Utilities Natural Gas Corp. v. Hill

239 S.W.2d 431, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2021
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1951
Docket14256
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 239 S.W.2d 431 (Utilities Natural Gas Corp. v. Hill) 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
Utilities Natural Gas Corp. v. Hill, 239 S.W.2d 431, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2021 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

CRAMER, Justice.

The parties will be designated as in the trial court. Joe L. Hill, plaintiff, filed this suit against the Utilities Natural Gas Comr pany, hereinafter referred to as Utilities, *433 Clint W. Murchison, Sr., hereinafter called Murchison, Sr., Clint W. Murchison, Jr., hereinafter called Murchison, Jr., Wofford Cain, hereinafter called Cain, the Reserve Loan Life Insurance Company, hereinafter called Insurance Company, and John Dabney Murchison, hereinafter called J. D. Murchison, to recover a commission of 5% on a sales contract negotiated by him for Utilities with the Central Power & Light Company, hereinafter called Light Company; such sales contract being a renewal (upon altered terms as to duration, price and tax provisions) of a previous contract under which Light Company purchased gas as fuel for its light plant from Utilities. The expiring contract was not satisfactory to the Light Company, who had negotiated with and received a bid from a competing company.

The term desired by Light Company on a renewal contract was 20 years; by Utilities 10 years. The new contract negotiated by Hill was for 12 years. The price finally agreed upon by Utilities and Light Company was substantially the same as that offered by the competing company. The tax clause was also changed (favorable to Light Company) by compromise before the signing of the new contract. Plaintiff Hill, in his pleading, first claimed an express oral agreement with Murchison, Sr., as a representative of Utilities, for a 5% commission based on total sales for the duration of the contract, to be computed as if the contract would cause the same amount of gas to be sold per year as was delivered by Utilities to the Light Company during the year 1947. Such agreement was claimed to have been entered into while plaintiff Hill and defendant Murchison, Sr., were on an airplane trip, while they were alone, and no one else knew of such agreement until Hill made his demand for compensation.

In the alternative, plaintiff sought recovery against defendants on a quantum meruit basis.

Joined with this cause of action, plaintiff Hill, in addition to Utilities and Murchison, Sr., sued Wofford Cain, J. D. Murchison, Murchison, Jr., and the Life Insurance Company, based on an alleged1 shifting of assets of Utilities by transfer (mainly through a corporation that existed for only one day) to the individual defendants, the Life Insurance Company and a newly created corporation. Murchison, Sr., owned practically all the stock of the newly created corporation and also of the Life Insurance Company.

On July 22, 1949, after the filing of the present suit and on application for appointment of a receiver for Utilities and for injunctive relief against Murchison, Sr., Murchison, Sr., and Wofford Cain jointly agreed to personally pay any judgment against Utilities, rendered in favor of plaintiff Hill, either on the alleged oral commission contract or on the quantum meruit count; and further that the judgment itself should be against them jointly with Utilities. An order was entered therein which approved such agreement and recited that final judgment “shall likewise provide that (defendants C. W. Murchison and Wofford Cain having jointly and severally guaranteed the payment thereof) plaintiff shall likewise have judgment against said individual defendants and guarantors of the judgment against said corporation.”

The application for receiver and injunc-tive relief based on the agreement and provision for personal judgment against Murchison, Sr., and Wofford Cain was then overruled.

Thereafter, but prior to the trial, defendants by motion sought to secure separate trials, (1) on the right of plaintiff to recover compensation upon the alleged oral contract (or on his quantum meruit count) against Utilities, Murchison, Sr., and Cain; and (2) if he prevailed on 'his first count, then on his right to recover also against the other parties, 'based on the alleged stripping operations of Utilities.

The trial court overruled such motion and on September 19, 1949 the cause went to trial on the merits, and was concluded September 29, 1949. The jury’s verdict was favorable to appellee Hill, and the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff for $50,647.26 (being $51,347.26, less $700 advanced by defendant Utilities to plaintiff during the time of the negotiations result *434 ing in the signing of the contract), plus interest and costs.

Defendants (appellants) brief twelve points of error.

Points 1 and 2 complain (1) of the court’s overruling of their motion to sever, and its refusal to try the issues of commission or quantum meruit recovery separately from the issues on the alleged fraudulent shifting of the assets of Utilities by the individual defendants, and • (2) the prejudicial manner in which the evidence on the second count was presented by plaintiff Hill which resulted in defendants being denied a fair trial. Appellee counters that the trial court did not abuse his discretion in entering the order complained of and that the evidence being interlocking on the two counts, they were properly joined and tried together.

Under Rule 174, Vernon’s Rules of Civil Procedure, the trial court has a wide discretion in the matter of joinder and severance of separate counts or causes of action. Montgomery v. Willbanks, Tex.Civ.App., 202 S.W.2d 851. The controlling reasons for a severance are (1) the doing of justice, (2) the avoiding of prejudice, (3) the furtherance of convenience. Society of European Stage Authors and Composers v. WCAU Broadcasting Co., D. C., 35 F.Supp. 460; United States v. 340 Acres, etc., D. C., 64 F.Supp. 117. In the application of the rule, each case stands on the peculiar facts involved therein. Examining the record here, we are of the opinion that the two counts do not involve substantially the same evidence, and further that the trial of the two counts together could, and did, prejudice defendants to such an extent that the overruling of the motion for separate trials denied them a fair and impartial consideration by the jury on the first count.

The evidence on the first count was not complicated, in that it involved primarily only the testimony of two parties, — appellee Hill and appellant Murchison, Sr., together with material circumstances connected with the reasons for the agreement, such as their prior dealings together, their former business connections, etc. A finding by the jury, either way, could have made a trial on the second count unnecessary, in that if the jury found there was no agreement as claimed, final judgment could have been entered on the entire case in favor of all defendants. If the verdict had been that the agreement was made as alleged, judgment could have been entered against the defendants, Utilities, Murchison, Sr., and Cain, and a trial on the second count had only if such judgment was not paid.

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239 S.W.2d 431, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 2021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utilities-natural-gas-corp-v-hill-texapp-1951.