W. F. Taylor Co. v. Baines Grocery Co.

72 S.W. 260, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 385, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 71
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 72 S.W. 260 (W. F. Taylor Co. v. Baines Grocery 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
W. F. Taylor Co. v. Baines Grocery Co., 72 S.W. 260, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 385, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 71 (Tex. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Justice.

This was an action of debt brought by the W. F. Taylor Company, Limited, against the Baines Grocery Company. The plaintiff is a corporation chartered by the State of Louisiana and the defendant is a corporation chartered" under the general law of the State of Texas. The petition sets out the cause of action as upon a balance on open account for $3345.82 for cash and goods, wares and merchandise furnished the defendant, and two promissory notes dated August 14, 1901, due respectively November 1 and November 20, 1901, for $512 each. After some dilatory pleas .and the general denial the defendant pleaded as a special defense to the plaintiff’s cause of action that the indebtedness sued upon had been discharged by a settlement between the plaintiff and defendant, in support of which the facts were averred substantially as follows: That in October, 1901, the Baines Grocery Company became insolvent, and so notified its creditors; and that a meeting of the creditors was held in Nacogdoches on November 11, 1901, for the purpose of settling and adjusting their claims with the .defendant. A list of creditors with the amounts due each was attached to the petition, and it was shown that the plaintiff was the largest creditor, with a claim amounting to $2241.40; the claims of all the cred- *386 itors amounting to about $10,000. It was further alleged that the defendant then had on hand a stock of goods of the estimated value of $2800, which had been examined by the plaintiff, and that it had also about $2000 in notes and accounts; that the plaintiff, with full notice and a better knowledge of the condition of said assets of the defendant than any other creditor, agreed with C. S. Baines and D. C. Baines, who were stockholders of the Baines Grocery Company, that if the creditors could be settled with at 35 cents on the dollar it would furnish the money to pay that amount, provided the stock of merchandise and the notes and accounts aforesaid, or the proceeds thereof, should be delivered to plaintiff, and the said D. C. Baines and C. S. Baines would execute to it their notes for whatever balance might be due upon a final settlement of the matter; that in pursuance of such agreement the plaintiff furnished the money necessary to pay off said claims at the rate of 35 cents on the dollar, and-said claims were paid and extinguished, and the stock of merchandise was sold for cash and the proceeds were delivered to the plaintiff; and said notes and accounts were placed in the hands of a collecting agency with instructions to pay over the proceeds to the plaintiff, and that all amounts collected had been paid to it; and that the said D. C. Baines and C. S. Baines had always been and were still willing to execute their notes for the balance of plaintiff’s claim whenever the same could be ascertained. The cause was submitted to the court without a jury and the trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendant.

The defendant, the Baines Grocery Company, was a private corporation organized for mercantile purposes and did business in the town of Garrison, Nacogdoches County. C. S. Baines and D. C. Baines were stockholders in said corporation and the business thereof was conducted by D. C. Baines. In October, 1901, the company became insolvent. Its indebtedness amounted to about $10,000, and the plaintiff was its largest creditor, to wholn it owed $2241.55. It had a stock of merchandise on hand worth about $2800, and there were notes and accounts due the company by customers amounting to $1800 or $1900. A meeting of the creditors of the defendant was held at its instance on November 11, 1901, at which it was agreed that the creditors would accept in payment of their claims 35 cents on the dollar. Prior to this meeting the plaintiff, acting by its agent, Z. B. Lawhon, agreed with the defendant, which was represented by C. S. Baines and D. C. Baines, who were conducting the business of defendant, to furnish the money for the payment of the claims in accordance with the terms of the settlement. As found ■ by the trial judge the agreement was as follows:

“Plaintiff was to furnish cash enqugh to pay off all the creditors of defendant at 33 1-3 cents on the dollar. That defendant was to turn over the stock of merchandise on hand, and all notes, accounts and claims due to defendant, or the proceeds of the same, to plaintiff, the stock to be sold and the claims to be collected by O. S. and D. C. Baines, and as the goods were sold and claims collected the proceeds thereof to *387 be delivered to plaintiff, provided they could get the other creditors of defendant to accept the 33 1-3 cents on the dollar for their claim. After the stock of goods had been sold and the claims collected and all turned over to plaintiff, then C. S. and D. C. Baines were to give to plaintiff their individual joint note for whatever amount the assets of defendant lacked of paying plaintiff 100 cents on the dollar of its indebtedness to plaintiff, including' the sum- to be advanced by plaintiff to pay other creditors the 33 1-3 per cent of their claims, as well as the $2241.55 then owing by defendant to plaintiff.”

The agreement to settle was proved by oral testimony, but it was shown to have been reduced to writing and signed by all of the creditors including the plaintiff, except some of them whose claims aggregated less than $500. The arrangement between Lawhon, representing the plaintiff, and the Baines Grocery Company was concealed from the other creditors, except A. Wettermark & Co., who accepted, however, and at the request of Lawhon and C. S. Baines and D. C. Baines, received the money and disbursed it to the creditors. The plaintiff furnished and paid A. Wettermark & Son the sum of $2715.65, the amount necessary to pay off all the debts of defendant at the rate of 35 cents on the dollar, except the debt of plaintiff, and A. Wettermark & Son paid the claims as they were presented. The stock of goods was sold and some of the notes and accounts due the defendant were collected, and the proceeds, amounting to $1593.05, were remitted to the plaintiff and accepted by it. The balance of the notes and accounts were turned over to a collecting agency at Garrison, with instructions to collect the same and remit the proceeds to the plaintiff, and there was in the hands of such agency when the cause was tried the sum of about $300 in money and about $1400 in solvent claims. The Baines Grocery Company performed their part of the agreement, and C. S. Baines and D. C. Baines both testified at the trial as to their willingness to execute their note for the balance due when it could be ascertained.

The agreement entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant for the advancement of the money to pay the amount agreed on in compromise of the claims of the creditors of the defendant should be enforced. By its terms the plaintiff undertook to advance for the use of the defendant the sum of $2715.65, and to surrender its claims against the defendant in consideration that the defendant would deliver to it the stock of goods belonging to the defendant, and the notes and accounts due the defendant by its customers to be sold and collected and the proceeds paid to the plaintiff and credited to defendant’s account, including the money advanced, and that C. S. Baines and D. C. Baines should execute to plaintiff their note for the balance of the entire indebtedness, for which the plaintiff accepted the promise of the said C. S. Baines and D. C. Baines.

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Bluebook (online)
72 S.W. 260, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 385, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-f-taylor-co-v-baines-grocery-co-texapp-1903.