This suit was instituted by ap-pellee, a corporation, against appellants, alleged to be the directors of Martin Company, a corporation of Comanche, Tex. Plaintiff alleged that during the years 1913 and 1914 it was a wholesale dealer in the milling and grain business in Wichita Falls, Tex., and the Martin Company was a general mercantile corporation, and a customer of the plaintiff; that during the said time the defendants, as directors of said Martin Company, held said corporation out to the plaintiff and to the public generally, and to R. G. Dun & Co. and Bradstreet & Co., the agents of the plaintiff, as of undoubted financial ability and deserving credit, which was done for the purpose of deceiving the plaintiff and other merchants from whom the Martin Company was purchasing or expecting to purchase merchandise and obtain credit; that during said years said defendants, on behalf of Martin Company, caused and permitted to be furnished written statements of its financial condition which purported to show its true financial condition to Bradstreet & Co. and R. G. Dun & Co. for publication in their printed reports, believing that the plaintiff would receive, read, and rely upon said statements; that one of said statements was furnished on June 18, 1913, and the other on May 14, 1914; that, relying upon said statements and induced thereby, the plaintiff sold and delivered to the Martin Company merchandise amounting to $4,787.61, exclusive of interest. It was alleged that said financial statements and representations so furnished were false and untrue, and that during said time said corporation was insolvent; by reason of said premises, the plaintiff was misled to its damage in the sum of $3,027.55. Defendants answered by way of general demurrer, special exceptions, general denial, and specific defensive answers. The nature of the special exceptions urged and the special denials pleaded will be noticed further in the course of this opinion. From a judgment based on a jury verdict in favor of plaintiff against defendants W. F. Durham, W. R. Slider, N. E. Ralmer, and W. G. Dingus in the amount sued for, defendants have appealed.
The record in this case is rather voluminous, and appellants present in their brief some 66 assignments of error; there being 10 separate assignments under the caption “Fifty-Third Assignment of Error.” It would be an unnecessary labor, and an extension of the opinion beyond its proper limits, to attempt to discuss each separate assignment, but we have examined every assignment presented, and have found that in several instances many of them present but a single question. Consequently, in such cases such assignments will be grouped in our discussion.
Appellee objects to the consideration' of practically every assignment presented, urging that such assignments in their form and manner of briefing are not in compliance with the rules provided by our Supreme Court for our guidance, and we find that in many instances the criticisms made and objections urged by appellee to the assignments are well founded, but we have concluded, except as may hereinafter be noted, to give said assignments consideration. But we think appellant’s first assignment, directed to the action of the trial court in overruling defendant’s general demurrer, is too general to warrant consideration. Neither in the assignment nor in the proposition thereunder is *140 any reason given wily the court erred in its action.
“To the best of my knowledge and belief the statement we received from R. G. Dun & Co. was an exact copy of this. * * * Mr. Bul-lington, attorney for plaintiff, says that he lost this copy; that is the original cony that R. G. Dun & Co. sent to the plaintiffs. * * * I received this statement from R. G. Dun & Co. about the 1st of June, 1914, and read it carefully and believed it was correct and relied on it as being correct, and continued soliciting the business from the Martin Company based on that representation or statement rendered.”
Priddy further testified:
“I believe this to be an exact copy of the statement we received from Bradstreet & Co. that I afterwards turned over to our attorney.”
Mrs. Howard testified:
“On application of the Wichita Mill & Elevator Company we sent a copy of the report received by us from the Martin Company to said Wichita Mill & Elevator Company.”
Patterson testified:
“In addition to the said publication [made by Bradstreet] there was forwarded to the Wichita Mill & Elevator Company at Wichita Falls, Tex., a copy of the statement given the Bradstreet & Co. by the said Martin Company in June, 1913, in which was the said statement of the said Martin Company purporting to give its said financial condition.”
It was not essential to show that plaintiff relied exclusively on the information furnished by the Martin Company in order to hold the defendants liable. If the report made by the Martin Company was false and misleading, and the plaintiff relied thereon, even in part, and would not have extended' the credit it did except for such reliance, defendants would be liable. In 12 R. O. B. § 112, it is said:
_ “It is not necessary that the misrepresentation should be the sole cause or inducement of the contract or transaction in question, con *141 tributing to the result, but it is enough that it may have constituted a material inducement. Belief may be had under this rule where reliance was in part on one’s own investigation.”
In Buchanan v. Burnett et al.,
We think the special charge requested by defendant, the refusal of which is urged as error in the sixteenth assignment, was on the weight of the evidence and should not have been given.
The seventeenth assignment is too vague and uncertain to warrant consideration.
In his main charge the court instructed the jury that before they could find against the defendants they must find and believe the financial statements of 1913 and 1914 were made or caused to be made by the defendants. It is true that, if the evidence were conflicting upon the question of the authority under which and the capacity in which Huddleston acted in making these statements, the defendants would probably be entitled to an affirmative charge, but we do not construe the evidence as presenting an issue of fact for the jury as to the authority of Huddleston in this respect.
By another -group of assignments, appellants complain of the failure of the court to give certain tendered special charges to the effect that if plaintiff had other sources of information, as to ¡the financial condition of the Martin Company during these two years, and if they should find it was the duty of the traveling salesman of plaintiff, and others, to inquire into the financial condition of its customers and report thereon, and that through these other sources of information,’ knowledge was brought to the plaintiff, or its agents, as to the failing or insolvent condition of the Martin Company, *142 the jury should find for the defendants. We do not believe, for the reasons heretofore given, that such charges were proper. The mere fact that one makes a personal investigation, or consults with others, or has other sources of information open to him, does not necessarily show that he relied on such personal investigation, or the information gained therefrom, or through the other sources. See 12 R, C. L. § 112, and authorities therein cited. The material question is, Did the party claiming fraud rely on false statements or misrepresentations made .by the other? In several other instances, complaint is made of the admission in evidence of the statem¡en]ts made by the mercantile agencies to plaintiff. It is in evidence that these reports contained either the original or exact copies of the financial statements furnished by the Martin Company. No request was made by appellants to limit the force and effect of theso mercantile reports to the information contained in the financial statements themselves furnished by defendants. In the absence of such objection or request the assignments must be overruled.
Under the forty-fifth assignment, complaint is.made of the admission in evidence of the purported trial balance from the books of the Martin Company as of date November 7, 1914, purporting to disclose the financial condition of the Martin Company. It is urged that said statement W immaterial and irrelevant, etc., because it was not shown that either of the defendants were responsible therefor. By reference to appellants’ bill of exception No. 45, and the court’s modification thereof, it is shown that the court excluded said statement and the sam,e was not introduced as evidence.
Several assignments are directed to the testimony of the plaintiff’s witness S. J. Hacks. ■ We think the witness made a prima facie showing as to his qualification 'to testify as to the market value of the notes and accounts owned by the Martin Company on January 1, 1913, and as to the value of the real estate holdings, and the testimony evoked from said witness on cross-examination affected rather the weight of such evidence than its admissibility. We are further of the opinion that, while the incidental statement made by said witness that some of the notes and accounts of the Martin Company were barred by the statutes of limitation was probably subject to the objection that the notes were in writing and would be the best evidence as to their dates, etc., yet in view of the entire testimony of Hicks, and in view of the statements contained in the courts’ qualification of this bill, we are of the opinion that error, if any, was harmless.
Without attempting to enlarge further this opinion, it is sufficient to say that after a careful examination of appellants’ lengthy brief, we find no reversible error presented, and conclude that judgment should be affirmed ; and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.
©=»For other oases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
(gmoFor other oases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
