Storrie v. Ft. Worth Stockyards Co.

143 S.W. 286, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 784
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 143 S.W. 286 (Storrie v. Ft. Worth Stockyards 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
Storrie v. Ft. Worth Stockyards Co., 143 S.W. 286, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 784 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

R, C. Storrie, in the firm name of Storrie, Bavouset & Co., instituted this suit on the 2d day of August, 1906, against the Ft. Worth Stockyards Company and the Belt Line Railway Company, to recover the sum of $19,071.65 alleged to be the balance due for a large amount of grading, excavating, filling, etc., done by said firm for the defendants under a written contract. It was alleged that the. firm of Storrie, Ba-vouset & Co. was composed of R. C. Stor-rie and J. Lang; that J. Bavouset whose name appeared in the firm was not a member of the partnership, but that his name was used with the permission of the plaintiff for the benefit of Lang. A copy of the contract was made an exhibit to the petition and provided for the payment on the part of the defendants:

For clearing and grubbing per acre..$20.00
For earthwork per cubic yard.13
For loose rock per cubic yard.36
For solid rock per cubic yard.72
For overhaul after 300 feet frorq haul ...01%,$ per cubic yard for each 100 feet of haul.

It was alleged that the plaintiffs had performed work in accordance with the contract, as estimated by the defendants’ engineer in charge, of the value of $53,071.65; that said amount less the sum sued for had been paid to said firm under the terms of the contract; that soon after the completion of the work in September or October, 1902, the defendants had attempted a settlement with R. C. Storrie which had been declined; that later, in September, 1903, J. Lang and J. Bavouset without the consent of the plaintiff Storrie conspired with the defendants and entered into an agreement whereby the said J. Lang was to accept from said defendants in full satisfaction of said $19,071.65, the sum of $9,288.68; that this agreement between Lang, Bavouset, and the defendants was consummated, said Lang in the name of the said firm of Storrie, Bavouset & Co. signing a receipt purporting to be in full settlement of all demands against said defendants in favor of the firm. It was further alleged that the defendants pretended to have paid to Armour & Co., *288 a corporation doing business in Tarrant county, tbe sum of $8,778.27, which sum said defendants improperly charged to the account of the plaintiff, Storrie, Bavouset & Co.; that said charge, as was claimed by the defendants, was the amount due to said Armour & Co. for certain dirt placed upon the fill of the defendants and taken from the premises of Armour & Co. by R. C. Stor-rie in a contract by Storrie individually with Armour & Co. to do certain excavations.

The defendants, Ft. Worth Stockyards Company and Belt Line Railway Company, answered, pleading that Lang had been made a party without his authority and specially, among other things, that the amount paid Armour & Co. for dirt was a just charge against the firm of Storrie, Bavouset & Co.; that said Lang and Bavouset so admitted and agreed that the sum of $9,288.68 was all that was due upon the contract and that this sum had been paid to them as a final balance on the 17th day of September, 1903. These defendants also pleaded over against the defendants J. Lang and Bavouset urging the good faith of the payment to them under an agreement that the amount paid constituted the full amount due said firm of Storrie, Bavouset & Co.; and they prayed, as against Lang and Bavouset, for judgment for any such amount as might be adjudged against them in this suit.

J. Bavouset appeared, and, among other things, pleaded a general denial to the plaintiff’s petition and specially denied that he at any time ever entered into, or became a party to, any conspiracy with Lang or the other defendants to in any wise defraud the plaintiff Storrie and specially denied all allegations of fraud, and averred that the settlement made by himself and Lang was, so far as he knew, “a fair, just and correct settlement”; that said settlement was made by the authority of the majority of the members of said firm “in good faith and with no intent or purpose to in any wise defraud R. C. Storrie and that the settlement was within the scope of the authority of the majority of the members of the former firm or the partnership of Storrie, Bavouset & Co.”

It appears that upon a hearing of the defendants’ motion therefor J. Lang was dismissed from the suit and that upon the submission of the case to the jury the trial resulted in a verdict for the defendants.

[1] The contract between Storrie, Bavouset & Co. and the Ft. Worth Stockyards and Belt Line Railway Company provided for monthly payments as the work progressed to be made upon estimates of the supervising engineer, one Robey, and appellant first complains of the exclusion of his testimony as set out in bill of exception No. 1. The material part of this bill as set out in appellant’s brief is as follows: “Q. Was there any understanding as to who was to get paid for it?” (Meaning the dirt from the Armour excavation that was put on the stockyards fill.) To Which question plaintiff Storrie, answered as follows: “A. There was no understanding as to who was to get paid for this Armour dirt, only that after we done our first work, and the estimates came along — the first work that was done, when our estimates came along — we looked up and estimated the amount of work that had been done, the amount of dirt that had been put in that fill, and the amount of work that had been done on the stockyards, and figuring up the amount of excavation and the amount of dirt that was put in that fill, and comparing it with our estimate, we saw that we were being paid for the dirt that was going into the stockyards fill. We got our information as to this from work that we had done and from the yardage that had been put out. That estimate, as I understand, was made by Mr. Robey. We arrived at that just exactly like a man would arrive at any other piece of work — he knows exactly what he is doing and he knows how much dirt he has moved, and he knows where he has put it — he knows where he has put every yard of it, and so it is accurate, and if we were 5,000 yards or 1,000 yards short, why we would know it at the time the estimate was made, whether we were being paid for it or not.

To this testimony as given by the plaintiff, Storrie, the defendants objected upon the ground that it was. nothing but an ex parte and a one-sided argument, and a conclusion of the worst legal form, and this objection was by the court sustained, and the plaintiffs then and there in open court excepted to the action of the court in excluding the testimony, etc.

[2] We think as appellee suggests that the testimony so offered was argumentative. Moreover, the record shows without dispute that the plaintiff, Storrie, after the first estimate made under the contract under consideration was absent in foreign lands; that he personally knew nothing of the particulars until his return after the completion of the work, and a consideration of the bill makes it evident that the fact he sought to thus show was that during the continuance of the work the dirt from Armour & Co. had been placed in the fill of the defendants and regularly estimated and paid for without deduction as the work progressed. This fact, however, otherwise appears from the record without dispute. John Currie, who had charge of appellant’s “outfit and looked after Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.W. 286, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/storrie-v-ft-worth-stockyards-co-texapp-1911.