165 S.W. 73 | Tex. App. | 1914
The First National Bank of Georgetown brought this suit against W. W. Edwards and John RI Allen as makers of the second note hereinafter referred to, and against the Georgetown Mercantile Company as indorser thereon. The latter answered by a special demurrer, general denial, and a special answer, alleging that the indorsement upon the note was not made for its benefit, but for the benefit of the defendant Edwards, without any authority from it. That defendant also set up a cross-action against the defendant Edwards for $814.30 upon an account for merchandise sold to him. The defendant Edwards answered the plaintiff's petition by a general demurrer and general denial. He also filed a special plea, setting out a full history of the transactions which resulted in the execution of the note sued on, and prayed in the alternative for ; judgment against the mercantile company for whatever sum the plaintiff might recover against him. Edwards also filed an answer to the cross-action asserted against him by the mercantile company, in which he claimed that he was entitled to certain credits upon his account with that company, including a credit of $800 for services rendered, and which credits left him indebted to the mercantile company in the sum of $14.28, and no more, which sum he tendered in court and deposited with the clerk. Defendant Allen filed an answer which, among other things, adopted the answer of his codefendant, Edwards, as to the right to recover judgment over against the mercantile company for such amount as the plaintiff might recover against him. On the 21st day of August, 1912, the Georgetown Mercantile Company, a trading corporation, was in need of money, which it was unable to obtain without assistance, as it had borrowed from its bank all that the bank was willing to lend it. Thereupon its president, W. W. Edwards, and its vice president, John R. Allen, made an arrangement with the bank, as a result of which they executed a note to the bank for $2,500, with 8 per cent. interest, and a stipulation for 10 per cent. attorney's fees. When the note was executed, and as part of the same transaction, the bank drew a check for $2,500 in favor of John R. Allen, which was then and there by him deposited in the bank to his credit, and he thereupon drew a check for the same amount in favor of the Georgetown Mercantile Company, which was delivered to the bank and placed by it to the credit of the Georgetown Mercantile Company, and was used by that company in the payment of its debts. The note referred to fell due October 21, 1912, whereupon *74 Edwards and Allen executed another note, similar in all respects to the first one, and some one made the following indorsement upon the back thereof: "Georgetown Mer. Co. Int. paid to Jan. 3/1913." It was shown by undisputed testimony that the Georgetown Mercantile Company paid the interest on the latter note to January 3, 1913. The plaintiff sued the mercantile company as indorser of the note, and the mercantile company did not deny under oath that the indorsement was made by it or by its authority. The only testimony as to how and by whom the indorsement was placed on the note was given by the defendants, Edwards and Allen. Edwards first testified that his codefendant, Allen, made the indorsement, but afterwards stated that he, Allen, and Carothers, the president of the bank, were all present, and he did not know which placed the indorsement on the note, but thought it was done by Allen. The defendant Allen testified that he knew nothing about the indorsement on the note; that he was not then president of the mercantile company, and had nothing to do with such matters. There was a nonjury trial, which resulted in a judgment for the bank against Edwards and Allen for the full amount of the note, interest, and attorney's fees, and judgment over in favor of Edwards and Allen against the Georgetown Mercantile Company for the same amount of the bank's judgment against them. Judgment was also rendered in favor of the mercantile company against Edwards for $114.30, to be credited upon any amount that Edwards might have to pay to the plaintiff upon its judgment against him. The Georgetown Mercantile Company alone has appealed.
In this respect this case is quite similar to Gaston Ayres v. Campbell Co.,
We do not agree with appellant in the contention that appellees, Edwards and Alien, founded their right to recover against appellant upon the note which formed the foundation of the bank's suit. The plea of Edwards, which was adopted by his codefendant, Allen, embodied a full statement of the transaction, and did not seek to recover upon the note, but sought to recover against appellant because of the fact that they had adopted the only available means by which money could be secured, not for them, but for appellant; and therefore, in equity and good conscience, appellant ought to hold them harmless. We think the pleading referred to was sufficient to entitle them to the relief sought and obtained.
The trial court held that appellee Edwards was entitled to a credit of $700 upon his account with appellant, the mercantile company, the reasonable value of services rendered by him for the company. The court made a finding, embodied in the judgment, that the services referred to were worth $100 per month, and that the time of service was seven months, making an aggregate of $700. Appellant presents the contention that, inasmuch as appellee Edwards was president of the mercantile company, and as the by-laws required all salaries of officers to be fixed by the board of directors, and as no salary for the president was fixed, therefore the court erred in allowing him the credit of $700 on his account as compensation for his services. In his pleading Edwards alleged the necessary facts, and sought to recover upon a quantum meruit for the value of certain services rendered by him. He testified that up to the 1st of March, 1912, the corporation had a Mr. Banner employed as manager, and that after that time and up to November he acted as general manager, filling the position and rendering the services formerly rendered by Mr. Banner; that the corporation paid Mr. Banner $125 a month. He also testified that from the 1st of March to the 1st of November he managed the business and worked as a salesman, worked all the time; that he was generally the first man to reach the store and the last to leave it; that he even helped to do the sweeping. There was other testimony corroborating Edwards in that respect, and tending to show that the services rendered by him, apart from those which he was required to perform as president of the corporation, were worth at least the amount awarded to him. Upon this state of facts we uphold the action of the trial court, and overrule appellant's contention, as to Edwards' right to compensation for extra services and the further contention that there was no proof of the value thereof.
No error has been shown and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.