The appellee Du Pont De Nemours Powder Company, a foreign corporation, sued Mitchell-Pigg Construction Company, W. J. Sparks, J. W. Pigg, H. F. Mitchell, M. D. Plumlee, W. H. Vardeman, A. S. Chapman, J. W. Braselton, and T. R. Erwin, as makers, and Will R. Allen, as indorser, of a negotiable promissory note in the sum of $5,904.05, payable to said Will R. Allen.
Appellee powder company, in the pleading upon which it went to trial, alleged that it acquired the note sued upon from Will R. Allen, the payee, before maturity for value, and without notice of any of the defenses subsequently set up by the makers, etc. Ap-pellee Allen, the payee in the note, adopted the pleading of the powder company and admitted his liability as indorser on the note, but denied any liability until all remedies had been exhausted against his several codefend-ants, and, further, that he received and accepted said note for value paid, without knowledge of the defenses alleged by his co-defendants.
The appellant Erwin pleaded, in substance, that the note was given in payment of an account standing in the name of Allen against Mitchell-Pigg Construction Company for powder and other explosives, but which were in fact sold to said Mitchell-Pigg Construction Company by appellee powder ‘company, through said Allen as its agent, and which had been used in the construction of the roadbed of the Chicago, Weatherford & Brazos Valley Railway Company, and that said Allen had established against the roadbed of said railway the statutory materialman’s lien in order to'secure the payment of the account covered by said note, the property against which said lien was established being of the value of $50,000, and then in the possession of G. A. Holland, appointed receiver of the property of both railway company and said construction company, by the district court of Parker county, and néither of which companies had been made parties to the suit upon the note. Upon the foregoing allegations it was asserted and prayed that the case be abated until appellee had first exhausted its remedy under said materialman’s lien.
Erwin next pleaded that appellee powder company is a foreign corporation, without a permit from the state of Texas to transact its business here, and since the note was in payment of certain business transacted in Texas, appellee was not entitled to maintain the suit, etc.
Erwin then pleaded to the merits that he signed the note merely as surety for said construction company, and upon the express condition that J. W. Braselton would also sign same as a maker, which condition was known to said Allen and the powder company, through their agent and representative, A. B. Flanary, Esq., who also knew that said note was being taken for the use and benefit of said powder company, and that he did not know until after the acceptance and delivery of said note that said Braselton had limited his liability thereon by indorsing same only, and that he would not have signed same had he known that said Brasel-ton intended to so limit his liability, and because of which he was released from liability thereon. Erwin also alleged that the transfer of the note from Allen to the powder company was a sham, for the reason that, in selling said material to the construction company and in taking said note in his name covering such account, said Allen was acting for and on behalf of the powder company and as its agent.
Appellants Sparks, Pigg, Mitchell, Plumlee, Vardeman, and Chapman, as touching the issues raised in their brief, pleaded surety-ship against the construction company, and that appellee was in law compelled to exhaust its remedy under the materialman’s lien as pleaded by the appellant Erwin, etc., and in which latter plea the construction company joined.
Appellee Braselton pleaded in abatement of the suit as set out in the plea of appellant Erwin; also that he signed his name across the back of the note on the express condition that he should be liable only as an accommodation indorser, and at no time agreed to become a surety for the payment thereof, and that all other parties thereto knew that he agreed to be bound only as indorser. He prayed judgment against all parties accordingly, except the powder company and Allen, the payee, in the note.
Upon trial before jury the court peremptorily instructed the jury to, and they did, return a verdict for the powder company against all the makers and the indorsers for the amount of the principal of the note, interest, attorney’s fees and' protest fees, *1099 amounting to the gross sum of $7,086.71; for Allen, the indorser, against all the other defendants for a similar amount; for Brasel-ton against all the defendants, except Allen, the indorser, for a similar amount; for 'all the defendants, except Allen and Braselton, against the construction company for a similar amo'unt; and finding that all defendants should, to the extent of any payments they might make on the judgment, be subro-gated to any lien established against the property of the construction company by Allen. Upon the directed verdict the judgment was entered accordingly, and from which all the parties, except Allen, the indorser, and Braselton, have appealed.
