Tyler Building & Loan Ass'n v. Biard & Scales

171 S.W. 1122
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1914
DocketNo. 2730
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 171 S.W. 1122 (Tyler Building & Loan Ass'n v. Biard & Scales) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler Building & Loan Ass'n v. Biard & Scales, 171 S.W. 1122 (Tex. 1914).

Opinion

HAWKINS, J.

Petitioner in error, as plaintiff in the trial court, sued defendant in error, defendants there, for damages alleged to have resulted from the unauthorized, wrongful, and fraudulent delivery by defendants, as plaintiff’s agents, of certain deeds to some 4,294 acres of land in Eastern Texas' in exchange for a stock of dry goods in Kansas City, Mo. Said petition alleges, in substance, among other things: That defendants are now, and during the year 1909 were, engaged in business in Dallas, Tex., as real estate agents and dealers. That in March, 1909, defendants represented to plaintiff, a corporation, that they were in position to make for their clients large profits on property turned over to them for trade or exchange. That at said time, and subsequent thereto, plaintiff owned and had possession of 2,888 acres of land in Angelina county, Tex., same being a portion of the Vincenti Michelli grant, describing it, worth $6.50 per acre, or $18,772, and also owned and held possession of 1,406 acres of land in Cherokee county, Tex., same being a portion of the M.- del C. Leigo league grant, describing it, worth $6.50 per acre, or $9,931; a portion of the last-named tract being at the time of the negotiations mentioned in said petition in the name of the estate of Mrs. Susan W. Thorn, deceased, but in truth and in fact belonging to plaintiff. That plaintiff listed said lands with defendants on or about April 1, 1909, for disposition by sale or trade. That defendants thereafter submitted various propositions of trade for said lands, none of which were acceptable to plaintiff. That on or about September 7, 1909, defendants represented to plaintiff that they could trade said lands to Kansas City parties at $15 per acre for a stock of general dry goods, consisting of clothing, shoes, boots, hats, dresses, etc., a stock which was first-class in every respect, and which could be easily handled for cash, whereupon plaintiff advised defendants that it would be willing to trade [1123]*1123for same, provided the stock was all right and the goods not damaged; said goods to be traded for to be submitted to inspection by plaintiff and cheeking up of the inventory thereof. That about September 18, 1909, and in reliance upon the representation of defendants, made through said Biard, to the effect that he had 20 years’ experience in the dry goods business, and had examined and handled over 200 stocks of dry goods, and was thoroughly acquainted with the character and quality of dry goods and the value thereof, and was competent to pass upon stocks of dry goods as to kind and quality and price thereof, plaintiff authorized said Biard to go to Kansas City to negotiate a deal of said lands for such a stock of general dry goods, but did not authorize him to enter negotiations to trade said lands for any other kind or character of dry goods. That shortly thereaftér said Biard went to Kansas City, and from there represented to plaintiff that they had been offered for said two tracts of land $60,000 in merchandise, whereupon plaintiff believed and relied upon the representations of defendants, acting by and through said Biard, that said offered stock of merchandise was such as defendants had so represented to plaintiff it would trade said lands for, and such as that for which the plaintiff had authorized defendants to so enter into negotiations by way of exchange. That, immediately after attempting to .enter into a contract on behalf of plaintiff with the Mitchell Dry Goods Company for the exchange of said $60,000 stock of merchandise for said land, Biard returned* to Texas, and thereafter studiously concealed the true character and quality of said stock of merchandise, but represented to plaintiff that he had traded for such a stock of general dry goods as he had represented to plaintiff he would trade for, and inventorying at cost prices the sum of $60,000, and that such sale was subject to inspection of said goods and checking said inventory by plaintiff, and very strenuously and urgently recommended to plaintiff that he accept said trade and close same immediately. That believing said statements so made by defendants to be true, and relying on fheir representations, plaintiff authorized defendants to proceed with closing said deal for the exchange of said goods for said lands; “said trade to be made subject to examination of the goods and checking of the inventory of the same by plaintiff.”

Said petition further avers: “That in pursuance of said trade, as represented to it by defendants, plaintiff prepared, executed, and acknowledged, and caused to be prepared, executed, and acknowledged, deeds for the land in question, conveying same by warranty title to one B. W. Pope, the party designated by said defendants, and turned said deeds over to defendants for safe-keeping, to be delivered when plaintiff had inspected and examined said stock of goods and checked the inventory therefor,” and turned said deeds over to defendants on or about October 23, 1909, down to which time, and ever since the return of said Biard from Kansas City, defendants had studiously and diligently represented to plaintiff that said stock of goods so traded for was a first-class stock of general dry goods, consisting of clothing, dresses, boots, shoes, etc., and had strenuously and diligently concealed from plaintiff the true character of said stock of goods, and up to said time had failed and refused to furnish to plaintiff a copy of the contract which they had entered into on behalf of plaintiff with said Mitchell Dry Goods Company, and had also failed and refused to furnish to plaintiff an inventory of said stock of goods, and plaintiff, when it left- said deeds with defendants, believed and relied upon their said representations that it was to get the kind and character of goods mentioned above. That on October 23, 1909, relying on defendant’s representations that they had traded for said stock of general dry goods, subject to plaintiff’s inspection of same and the checkingi of the inventory thereof, plaintiff employed an expert and experienced dry goods man to go from Texas to Kansas City and inspect said dry goods and check the inventory thereof, and he arrived there on October 25, 1909. That on October 23, 1909, plaintiff turned over its said deeds to defendants, and that on that same day defendants took the fast train out of Dallas for Kansas City, and as soon as they could reach the office of the Mitchell Dry Goods Company after arriving in Kansas City, and on the very day on- which plaintiff’s said expert had arrived in Kansas City, defendants, knowing that plaintiff had employed and sent said expert dry goods man to examine said stock, and knowing that he had not examined same, nor had an opportunity to do so, and in “utter and willful disregard of plaintiff’s rights, and in violation of their authority and against plaintiff’s directions and instructions, turned over and delivered said deeds to the Mitchell Dry Goods Company, without plaintiff’s knowledge, consent, or authority,” and, without plaintiff’s authority to do so, employed one Earnest Lovan to act for it in accepting said stock of merchandise, he being the party who, throughout said negotiations, had represented and was at that time representing said Mitchell Dry Goods Company as its agent, which fact defendants well knew, and that immediately upon receiving said deeds said Mitchell Dry Goods Company caused said land to be conveyed to, an innocent purchaser for value, without any notice. That the stock of goods which defendants received for plaintiff’s land “was not a stock of general dry goods consisting of boots, shoes, dresses, hats, clothing,” etc., such as was represented to it to be, but that the majority of said stock consisted of cheap and worthless jewelry, notions, etc.

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

Related

Johnson v. Freytag
338 S.W.2d 257 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1960)
Bradley v. Howell
126 S.W.2d 547 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1939)
Sanger v. Calloway
61 S.W.2d 988 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1933)
National Bond & Mortgage Corp. v. Davis
60 S.W.2d 429 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1933)
Busby v. Smith
53 S.W.2d 138 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1932)
Smith v. Daniel
288 S.W. 528 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Covert v. Calvert
287 S.W. 117 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Cattlemen's Trust Co. of Ft. Worth v. Turner
182 S.W. 438 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 S.W. 1122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-building-loan-assn-v-biard-scales-tex-1914.