(after stating the case as above).
The question arising is the simple one of whether or not in the circumstances the appellant the Citizens’ National Bank of Abilene can be deprived of its privilege of being sued in the county of its domicile. ,Thе statute expressly declares, and makes it the fundamental right of the defendant, that the venue of the action shall be at the residence of the party sued, unless there is some statutory provision to thе contrary. An exception, enumerated in the statute, fixes the venue of an action at the residence of either defendant where two or more defendants to the action shall reside in differеnt counties. Rev. St. 1925, art. 1995, exception 4, and also exception 29a as added by Acts 40th Leg. (1927), 1st Called Sess., c. 72, § 2 (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 1995, subd. 29a). The limitations put upon the above exceptions are that the party who is a nonresident of the county in which the action is brought must be a proper or a necessary party to the plaintiff’s action. Rush v. Bishop,
Accordingly, under the definition and test above stated, it is believed the two code-fendants in the present case could not be classed and regarded as joint tort-feasors, in the special circumstances shown. The plaintiff’s loss was not caused nor did it result through any combined negligence of'the two banks. The loss was occasioned solely through default of the Abilene bank in acts entirely separate and independent and wholly without any concert of action on the part of the other defendant. If the Citizens’ National Bank of Abilene received, as is shown by the judgment it did, the trust certificates and time drafts from the forwarding bank at Fоrt Worth, then the Abilene bank was guilty of negligence, directly and solely causing the plaintiff’s loss, by not having Charles Danford execute and deliver the trust certifi
The next question arising is that of whether or not exception 23, also enumerated in the statute, is applicable, which fixes the venue of an action agаinst a private corporation in the county in which the cause of action or a part thereof arose. If the Citizens’ National Bank of Abilene did not, in point of fact, receive from the forwarding bank at Fort Worth the trust certificates and time drafts, then no cause of action against it arises at all in favor of the plaintiff. The relation of principal and agent did not, as held, exist between the two banks. Tillman County Bank v. Behringer, supra. If the Citizens’ National Bank of Abilene did receive the particular instruments mentioned, then the legal effect of the evidence is that of a completed undertaking betwеen it and the plaintiff. The plaintiff sent through the forwarding bank the particular instruments for execution in Abilene to be accomplished there by the bank at Abilene and the bank at Abilene accepted the proposition. The agreement then was made in Abilene, which was the place of acceptance. Early-Foster Co. v. A. P. Moore’s Sons (Tex. Civ. App.)
The facts here are dissimilar to the facts in the case of Mercantile Bank & Trust Co. v. Schuhart, suprа. In that case the Dallas bank held the draft and made no effort at collection, beyond a reasonable time without giving notice of the cause of delay. The failure on the part of the bank tо give timely notice of the inaction was the producing cause of the plaintiff’s loss, for with prompt notice of the bank’s inaction the plaintiff would have had time to divert the shipment and have prevented it from coming into possession of the purchaser who was insolvent. The plaintiff could not have prevented the loss until it had such notice from the bank. The car of grain was so shipped that the purсhaser was able to get possession of the same without payment of the draft. The bank’s negligence therefore lay in failing to timely give notice of its refusal to undertake to present the draft for collection. It did not have to act as the plaintiff’s agent, but the duty nevertheless rested upon it to timely notify the plaintiff of its unwillingness or refusal to do so. The “locus of the performance of this obligation” (to timely notify of the refusal), as held,
It is concluded that the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to order the transfer of the cause, as pertains to the Citizens’ National Bank of Abilene to Taylor county for trial.
The judgment in favor of the First National Bank of Fort Worth will remain undisturbed, there being no appeal therefrom nor complaint respecting same.
