Williams v. Kincannon

265 S.W. 925
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1924
DocketNo. 82.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 265 S.W. 925 (Williams v. Kincannon) 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
Williams v. Kincannon, 265 S.W. 925 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, O. J.

The date of the institution of this suit is not shown affirmatively, but the answer of a part of the defendants recites that it was filed on the 8th day of July, 1919. It appears'from the record that it was filed by S. O. Williams, now deceased, to recover against appellees .G. G. Kincannon, J. L. Litterell, and J. W. Adams on five promissory notes executed and delivered to him by them. The parties will be designated as in the trial court.

The original plaintiff died, and on March 5, 1923, appellant, Luke Williams, executor of his will, filed herein an amended petition, alleging his appointment and qualification as such executor, and seeking recovery on said five notes against the makers thereof and against Edward Rotan, who was made a party defendant in said suit for the first time by said amended petition. The notes declared on were all dated July 15, 1913, and became due one, two, three, four, and five years after date, respectively. Some minor credits on the interest and principal of said notes were admitted in said amended petition, and the same further admitted that the defendants were liable to plaintiff for only three-fourths of the amo.unt of said notes. No cause of action was asserted against said defendants except on said notes.

Plaintiff sought recovery against defendant Rotan on the ground (1) that he, the said Rotan, had in writing assumed the payment of the notes sued on; (2) that at the time of the execution and delivery of said notes a partnership existed between the .deceased S. O. Williams and the defendants herein, and that said notes were executed in such partnership business, and that said Rotan was liable thereon as a member of such partnership, and that his failure to _ actually sign said notes was an oversight"; (3) that, if said Rotan was not liable on said notes, he was liable for the loss sustained by the deceased in the amount of said notes.

The defendants other than Rotan pleaded a partnership between the deceased and all the defendants, and that such partnership was engaged in operating a certain oil mill of which the deceased was manager; that it was customary for oil mills to finance gin-ners in the purchase of seed from their customers, under an agreement that the seed so purchased should be sold to the mill making such advances; that the defendants signing said notes stated that they were unable to make advancements for such purpose; that the deceased stated that he had the money to make such advancements, and would do so if said defendants would execute and deliver to him the notes sued on to indemnify him against loss, and in this connection stated that the only chance for loss would be in the event of fire or storm or some such catastrophe; that they executed and delivered said notes for the purpose of so protecting the deceased from loss in the event the seed purchased with the money advanced by deceased to the owners of gins was destroyed by fire, storm, or other such casualty; and that no such casualty had occurred, and that no loss was suffered by the deceased. They also pleaded under oath non est factum, and that said notes were given without consideration.

The defendant Rotan answered separately, and pleaded misjoinder of parties and causes of action; he denied all plaintiff’s allegations, and pleaded the statute of limitation of four years, and also pleaded under oath non est factum as to said notes and as to the said alleged written assumption of the same by him and want of eonsidei’ation for such written assumption, if such writing was found to exist. He nowhere in his pleadings alleged or admitted the existence of such partnership.

The case came on for trial before the court. Plaintiff proved that the signatures of defendants Kincannon, Litterell, and Adams to the notes sued on were genuine. He then introduced the notes in evidence. The notes so introduced in evidence did not show the name of said Rotan as maker or indorser or as a party thereto in any way. No writing assuming the payment of said notes by said Rotan or by any one else purporting to act for him was introduced in evidence. Plaintiff introduced in evidence a part of the separate answer of the defendants Kincan-non, Litterell, and Adams as follows:

“For further answer herein, if need he, these defendants show to the court that they, together with the plaintiff, S. 0. Williams, and Edward Rotan, composed a partnership which did business at Bruceville, Tex., under the name of Independent Oil Company.”

No other evidence was introduced by plaintiff, and he then rested his case. At this juncture the defendant Rotan moved the court to render judgment in his favor, on the ground that there was no evidence in the case before the court tending to show that he was in any manner liable on the cause or causes of action sued on by plaintiff. The court sustained said motion and entered judgment in favor of said Rotan that the plaintiff take nothing against him. There was neither objection nor exception to such action of the court at the time, nor is the same assigned as error in this appeal.

The other defendants afterwards placed said Rotan on the stand as a witness in their behalf, and his testimony) over the objection of the plaintiff, was heard and considered by *927 the court. At the conclusion of the testimony offered by them said defendants rested’, and, plaintiff offering nothing in rebuttal, the evidence was closed. The court thereupon rendered judgment for said defendants Kin-cannon, Litterell, and Adams that plaintiff take nothing against them. Plaintiff has appealed from that judgment.

While the plaintiff by an appropriate assignment of error complains of the judgment against him in favor of the defendants Kincannon, Litterell, and Adams, and assails the same on the ground that such judgment is without support in the evidence and contrary thereto, the judgment against plaintiff in favor of defendant Rotan is in no way attacked. Plaintiff sought to recover on the notes declared upon. Rotan was not a party thereto. No recovery could be had against him on said notes, even if they had been given in furtherance of the business of a partnership of which he was a member. Sanger v. Warren, 91 Tex. 472, 481, 484, 44 S. W. 477, 66 Am. St. Rep. 913.

There was no attempt to prove that Rotan had assumed the’ payment of said notes in writing or otherwise. The allegations of partnership contained in the separate answer of his codefendants were not evidence of such partnership against him. There was no proof that deceased ever sustained any loss on account of the alleged partnership business, or that said notes were given in satisfaction of such loss' or as indemnity in contemplation of the possibility of such loss subsequent to their execution and delivery. It appears therefore that the defendant Rotan was entitled on the facts in evidence, when plaintiff rested his case, to a judgment in his favor denying a recovery against him. There being no assignment attacking such judgment as being without support in the evidence, and no assignment complaining of the manner in which same was rendered or complaining of the same on any other account, it becomes our duty to affirm such judgment on appeal, and it is sq ordered.

The only assignment submitted by plaintiff other than the one above referred to complains of the admission of the following portion of the evidence of said Rotan as a witness for the other defendants, to wit:

“The notes sued on were executed with the understanding with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W. 925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-kincannon-texapp-1924.