Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau v. Armstrong

281 S.W. 244
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 25, 1925
DocketNo. 8683.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 281 S.W. 244 (Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau v. Armstrong) 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
Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau v. Armstrong, 281 S.W. 244 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinions

DANE, J.

On the 29th day of May, 1917, plaintiff, George W. Armstrong, filed his original petition in the district court, of Harris county, Tex., seeking to recover damages against W. E. Edmundson, Liverpool Hay & Grain Company, Wilbur Webb, Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company, and the Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau. The suit was filed in the name of George W. Armstrong, suing for himself individually and as the agent and trustee of and for the use and benefit of E. D. Steger, George A. Carden and C. E. Schaff, composing the partnership of Steger & Co. •

Plaintiff alleged that Steger & Co. was a partnership, composed of E. D. Steger, George A. Carden, C. E. Schaff, and George W. Armstrong, doing business under said firm name, and that on or about the-day of May, 1916, said firm and copartnership was, by mutual agreement, dissolved and terminated, and the- plaintiff, George W. Armstrong, was agreed upon and appointed by all of the members of said copartnership as the liquidating agent for said firm and copartnership, and given full power and authority to collect and receive all assets, including claims and chos-es of action, owned and held by said copart-nership; and said plaintiff bringS this suit for and on behalf of said copartnership and its individual members, as trustee, for the use and benefit thereof, and as liquidating agent under said agreement and authority.

The plaintiff further alleged that on or about the 18th day of May, 1925, by written contract of that date, the firm of Steger & Co. contracted with the defendants Edmund-son and Liverpool Hay & Grain Company to sell and deliver to Steger & Co. at Galveston, Tex., 5,000 tons of hay then owned by defendant Wilbur Webb, for which Steger & Co. agreed to pay at the rate of $9.50 per ton f. o. b. Galveston; that in and by such contract it was agreed that payment for the hay should be made in cash on Western Weighing Association railroad weights immediately after the acceptance of the hay, as to quality, by the inspector of the French government; that it was also provided that the sellers should compress the hay for Steger & Co. and should receive for such compressing the sum of $3 per ton; that by said contract it was specially provided that the basis of settlement as to weight should be those furnished by the Western Weighing Association, upon which the railroad companies had collected their freight charges; that, acting under said contract, Steger & Co. purchased the 5,000 tons Webb hay mentioned in the contract and also purchased additional tons of Webb hay, aggregating in all about 10,000 tons, *246 which it was agreed between Steger & Co. and said sellers should be purchased and paid paid for under the tferms and ■ provisions of the contract; that all of the hay was compressed by the sellers under the terms of the contract; that subsequent to the date of said written contract above referred to, it was mutually agreed by and between said Steger & Co. and said Edmundson, and said Liverpool Hay & Grain Company, and said Wilbur Webb, that said Steger & Co. should pay- to the railroad company, at Galveston, the freight upon all shipments of said Webb hay made to and received by said Steger & Co., and that said Steger. & Co., after deducting the amount of freight charges so paid, should pay direct to said Webb the balance of the purchase price as provided in said contract, due upon all of said Webb hay, and said Webb was constituted and acted as the agent of said Edmundson and Liverpool Hay Grain Company in delivering and collecting for said hay; 'that among the number of cars of hay shipped and delivered to Steger & Co. by said Edmundson and Liverpool Hay & Grain Company, acting through and by Wilbur Webb, and received by said Steger & Co., under said contract, were 436 carloads, the identity and exact weights of which are unknown to plaintiffs, but are known to defendants, all of which were transported into the city of Galveston by the defendant Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Company, and which were shown by the railroad waybills, and by the certificates of weight issued by the Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau, and by the expense bills issued and presented by said defendant railroad, to contain 12,020,000 pounds of hay, and said Steger & Co. paid to said defendant railroad the freight upon said shipments, based upon said weights, and also paid to said Wilbur Webb the sum of $9.50 per ton for. said hay, less the freight on said hay which had theretofore been paid to the said railway company, said freight and said payments to Wilbur Webb having been made under and by virtue of the terms of the written contract first above mentioned, and the subsequent agreement .between said parties heretofore alleged; that Wilbur Webb, with intent to defraud said Ste-ger & Co., and acting in fraudulent collusion - with other persons to plaintiff, unknown, greatly inflated, or caused to -Be inflated, the weights of said carload shipments ..of hay ■ above referred to, and fraudulently, willfully, and maliciously waybilled said hay, or caused the same to be waybilled at weights greatly in excess of the actual weight. of the hay contained in said shipments; that the actual weight of the hay contained in said 430 carloads of hay was only 9,850,000 pounds; that by reason of the fraudulent inflation of said' weights of said 436 -carloads of hay by said Webb and those acting in collusion with him, under and by said procurement, the actual weight of said hay was inflated and raised to the extent of 2,170,000 pounds over and above the actual weight of said 436 carloads of hay shipped to and -received by said Steger & Co. under said contract and agreement.

It was then alleged, substantially, that the Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau is simply an organization formed and maintained by the various railroads of the United States for the purpose of weighing shipments made or passing over the lines of railroads who are parties to the agreement, for the use, benefit, and convenience of said railroads and each of them; that it has no capital sltoek, and does not earn nor was it intended to earn any profits; that the persons who do the weighing, which is ostensibly done by said bureau, and who keep the records of said bureau, are in fact employés of the railroads or some one of them who are parties to such agreement, and that their salaries are paid by such railroad of which such persons are em-ployés; that whatever amount is paid by the respective railroads to said bureau, for weighing and other services in connection therewith, is used to defray the expenses of maintaining and operating said bureau, and any deficit - remaining unpaid of said expenses are assessed ratably against the railroads who are parties to such arrangements, and the agents and employés of said bureau thereby become and are the .agents and employés of the railroads, parties thereto; that all of said 436 carloads of hay above referred to were weighed upon their arrival in Galveston by said Western. Weighing & Inspection Bureau, and its ostensible and purported employés, or under its and their direction, supervision, and with their consent and co-operation, and the persons weighing such hay or charged with the duty of weighing the same, agents and em-ployés of the defendant Galveston, Harrisburg & 'San Antonio Railway Company, -inflated the.

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Related

Armour & Co. v. Tomlin
60 S.W.2d 204 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1933)
Armour & Co. v. Tomlin
42 S.W.2d 634 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1931)
Western Weighing & Inspection Bureau v. Armstrong
288 S.W. 119 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1926)

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281 S.W. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-weighing-inspection-bureau-v-armstrong-texapp-1925.