165 S.W. 900 | Tex. App. | 1914
This controversy arose over the sale and delivery of wheat by the appellees to the appellant, and the payment by the appellant with a check of the Johnson Mercantile Company, for said wheat, with a recitation upon said check, "Balance on Lyon wheat." Appellees claim to have sold the wheat to appellant individually. Appellant alleges that he purchased the wheat as agent for the Johnson Mercantile Company, of which appellees had notice, and that the execution and delivery of the check with the indorsement upon the same was a full settlement as a consideration for the wheat.
The appellant's brief embodies assignments of error leveled at the action of the trial court, by either complaining of some phase of the general charge of the court, or of the refusal of the trial court in failing to give some special instruction requested by him, except the last assignment, which is a complaint that the verdict and judgment is contrary to the law and the evidence.
As to the objections to the general charge and the attempted complaint of the action of the court in refusing the special charges, the condition of the record is such that, under the Acts of the Thirty-Third Legislature with reference to the trial of causes and the submission of general and specially requested instructions to the jury, he is unable to complain on account of the inadequacy or total lack of exceptions. General Laws of Texas, Session Acts, p. 113.
We find objections to the charge in the record, purported to have been made by the recitations in the pleading before the charge of the court was read to the jury. However, there is no preservation of exceptions to the action of the court in this respect, nor any approved record showing when the objections were made. The statute imperatively prescribed that the objections shall, in every instance, be presented to the court before the charge is read to the jury, and all objections not so made and presented shall be considered as waived, necessarily requiring the incorporation of the fact of the presentation to the court of the objections before the charge was read to the jury into the record; and exceptions should be reserved thereto not exhibited in this record. The recitation in the pleading is insufficient — the court must act and exceptions be properly preserved. As to the refusal of special charges, the statute also states that the ruling of the court in refusing instructions to the jury shall be regarded as approved, unless excepted to, which is likewise omitted in this record. Quanah, Acme Pacific Ry. Co. et al., Appellants, v. W. W. Galloway, Appellee, No. 575,
The tenth ground of the motion for new trial, brought forward in the brief, is substantially as follows: The verdict is contrary to the evidence, in that the testimony discloses that the matters in controversy, as between the plaintiffs and the Johnson Mercantile Company, were finally closed by settlement between J. F. Johnson as president of the corporation and Reese Johnson, acting in the scope, or apparent scope, of his authority as agent for the plaintiffs. As stated, appellees claim they sold the wheat to J. F. *901
Johnson individually, and not to the corporation. The jury evidently found in their favor upon that issue, and concluded the question. Even if J. F. Johnson was buying the wheat for the Mercantile Company, the appellees had no notice of that fact; the jury said J. F. Johnson was buying it for himself; hence if that be true, the amount as between appellees and J. F. Johnson is an undisputed liquidated demand for the wheat purchased, without the semblance of a bona fide controversy between him as an individual and the appellees as the vendors as to the amount actually owing. Consequently, if J. F. Johnson, as an individual, purchased the wheat, and the trade was a consummated transaction, though afterwards he gave the Johnson Mercantile Company's check in payment of same, and indorsed that it was a balance on wheat, and if it were a less amount paid by J. F. Johnson, in attempted payment for a greater liquidated debt, there is no consideration, and the debt was unpaid. In the case of Bergman Produce Co. v. Brown, 156 S.W. 1104, we quoted with approval the case of Cunningham v. Construction Co.,
We infer from the record that the check, though apparently given by the Mercantile Company, was accepted after the consummation of the sale and delivery of the wheat, and could not then afford notice; under the jury's verdict the trade was made with Johnson individually.
The judgment is affirmed.