The following facts, and the essential ones, in substance, are undisputed: ■ Will R. Allen, at the time and prior to the execution of the note sued on, was a merchant in the city of Dallas, engaged in the sale of powder and explosives, and was agent for the sale of the powder and explosives of appellee powder company, as well as agent for the sale of similar articles for another concern. All powder, etc., bought by him. from the powder company was bought outright, and all owned by him and the agency “in a general merchantable sense,” as he puts it, was that he bought and sold or carried in stock the powder company’s powder, etc. No sales were made by him on commission. When he received an order from a customer for powder he exercised his judgment as to which concern’s powder he would deliver. Under a contract with the powder company all powder bought by him from, it was required to be 'stored in magazines erected by what he understood to be a subsidiary realty corporation of the appellee powder company, and for the use of which Allen paid no rental. Prior to the execution of the note Allen sold certain powder and explosives to the construction company, used by it in constructing the roadbed of the Chicago, Weatherford & Brazos Valley Railway Company. The bill for the powder, etc., being several months overdue and Allen being unable to collect it, he placed same with his attorney, A. B. Planary, Esq., for collection and adjustment. Mr. Planary finally secured the note sued on and delivered same to Allen, signed by all the parties as makers, except Braselton, who signed the same across the back without indicating the capacity in which he signed. Allen failing to negotiate the note in Dallas, or where the makers were known, went to Wilmington, Del., where the said powder company is domiciled, and by indorsing same, got that concern to accept same as a credit on his account. The credit allowed on his account for the. note did not go specifically in payment of the debt of the construction company; that debt having been prior to that time paid by Allen. The note was signed by all parties at Weatherford, Tex., and there delivered to Planary, the attorney for Allen. All the makers had signed the note, except Erwin, when it was presented to Braselton in the forenoon of the day of its execution. When first presented to him he positively declined to sign it. After some discussion with those interested, he told them, he would consider it. further. Those in charge of the matter then went to Erwin seeking his signature on the note, whom, it seems, they had been negotiating with before, and he finally signed the note upon the express condition that Braselton would also sign and upon the agreement of the parties that he would do so. The note was again presented to Braselton, who examined it and said it was a good note, and that he would “indorse” it, which he did. There 'was much testimony, of course, developed in detail on the trial, but what we have outlined are the substantial facts, briefly told, upon which the rights and liabilities of the parties depend. It is proper to say, if that fact is important, that no representations were made by Planary to any of the parties that induced them to sign the note, or which would affect their liability. Nor did he in any respect represent the powder company, but was solely representing Will R. Allen. Another fact necessary to state in passing upon one of the issues presented by this appeal is that about three days prior to the execution of the note sued on Will R. Allen prepared and filed, in the office of the county clerk of Parker county, an affidavit under the statute claiming a lien on the property of the Chicago, Weather-ford & Brazos Valley Railway Company, for the cost of the powder, etc., furnished to the construction company, and which was used in the construction of the railroad company’s roadbed, etc. Also, it was shown that G. A. Holland had been appointed by the district court of Parker county, and qualified as receiver of both the construction company and the Chicago, Weatherford & Brazos Valley Railway Company, and was in possession of and administering the assets of both, at the time this suit was filed.
It is impracticable, and would extend this, opinion too much, to discuss the assignments of all the parties separately, and for that reason we will notice the issues without reference to the. assignments.
Aside from what we have said in stating the facts in this case, the evidence develops without dispute that appellee powder company is a foreign corporation, with headquarters at Wilmington, Del., without a' permit from the state of Texas to transact or solicit business or establish a general or special office within its boundaries. The greater part of the powder, etc., was shipped to the construction company direct from the powder company’s wills, although a small portion was shipped from Dallas. Allen bought his powder from the powder company under a contract existing between them, which by its terms assigned to Allen certain trade territory, fixed the price he was to pay for the powder, including terms and discount, provided for drayage allowances in certain cases, declared the contract should be forfeited if Allen sold to his customers for less than the prices fixed by the powder.company, provided that Allen should pay current prices for all supplies not mentioned in the contract, arranged for advance of prices in case of advance of freight rates or cost of packing, and provided for storage facilities to be furnished by the powder company. All the powder delivered to the construction company was bought by Allen under the terms of the foregoing contract, and was paid for by him before he received the note sued on in this case. The noté was sold to the powder company as stated in the beginning of this opinion. The powder company also sent its representatives through the territory allotted to Allen, soliciting business without reference to the contract, which seems to have been its prerogative. Allen *1102 wrote the construction company that one of these representatives, one Magill, would, at Allen’s request, call upon the construction company, and asked them to sign certain contracts for the purchase of some or all of the powder delivered previously by Allen to the construction company, and whicjh had been signed by appellee powder company before delivery. Magill secured the contracts. The contracts were signed by the powder company and the construction company, and recite that the powder company sells, and the construction company purchases, the explosives, etc., therein described, at the prices and upon the terms therein fixed, and that all supplies purchased thereunder shall be invoiced to the construction company through Will R. Allen, Dallas, Tex. The powder company did not present bill for, or demand payment of, the powder shipped under said contract from the construction company, but did collect same from Will R. Allen.
The foregoing are the facts surrounding the manner and method of the sale and delivery of the powder. The statute has been long since upheld and repeatedly sustained, and hence it becomes our single duty to determine whether the powder company was “transacting” its business in Texas, since it is not contended that it had either general or special office in the state, and since any participation in the sale by Magill, the admitted and accredited traveling agent of the powder company, will not constitute the same intrastate dealing, for the reason that the powder company, without securing a permit to do so, may send its agents into this state for the purpose of soliciting orders for merchandise to be shipped into this state from the state of its domicile. Miller v. Goodman,
A careful consideration of both shows, in our opinion, no intention to ship goods into Texas and store them and sell them from the magazines as the trade may require. On the contrary, said contracts seem to have been prepared solely for the purpose of holding Allen, as well as Allen’s customers, to certain fixed rules, terms, and prices demanded by the powder company, and which no doubt tended largely to the increase and profit of their business, and which it is fair to assume were conditions precedent to the purchase of their product by either Allen or the construction company. And in discussing whether Allen was the agent of the ap-pellee powder company, we do not mean to be understood as holding that the Sale by a resident agent of the merchandise or product of a corporation created under the laws of another state, and the shipment of the same into this state, would be an act of intrastate commerce. Such an act would be interstate commerce. Miller v. Goodman, supra. We have discussed the question of his agency for the reason that only upon the theory that he was the powder company’s agent, and that as agent he had stored the merchandise in the magazines and then sold same, could the issue of intrastate commerce, under the proven facts, enter into the casa
In accordance with the views we have expressed in this opinion we find no error in the judgment of the court below, except that part thereof which finds that appellee Bras-elton is entitled to a judgment against the appellant Erwin. That judgment is set aside and held for naught, and it is here ordered that the judgment of the court below be reformed so as to provide that Braselton and Erwin shall jointly and severally recover judgment against the other makers of said note for any sum of money paid by them on said judgment, and that as between themselves each shall be proportionately liable to the powder company and Allen, as provided by statute regulating the rights of sureties.
Reformed and affirmed.
