Harrison v. Hawley

26 S.W. 765 | Tex. App. | 1894

This appeal is from a verdict and judgment in the sum of $3195, recovered by the appellees, as plaintiffs, from the appellants, as defendants. The recovery was had on the ground of the alleged conversion by the defendants to their own use and benefit, on December 23, 1890, of a certain number of barrels of rice and sugar, of which at that date the plaintiffs were the alleged owners.

The defendants, among other matters, specially pleaded, that on December 22, 1890, Bateman Bro., a mercantile firm doing business at Fort Worth, Texas, were the owners of the property described; that as such they, on the date named, executed to the defendants, as trustees, a deed in trust, transferring all of their property, including the goods in question, for the purpose of securing a certain valid indebtedness amounting to the sum of $126,451; that if the plaintiffs ever had any right or title to the property claimed, they had long before the date of the deed in trust disposed of it to Bateman Bro. They further alleged, that Bateman Bro. and the several beneficiaries named in the deed in trust were necessary parties to the suit brought by the plaintiffs; and they prayed that the grantors and the beneficiary creditors should be made parties defendant.

The plaintiffs filed a supplemental petition, replying to the special answer of the defendants, and alleging, in effect, that in 1889 and 1890 the plaintiffs were merchants, doing business as such at Galveston, Texas, and that Bateman Bro. were merchants doing business at Fort Worth, Texas; that during that period plaintiffs and Bateman Bro. were subscribers to Dun's Commercial Agency, whose business it was to furnish merchants information as to the standing of other merchants, conveying reports of the solvency and financial standing of merchants; that in 1889, Bateman Bro. made a report to the commercial agency, stating that their assets, consisting of notes, accounts, merchandise on hand, bank stocks, and cash, aggregated $370,700; that their liabilities on open accounts and bills payable amounted to $210,000, and that their net worth over and above their liabilities was $160,700; that Bateman Bro. intended that the commercial agency should communicate this report to persons desiring to consult it as to their commercial standing and financial ability; that for this purpose the plaintiffs did consult the report, saw the representation, and believed it to be true; that afterwards Bateman Bro. communicated said information orally to the plaintiffs, and that, relying upon the representations thus furnished by the commercial agency and by the oral statements, the plaintiffs sold and delivered to Bateman Bro. the goods in question; that at the time of making these statements Bateman Bro. were insolvent; that the statements as to their assets and liabilities were false, as was well known to Bateman Bro. at the time they were made; and that Bateman Bro. did not intend to pay for *311 the goods, and had no reasonable expectation to believe that they would be able to pay for them.

The verdict of the jury, founded on conflicting evidence, establishes the truth of the material allegations contained in the supplemental petition, as above stated, and we are constrained by that verdict to conclude accordingly with reference to the matters of fact presented by that pleading.

Opinion. — 1. We think that the supplemental petition performed in this instance the office of that character of pleading, in that its allegations were in avoidance of the special matter set up in the defendant's answer, viz., that Bateman Bro. were entitled as owners to the goods in controversy, because of the sale thereof by the plaintiffs. The allegations of the supplemental petition set forth facts showing that no title passed by the sale relied upon by the defendants as a matter of special defense. In other words, the facts relied upon in replication to the special matter of defense avoided the effect of that defense. Morrison v. Adoue, 76 Tex. 255; Rivers v. Foote, 11 Tex. 662; Meyer v. Opperman,76 Tex. 108.

2. The court held, that the beneficiaries in the trust deed were not necessary parties to this suit, and when the exceptions were presented raising the question, it held that Bateman Bro., the grantors, were necessary parties. During the trial the latter ruling was reversed, and Bateman Bro. were dismissed.

We are of opinion, that neither the makers of the deed in trust nor the beneficiaries were necessary parties to the proceeding, and so overrule the second assignment of error.

The ground on which it was sought to bring in these additional parties was to enable the defendants to have recourse for any judgment which might be rendered against them. As the makers of the deed in trust were insolvent, the redress thus sought as to them would be fruitless. As the beneficiaries were quite numerous — some twenty-five in number — and as there was no hostility of interest between them and the trustees, and as the latter could reasonably have been held to represent them (if indeed they had accepted the benefits of the transfer), the court, we think, correctly held them not to be necessary parties. Ebell v. Bursinger, 70 Tex. 120; Preston v. Carter,80 Tex. 388.

Besides, we think that there is force in the contention of the appellees that the trustees, under the allegations of the plaintiffs, should be regarded as tort-feasors, in which event the suit could be maintained against them without joinder of other tort-feasors. Dicey on Part. to Act., p. 439; Hawes on Part. to Act., sec. 98; Sayles' Texas Pl., sec. 443. If the absent parties on being impleaded should adopt the acts of the trustees, they would be joint tort-feasors; if they repudiated them, the recourse of the defendants would be fruitless. *312

3. We are not prepared to hold that the court erred in admitting in evidence the paper purporting to be a report, or a copy of the report, of R.G. Dun's Commercial Agency. The testimony of the witness Gard, to the effect that the original, which he had taken, had been lost or misplaced, that he had looked for it, that he could not find it, and that the figures contained in the report, the correctness of which he recognized, were made by Bateman Bro., was sufficient to justify the court's action in the matter complained of. So much of the report as did not emanate from Bateman Bro. the court offered to exclude, but it was permitted to remain at the instance of the appellants.

