Thos. W. Blake Lumber Co. v. Guaranty State Bank of Woodville

290 S.W. 187
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 1926
DocketNo. 8863. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 187 (Thos. W. Blake Lumber Co. v. Guaranty State Bank of Woodville) 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
Thos. W. Blake Lumber Co. v. Guaranty State Bank of Woodville, 290 S.W. 187 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

LANE, J.

This suit was brought by Thos. W. Blake in the name of Thos. W. Blake Lumber Company, under which name he was doing business, against the Guaranty State Bank of Woodville, Tex., the R. L. Lumber Company of Woodville, a corporation, hereinafter for convenience referred to as the R. L. Lumber Company, and the Hey-man-Pate Lumber Company of Houston, Tex., a corporation, hereinafter referred to as the Heyman Lumber Company, to recover certain sums of money alleged to be a balance due him upon certain alleged advances made by him to the defendants. A judgment was sought against the defendants Guaranty *188 State Bank of Woodville, the R. L. I/umber Company, and the Heyman-Pate. Lumber Company, in the sum of $4,630.85, with, interest. at 8 per cent, per annum from August 14, 1923, and for judgment against the R. L. Lumber Company and the Guaranty State Bank of Woodville for the sum of $2,735.72, with interest from November 8, 1923.

For cause of action the plaintiff alleged, substantially,, that he was engaged in the wholesale selling of lumber, and also in the sale of lumber on a brokerage basis; that on the-27th day of March, 1922, he entered into an agreement with the Heyman Lumber Company to sell the output of its sawmill for a brokerage fee of $1.75 per thousand feet; that it was stipulated in said agreement that he was to set aside SO per cent, of the proceeds of the sales made by him, from which he was to pay the stumpage charges due by the lumber company, and that the balance thereof was to be paid to said lumber company, less the brokerage due him; that the remaining 20 per cent, of such proceeds was to be used by him, first, in the payment of “any and all claims that might have been made by the plaintiff’s customers against the several outturns,” and that the balance of said 20 per cent, should be divided between the plaintiff and the lumber company, and that that portion of said 20 per cent, retained by plaintiff was to be applied to the payment of a noté for the sum of $2,500 due by the lumber company; that by said agreement plaintiff had full power to make all settlements with his customers on any claim made by them against the lumber- shipped under sales made under the contract; that the parties operated under said contract from its date to about the 19th day of June, 1922, at which time there was a reorganization of said lumber company; that at the time of such reorganization the Guaranty State Bank of Woodville made a loan of $3,000 to the lumber company, for which the lumber company executed and delivered its note; that to secure the payment of such note the lumber company .gave the bank a deed of trust upon all of its assets of every kind and nature, and it was agreed by said instrument that it should extend to any renewal of any indebtedness due by the lumber company to the bank, as well as to any debt made in the future.

The plaintiff further alleged:

That, after the giving of said deed of trust, it was agreed by the parties thereto that plaintiff might continue to handle the output of the lumber company under the same terms and with the same powers as set out in the contract entered into between him and the lumber company on the 27th day of March, 1922, except that all remittances should be made by the plaintiff to the bank from sales, for the account of the lumber company, after-first making proper deductions. That thereafter, and until the 14th day of August, 1923, plaintiff handled the outturn of the mill of the lumber company under the terms of said agreement.

That in December, 1922, the R. L. Lumber Company also entered into a contract with plaintiff to sell the lumber manufactured by it for the term of one year; the provisions of such contract being practically the same as in the contract between plaintiff and the Hey-man Lumber Company. That the bank became interested in the R. L. Lumber Company by reason of loans made by it to said lumber company, to secure payment of which it took deeds of trust on the timber and lumber of said lumber company, and a lien upon the outturn of said lumber. That both of said contracts were entered into on the part of the contracting parties at .the specific instance and request of the bank by and through its active vice president, Burlew. That said vice president explained to the said plaintiff that both of the said lumber companies were indebted to the bank, and it was the desire of the bank that plaintiff assist the bank and the lumber companies in the sale of the output of said lumber companies, and to -assist the bank in financing the operations of the said companies, by making advances to the bank to be credited to the lumber companies, to keep as low as possible on the books of the bank the indebtedness of the said lumber companies to it, and to enable the said bank to ultimately realize on the debts owed by the said companies to the bank.

That, at the instance and request of the said bank at various and sundry times, he advanced large' sums of money to the bank for the account of the lumber companies; it being, agreed between the plaintiff and the bank that for such advances the bank would cause the lumber companies to deliver to the plaintiff the output of the lumber companies, which plaintiff was to sell, and, after deducting all claims and expenses of sale, including brokerage of $1.75 per thousand feet, the balance to be credited on such’advances theretofore made by the plaintiff, and, if such sums exceeded the advances, same was to be paid to the defendant Guaranty State Bank for the account of the lumber companies.

' That on or about August 1, 1923, the said bank and Heyman-Pate Lumber Company were largely indebted to him for advances made on invoices in excess of the sales price of the lumber shipped by the defendants to the plaintiff’s customers, after all proper deductions were made in accordance with the terms of the said sales contract, and plaintiff was entitled in equity to a lien on the lumber that was on the yards of the Heyman-Pate Lumber Company, at Warren, Tex., as against said bank and lumber company, for the advances so made by him in excess of the net proceeds of the sale of said lumber, and made by him upon the faith of the continuance of the said contract by which plaintiff might be repaid the said advances.

That, on or about August 14, 1923, the de *189 fendant bank, through its active vice president, H. G. Burlew, represented to him that he was entirely familiar with the affairs of the said two lumber companies, and was endeavoring to work out of their operations the debts due by them to the Guaranty State Bank. That the bank examiner had recently made demand of him that the debts of the said two companies be reduced or paid. That he was compelled to get some money upon the obligations of these two lumber companies to the bank. That the bank had liens on the physical properties of the said companies, and that the Heyman-Pate Lumber Company had on its yards at Warren, Tex., 700,000 feet of pine lumber, and the bank desired the assistance of the plaintiff in the matter of disposing of the said lumber. That the mill of the Heyman-Pate Lumber Company had been shut down, and the said company was insolvent and was willing to turn over said lumber to the bank, and had consented that the bank might deliver the said lumber to the plaintiff for the purposes of sale, and likewise desired the assistance of the plaintiff in disposing of the same. That he might handle the said lumber upon the same basis that he had been handling the output of the Heyman-Pate Lumber Company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Plains Cotton Cooperative Ass'n v. Panhandle Mutual Hail Ass'n
389 S.W.2d 316 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1965)
San Jacinto Trust Co. v. Griffey
87 S.W.2d 857 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thos-w-blake-lumber-co-v-guaranty-state-bank-of-woodville-texapp-1926.