Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Smith

130 S.W.2d 425, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1228
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1939
DocketNo. 1900.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 130 S.W.2d 425 (Texas Pacific Coal & Oil 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
Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Smith, 130 S.W.2d 425, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1228 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, Justice.

C. O. Smith (hereinafter called Smith), in the course of his employment by Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company (hereinafter called Oil Company), received an injury resulting in the loss of one leg. Texas Pacific Fidelity & Surety Company (hereinafter called Surety Company), the compensation insurance carrier for the Oil Company, admitted its liability and under an agreed award of the Industrial • Accident Board paid him $4,500 in full. -Independent-Eastern ' Torpedo Company (hereinafter called Torpedo Company) reimbursed the Surety Company for the full *428 amount of compensation insurance paid by the latter to Smith. Such reimbursement was made in pursuance of an agreement by the Torpedo Company to do so if the Surety Company would procure from Smith a transfer or release of his potential cause of action for damages against the Torpedo Company. Such transfer or assignment was executed by Smith to the Surety Company and in turn assigned by the Surety Company to the Torpedo Company.

As a consideration for the transfer by Smith to the Surety Company of his cause of action against the Torpedo Company, the sum of $500 was paid by the Surety Company, and in addition thereto, according to the contention of Smith, but denied by the Oil Company, the latter, acting by C. L. Hightower, agreed to give Smith lifetime employment upon specified terms. As soon after his injuries as Smith was able to resume work, he was given employment by the Oil Company, at which he continued about 5½ years and was discharged.

This suit was brought by Smith against the Oil Company to recover damages for the breach of the alleged contract of lifetime employment. The Torpedo Company was joined as a defendant in a separate count, by which recovery against it was sought in the alternative upon the original cause of action. The Torpedo Company, upon pleas of misjoinder and limitation, was dismissed from the suit, which action we affirm.

In a jury trial the court gave judgment, based upon a special verdict, in favor of the plaintiff against the Oil Company, in the sum of $16,800, from which judgment this appeal has been duly prosecuted by the ■Oil Company.

Among the contentions of the Oil Company is one that Smith’s cause of action was conclusively shown to be barred by limitation. Smith alleged that he was discharged on or about January 31, 1936. The suit, as it was brought on May 4, 1936, described the contract of employment as differing in some of its terms from that described in his second amended original petition (trial pleading), filed February 4, 1938. Invoking the well-known principle -of law that in an action upon a contract recovery may be had, if at all, only upon proof of the identical contract alleged, the Oil Company argues that since the cause of action for breach of the alleged oral contract of employment accrued at the time of the alleged discharge of plaintiff, and since more than, two years elapsed before the filing of plaintiff’s amended petition alleging for the first time material provisions of the contract, the cause of action was, as a matter of law, barred by limitation. A complete answer, we think, is that no new or different transaction was described in the amended pleading. Unless the cause of action alleged in an amended pleading involves a different transaction from that in the original pleading, the latter having declared upon a cause of action not then barred, it is immaterial that the cause of action alleged in the amended pleading be different from the cause of action originally alleged. The test which Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 5539b makes proper is whether or not the cause of action alleged in the amended pleading be “wholly based upon and grows out of a new, distinct or different transaction and occurrence.” Farmers & Merchants Nat. Bank v. Arrington, Tex.Civ.App., 98 S.W.2d 378, 379; Universal Life & Accident Ins. Co. v. Johnson, Tex.Civ.App., 120 S.W.2d 314.

We shall next consider whether the court should, as requested by the Oil Company, have instructed a verdict in its favor. The proper conclusion upon this question will be controlled, or at least materially influenced, by considering whether the jury in making its findings upon the issues submitted was authorized to regard the Surety Company as the agent or representative of the Oil Company, and to consider the agents and representatives of the Surety Company by reason of such relationship alone, as agents and representatives of the Oil Company.

It was undisputed that the Surety Company was a corporation and the carrier of compensation insurance for the Oil Company. All the stock, except a few shares for the qualification of officers or directors, of the Surety Company, was owned by the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company of Delaware, a Delaware corporation. All the stock of the last named corporation, except a few shares for qualifying purposes, was in turn owned by the Oil Company, the defendant, a Texas corporation. Actually, therefore, the Oil Company did not own any stock in the Surety Company. The two corporations had the same officers and directors and a common place of business. It *429 may be granted that the Oil Company, through ownership of the stock of the foreign holding company, had the power to control the Surety Company. In our opinion there was .no evidence to establish, or raise an issue of the fact, that the officers or agents of the Surety Company were by reason of their status as such, officers or agents of the Oil Company. The Surety Company was conducting no business in which the Oil Company was engaged, or in which its charter powers permitted it to engage. There was, therefore, no evidence to show that the Surety Company was "but an instrumentality or adjunct” of the Oil Company as the dominant corporation. There was no evidence to support an inference that the organization of the Surety Company was “a mere sham” or used as “an instrument for concealing the truth” or “perpetrating fraud.” Under these circumstances, whatever may be said in criticism of the soundness of a governmental policy of empowering corporations to possess such powers of control one over another, as we have recently had occasion to consider, there is, in our opinion, wanting essential elements to make it proper for the jury to decide the question of whether the agents and officers of the Surety Company were' the agents and officers of the Oil Company. National Hotel Co. v. Motley, Tex.Civ.App., 123 S.W.2d 461, and authorities therein cited and discussed.

C. L. Hightower not being agent of the Oil Company by reason of being an agent of the Surety Company, there was no evidence that he was, in fact, an agent of the Oil Company. Absent evidence that Hightower was an agent of the Oil Company, there was, therefore, no evidence that he had any authority, as the act of the Oil Company, to make the alleged contract of lifetime employment. Smith admits that he had no express authority. If, as we hold, Hightower was not an agent of the Oil Company, then he had neither express nor implied authority to make the contract alleged.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W.2d 425, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-coal-oil-co-v-smith-texapp-1939.