The extent of the proof showing the loss of an instrument, and justifying secondary evidence of its contents, is necessarily to a great extent within the sound discretion of the trial court, and we are unable to hold, in the present instance, that this discretion was abused. As numerous copies were made of the original report, to be sent in various directions and to divers merchants, in consonance with the purpose of the report, it may well be conceived that the original would not be deemed of such importance as to require very close and circumspect custody. Whart. on Ev., sec. 148, note 3; Bonds v. Smith, 11 S.E. Rep., 322.

These remarks overrule the third and fourth assignments of error.

4. The testimony of R.B. Hawley and of Fen. Cannon, the admission of which is complained of in the fifth and eighth assignments of error, was properly heard. It related to conversations with a member of the firm of Bateman Bro., and statements by him antedating the execution of the deed in trust. Its tendency was to support the allegations of the plaintiffs charging a fraudulent intent with reference to representations of solvency.

The witness Fen. Cannon was a creditor of Bateman Bro., and evidence tending to show a fraudulent intent is not confined to the existence of that intent with reference to the persons complaining in the particular action, but the fraudulent design may be shown to have extended to others. The motive is a paramount question in issue, and where false representations are made by the same parties, closely connected in time, they beget the inference of a common origin in the same motive, and are therefore pertinent. Ins. Co. v. Armstrong, 117 U.S. 598.

5. The sixth, seventh, and ninth assignments of error present the question of greatest difficulty encountered by us. They complain of the action of the court in admitting in evidence conversations with the members of the firm of Bateman Bro. with the plaintiff R.B. Hawley and with the witness Fen. Cannon, and of statements made by members of the firm after their failure,and after their execution of the deed in trust. The purport of these statements was to sustain the allegations in plaintiffs' petition of fraudulent intent on the part of *313 the makers of the deed in trust, and in that sense to defeat the instrument.

The sole objection urged to the admission of this testimony, as stated in the bills of exception and the assignments of error, was that the "statements and conversations occurred long after the purchase by Bateman Bro. from plaintiffs of the goods in controversy, and said statements could not have influenced the said plaintiffs in extending credit to said Bateman Bro.; and said statements were wholly irrelevant, and tended to prove no issue in this case."

It is well settled, that statements and declarations made by an assignor or grantor in an instrument after he has parted with title to the property can not be heard to defeat the sale. Hinson v. Walker, 65 Tex. 103; Bump. on Fraud. Con., p. 587.

The reason of this rule is, that "after the transfer is consummated, the debtor becomes a stranger to the title for all purposes, and his acts and declarations are no more binding on the grantee than are those of any stranger to the transaction." This rule is not applied where the debtor testifies as a witness, in which event his declarations may be used for the purpose of affecting the credibility of his testimony, apart from the question of "intrinsic competency." Garahy v. Bayley, 25 Texas Supp., 294; Schmick v. Noel, 64 Tex. 406.

Nor is it applied where the "debtor and grantee are both parties to the suit," in which case the latter's "subsequent declarations are competent evidence against him." Bump. on Fraud. Con., pp. 587, 588.

Here, as shown by an explanation of the trial judge appended to the bill of exceptions, it appears that Bateman Bro. were parties to this suit at the time when this testimony was introduced. It further appears, that each of the declarants testified in the case, and denied the making of the statements in question. They were used as witnesses, and while these declarations were introduced as original evidence, they had the same opportunity to testify with reference to them as if a proper predicate had been laid for proving statements made out of court different from the statements made in court, and advantage was taken of this opportunity.

If, when the court at a subsequent stage of the proceedings dismissed Bateman Bro. from the suit as unnecessary parties, it became the court's duty, of its own motion, to exclude these declarations, had the objection been urged that they were inadmissible because their tendency was to defeat the title transferred by the deed in trust, we are, nevertheless, not prepared to hold that the court erred with reference to the admission of the testimony when such an objection was in no way called to its attention, and is in no sense embodied in the assignments of error here considered. Disposing, therefore, of the objection as made, we overrule it. *314

6. The tenth assignment of error, complaining of the action of the court with reference to the testimony of the witness Gard regarding the object and purpose of Bateman Bro. in subscribing for and using the report issued by Dun's Agency, is not considered, because it is accompanied neither by a statement from the record, nor by any appropriate proposition. We are not informed by any reference to the record that the statement consisted of the witness' mere opinion.

7. The testimony of W.Q. Bateman, heard over the objection of appellants, attesting the genuineness of the claims of the beneficiaries, could not have prejudiced the defendants.

8. The remaining assignments of error — save those which complain of the verdict of the jury as contrary to the evidence — criticise the action of the court with reference to its general charge, and to its refusal of special charges requested by the defendants. We think that the charge instructed the jury with substantial, though perhaps not with critical, accuracy with reference to the issues presented by the pleadings and the evidence upon the paramount question, whether the plaintiffs were entitled to avoid the sale of the goods in question to Bateman Bro., and that the special instructions were properly refused.

We affirm the judgment.

Affirmed.

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