

“Further answering, this defendant says that there was no consideration for the debt declared upon, in that while there were certain transactions between the plaintiff and the defendant William Stacy arising out of the water rent for certain premises cultivated by tenants of the said William Stacy, and at the time of the execution of said draft declared upon in the sum of $431.71 it was understood by C. E. Stacy that certain tenants of said William Stacy had cultivated certain lands in rice at the instance of the said William Stacy, which were watered by the plaintiff, and that the defendant Wm. Stacy therefore owed the water rent for the same, but that as a matter of fact said tenants had not cultivated the land which had been so watered for the said William Stacy, but were in fact the tenants of one John Evans, and that the water rent was not due from the said William Stacy or the said William Stacy & Son, but that, owing to a mistake and misunderstanding as to the facts, the said William Stacy & Son, by C. E. Stacy, through inadvertence signed said draft, but that the same was not signed by Wm. Stacy, or by his authority, and that said partnership of Stacy & Sons had no connection whatever with the matters in dispute, that there was no consideration for said draft at the time of its execution moving from the plaintiff to the said William Stacy & Son, or to William Stacy, and that there was a total want and total failure of consideration for the same, since neither the said William Stacy nor the said William Stacy & Son owed the plaintiff the said sum for which said draft was executed, and this defendant denies that said William Stacy, or the said William Stacy & Son, at any time assumed the payment of any water rent for any tenants who received water from the plaintiff, other than upon the lands which were cultivated by tenants for the said defendants, and as to such water rent as was due for lands so cultivated for defendants, the same was paid long prior to the execution of said draft, and that the said draft declared upon was executed without consideration, as aforesaid, and it is denied that Wm. Stacy in whole or in part executed, or by the authority of said Wm. Stacy was the draft or check declared upon executed.”

It was agreed that Mrs. Hattie B. Stacy was independent executrix of the will of William Stacy, deceased, and sole devisee, and R. E. Brooks testified that the draft was given in payment of the amount agreed to be due, after a compromise and settlement of disputed accounts. It was admitted that the draft was not paid, and that there was a $5 protest fee thereon. It might be well to here set out In part the testimony of C. E. Stacy as a witness for himgelf and the other defendants, as follows:

“The account attached to the petition is not stated correctly. The account is a little different in our accounts from what you have it there it was at the time. That account states the settlement correctly. I got $477.86 from the National Milling Company for rice belonging to the Raywood Canal & Milling Company two or three months before this came up. I didn’t have that money in my hands at the time I came up here. It had been paid to me. I hadn’t paid it to the Raywood Canal & Milling Company because they owed us; $431 was not the difference. The difference between this rice that you speak of that I sold and the John Brown rice and our store account shows a dif *569 ference on your “books of $95, and our books showed $33. The way you have it there is correct, but you spoke about getting this money from the John Brown rice. Thei’e was a balance in this settlement of $245.16 due by Stacy & Son outside of the Stacy, Beavis & Reynolds matter. That’s right, I gave a check for it; $245.16 of the $31 was Wm. Stacy & Son’s matters entirely; there was that amount besides the Girourd. The Devoe and Girourd matter was a Wm. Stacy & Son matter. So that at the time we made this settlement there was a balance due by Stacy & Son on the above matters of $245.16. Of the draft that I gave you in settlement for $431.71, $245.16 of it was not matters that belonged to Wm. Stacy & Son altogether. I am looking at this other here. You have got $477.86 in there; that’s what that rice brought that was shipped of yours. That was Wm. Stacy & Son’s. Every item there was Wm. Stacy & Son’s, except this last item, the Evans and Reynolds and Reavis rice, there on the Evans land, wasn’t Wm. Stacy & Son’s at all. The item in there on the John Evans was not $186.55; it was two hundred and something. It is not credited with part of that. There’s $248.32 that wasn’t Wm. Stacy & Son’s. I don’t know there were any deliveries on that. This rice here, this settlement I made here of my father’s, I don’t know anything about. This $24S you said was rice from the Reavis and Reynolds off the Evans land.”
“The statement attached to the petition shows that the balance due by Stacy & Son on the above matters is $245.16, and that there was added to that a balance due for water rent by Stacy, Reynolds; and Reavis, as per statement, $186.55. All that $431.71, except the $186.55, was not Wm. Stacy & Son’s. That’s the way you got it here. That off the Evans land wasn’t Y/m. Stacy & Son’s. You haven’t got that in here as I can see. I don’t know what you charged in this, settlement. I know there was two hundred and forty some odd dollars that you said was off the Evans land. Right there it shows a balance due by Stacy & Son of $245.16, and further shows a balance due for water rent by Stacy, Reynolds, and Reavis of $186.55, and the two items added together make $431.71. That’s the amount I have the draft for. You have it there showing that the entire matters covered by the draft I gave was Wm. Stacy & Son’s, except $186.55, but it amounted to more than that off the Evans land. You have taken some of this out of the account above here. The rice off the Evans land you have got charged up $244 and something. I was authorized to run the business of Wm. Stacy & Son and had been running it for several years. So far as Wm. Stacy & Son were concerned, I was fully authorized to act for them, and I acted for them. I have been acting for them all the time. I did not have any secret agreement that I wasn’t authorized to act for Wm. Stacy & Son. I knew that that was the Evans land that this charge for water rent was made for. It shows that right on the face of the receipt. I was the man that insisted on having receipts for these different amounts showing settlement of them. And this amount was included in the draft of $431. This was one of the items that went in to make up that tract. By . getting this matter settled you got released to Wm.

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Related

International & G. N. Ry. Co. v. Perkins
184 S.W. 725 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 568, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 700, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stacy-v-raywood-canal-milling-co-texapp-1917.