Stephenville Compress Co. v. First Nat. Bank of Stephenville
This text of 148 S.W. 335 (Stephenville Compress Co. v. First Nat. Bank of Stephenville) 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.
Opinion
This suit was instituted in the district court of Erath county by the First National Bank of Stephenville against Cres-pie, Roensch & Co., a corporation, the Ste-phenville Compress Company, a corporation, and John Crotty & Son Company, a copart-nership composed of John Crotty, W. E. Crotty, and C. D. Waldo. The plaintiff bank alleged that it had an agreement with the firm of John Crotty & Son Company to furnish them with money with which to buy cotton for the season of 1909, according to the terms of which the firm agreed to deliver to the bank the receipts of the defendant compress company and of all others to whom they might deliver cotton, with the intention that said receipts and the cotton which they represented should be pledged to the bank as security for all advances made by the bank to the copartnership; that the defendant Stephenville Compress Company issued certain receipts to the John Crotty & Son Company, which receipts were delivered to the plaintiff under its agreement with John Crotty & Son Company, such receipts stipulating that the cotton would only be delivered upon the return of the receipts; that contrary to such stipulation, and to the custom of the country, which was pleaded, the defendant compress company wrongfully delivered the cotton to John Crotty & Son Company without the receipts, while the plaintiff yet held them, and while the sum for which they were pledged was yet due and unpaid; and, therefore, prayed that it have judgment against John Crotty & Son Company for its debt, and against the defendant compress company for the possession of the cotton, and, if that could not be found, for a personal judgment against it as for a conversion. It is unnecessary to state in detail all the pleadings of the parties. A jury trial resulted in an instructed verdict in favor of the defendant Crespie, Roensch & Co. and a finding by the jury in favor of the plaintiff against the firm of John Crotty & Son Company and its individual members, and in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant Stephenville Compress Company, followed by appropriate judgment, from which judgment the Stephenville Compress Company alone has appealed.
The statement contained under the ninth assignment of error is insufficient to show error in the refusal of the charge there referred to, and, besides, on another trial, if the case is submitted in accordance with the opinion of the Supreme Court hereinabove referred to, such question can hardly arise again.
Reversed and remanded as to Stephenville Compress Company alone.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
148 S.W. 335, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenville-compress-co-v-first-nat-bank-of-stephenville-texapp-1912.