Wilson v. Remmel Cattle Co., Inc.

542 S.W.2d 938, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3253
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 1976
Docket8689
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 542 S.W.2d 938 (Wilson v. Remmel Cattle Co., Inc.) 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
Wilson v. Remmel Cattle Co., Inc., 542 S.W.2d 938, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3253 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, Justice.

Judgment non obstante veredicto was improperly rendered after a jury trial because a viable disputed fact issue was not submitted to the jury and is yet unresolved. Reversed and remanded with instructions.

Appellants Gary Wilson and Ben Wilson bought 118 head of cattle with the proceeds of their $29,393.91 bank note. On 8 October 1973, the cattle were delivered to and placed in a separate pen on the premises of appellee Remmel Cattle Co., Inc., a commercial feedlot engaged in feeding and marketing cattle, pursuant to an agreement between the Wilsons and appellee Charles Kent Remmel, an officer and manager of the feedlot. The agreement was that the Wilsons would feed and doctor their cattle, furnishing their own grain and medicine, until the cattle were placed on wheat pasture and, for the use of the pen, the Wilsons would perform custom cattle work for the feedlot.

After the Wilsons furnished some feed and doctored their cattle and worked one pen of cattle for the feedlot, the feedlot furnished some feed to the cattle on the 10th and 11th of October, 1973, and, beginning 14 October 1973, the feedlot supplied a significant amount of feed to and provided general care of the cattle. At or following the end of the year, a feedlot statement approximating $6,000 for the care of the cattle was presented to the Wilsons, who refused to pay the account. They contended that they had neither asked Charles Kent Remmel nor agreed with him to care for the cattle, and that on or about 14 October 1973 they entered into an oral agreement with him whereby he had purchased the cattle for the balance due on the Wilsons’ bank note. Remmel’s payment was deferred, according to Gary Wilson, until Remmel could sell some fat cattle he had in the feedlot because he was “loaned up at the bank.” Remmel denied that he had agreed to purchase the cattle and stated that the feedlot began caring for the cattle at the request of the Wilsons, who said they could not handle the cattle along with their regular jobs. In January of 1974, when cattle prices were declining, the Wilsons moved the cattle, the number of which had been decreased by death loss to 109, from the feedlot and, after pasturing them on wheat and grass, sold them in May of 1974. Gary Wilson said that when Charles Kent Remmel presented the statement and suggested they do something with the cattle, the cattle were removed to wheat pasture because “our name was still on the note at the bank. So we decided we had better get somewhere to put those cattle.”

Thereafter in August of 1974, Remmel Cattle Co., Inc., and Charles Kent Remmel, collectively designated as the Remmels, instituted this suit to recover $7,455.81 from the Wilsons for the care of the cattle. The Wilsons counterclaimed, alleging the oral contract pursuant to which the Remmels took the cattle as their own, and sought from the Remmels the difference between the oral contract price and the selling price of the cattle, the expenses incurred after the sale and exemplary damages. The Remmels interposed the defense of the statute of frauds to the Wilsons’ cross-action and, alternatively, pleaded a mutual rescission of the oral contract.

After hearing contradictory versions of the transactions from Charles Kent Remmel and the Wilsons, the jury failed to find that the Wilsons agreed with Remmel Cattle Co., Inc., to furnish feed and maintenance for the cattle, but found that on or about 14 October 1973, the Remmels did agree to purchase the cattle for $29,393.91 and breached the agreement which was a proximate cause of the Wilsons’ damages in the sum of $9,020.01. The Wilsons’ motion for judgment on the verdict was denied and the Remmels’ motion for judgment non obstan-te veredicto was granted, the court finding “the contract . . .' violative of the statute of frauds,” one of the grounds of the motion for judgment non obstante vere-dicto.

*941 The Wilsons have appealed. They utilize the first two of their four points of error to attack the judgment non obstante veredicto and the remaining two points to assert their entitlement to judgment on the verdict. Replying, the Remmels have included a cross-point assertion that, even assuming an enforceable oral contract, the judgment non obstante veredicto is nevertheless correct because the oral agreement was mutually rescinded when the Wilsons reacquired the cattle from the Remmels. None of the jury’s answers has been challenged.

In V.T.C.A., Bus. & C. § 2.201, 1 which is denominated a statute of frauds, it is provided that:

(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section a contract for the sale of goods for the price of $500 or more is not enforceable by way of action or defense unless there is some writing sufficient to indicate that a contract for sale has been made between the parties and signed by the party against whom enforcement is sought or by his authorized agent or broker. .
******
(c) A contract which does not satisfy the requirements of Subsection (a) but which is valid in other respects is enforceable
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(3) with respect to goods which have been received and accepted.

Thus, for the Wilsons to enforce their pleaded oral contract of sale in .face of the pleaded defense of the statute of frauds, they were required to establish two essential elements: (1) the oral agreement, and that (2) pursuant to it, the Remmels received and accepted the cattle. The first element of their cause of action was submitted to and found in their favor by the jury, but the second essential element was omitted from the submission without objection.

Under Rule 277, 2 the trial court is to submit to the jury any pleaded group of facts supported by the evidence which controls the disposition of the case. The corollary is that the court is not to submit a pleaded issue which is conclusively established under the evidence or for which there is no evidence to support a finding thereon. Unless established as a matter of law, the issue of receipt 3 and acceptance 4 is a factual issue. See, e. g., Wade v. Jones, 526 S.W.2d 160, 161-62 (Tex.Civ.App.-Dallas 1975, no writ). In our view and contrary to the respective positions of the Wilsons and the Remmels, neither receipt and acceptance nor non-receipt and non-acceptance was established by the evidence as a matter of law. The fact that the cattle were located in the feedlot at. the time of the pleaded oral contract does not, under the description of the agreement placing them there, either establish physical possession in the Rem-mels so as to foreclose their taking physical possession under a later contract of sale or ripen into their receipt and acceptance of the cattle upon the mere showing of an oral contract. No one other than the interested parties testified to the conversations and *942 actions concerning the presence or absence of an oral sale agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
542 S.W.2d 938, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-remmel-cattle-co-inc-texapp-1976.