143 S.W. 235 | Tex. App. | 1911
The Gribble-Carter Grain Company answered by a general demurrer and a general denial and by the following special answer seeking to have Keel Son, plaintiffs in error, made parties defendant: "For further defense to this action and for plea over against Keel Son, a copartnership composed of J. Z. Keel and W. L. Keel, who reside in Cooke county, Tex., avers and charges that it is true, as alleged in plaintiff's original petition, that about November 16, 1908, plaintiff purchased of defendant a car of No. 2 mixed corn in bulk to be delivered to plaintiff at Brookston, Tex., free on board cars at that point, the said car to contain 1,000 to 1,200 bushels of corn, which purchase and the terms thereof was evidenced by written contract entered into by defendant with plaintiff on or about the date aforesaid. And it is true, as alleged in plaintiff's original petition, that according to the terms of said written contract and according to the usual, customary, and well-established meaning of the words, grade, and quality of No. 2 corn, such corn was to be dry, free from weevil, and in good condition and sound; that it is true that by the terms of said written contract defendant became bound to furnish and deliver to plaintiff the said corn free on board cars at Brookston, Tex., at and for the price to be paid by plaintiff to defendant, which was 70 cents per bushel; and it is true that about November 25, 1908, defendant, through and by said Keel Son, shipped to plaintiff at Brookston, Tex., a car of 1,200 bushels of corn and made a draft on plaintiff for the contract price of the said corn, aforesaid, which amounted to $790.67, freight charges thereon, which was $49.33, added, making said draft $840, which said draft was duly paid by plaintiff. That said car of corn was purchased by defendant from said Keel Son on said November 16, 1908, for the special purpose of being shipped to said Brookston, Tex., to comply with defendants' said contract with plaintiff, all of which said Keel Son well knew, and said purchase of corn was made with Keel Son before defendant finally entered into and closed the contract with plaintiff to sell and ship to him said car of corn as aforesaid the sale to plaintiff being dependent upon defendants' ability to purchase said car of corn from said Keel Son, which they well knew. That the defendant would not have purchased said corn from said Keel Son, but for said contract with plaintiff. That defendant never saw or inspected said corn or a sample of it before it was shipped by said Keel Son, as aforesaid, but relied wholly upon said Keel Son to ship to said Brookston, Tex., said car of corn of the grade, quality, and condition that defendant was to furnish to plaintiff under defendants' said contract with plaintiff, which said Keel Son promised and agreed to do. That said Keel Son about November 25, 1908, shipped said car of corn from Gainesville, Tex., to said Brookston, Tex., and defendant paid them for same in full. That if said car of corn was No. 2 mixed corn of the kind and character that defendant had contracted to deliver to plaintiff, but was wet, damp, heating, moulding, unsound, full of trash, and infested with weevil, and in such condition *237 that it was unfit for horse feed, as charged in plaintiff's original petition, then defendant avers and charges that defendant had no knowledge or means of knowing that said car of corn was of the kind and in the condition alleged in plaintiff's original petition aforesaid, and if such were the facts as to said car of corn, which are here adopted, defendant avers and charges that said Keel Son broke their said contract with defendant, and thereby became liable and promised to pay defendant the difference between the market price of said car of corn at Brookston, Tex., at the time said car of corn reached said Brookston, Tex., of the kind, grade, quality, and condition stipulated in the contract between defendant and plaintiff, and defendant and said Keel Son, the said contracts being in all things substantially the same, and the market value of said car of corn at the time and place aforesaid of the kind and condition alleged in plaintiff's original petition aforesaid, which it really was. That the said contract between defendant and said Keel Son was in writing and was substantially as hereinbefore alleged. That said Keel Son knew the true quality and grade of corn when they shipped it, or were duly and truly notified of the quality, grade, and condition of the same after it became known to the defendant, and they were thereby given an opportunity to deal with said car of corn as they might desire to do, but that they did not avail themselves of such opportunity. That in the event plaintiff should recover against the defendant, then, and in that event, defendant will be entitled to recover over against Keel Son the amount so recovered against it by plaintiff."
Keel Son answered by pleading their privilege of being sued in the county of their residence. They also excepted to the answer of the Gribble-Carter Grain Company as follows, "because it appears therefrom that these defendants are improperly joined as defendants in this cause, and that said Gribble-Carter Grain Company has no right to sue these defendants in this cause, and of this they pray the judgment of the court." This exception was followed by a general denial and a special answer which it is not necessary to here notice. The court overruled Keel Son's plea of privilege and demurrer, tried the case upon its merits, and rendered a judgment in favor of Williams against the Gribble-Carter Grain Company for the sum of $452 and in favor of the Gribble-Carter Grain Company for the same amount against Keel Son. The judgment, after providing for the issuance of an execution, contains this further direction: "And that any moneys collected thereby shall by the officer collecting the same be applied on the judgment herein rendered in favor of the plaintiff J. S. Williams against the defendant Gribble-Carter Grain Company."
Within the time prescribed by law Keel Son prosecuted an appeal to the last term of this court; but on motion of the appellees in that suit the appeal was dismissed in February, 1911, because of a defect in the appeal bond. See Keel Son v. Gribble-Carter Grain Co. et al.,
Defendants in error have filed a motion to dismiss the writ because the plaintiffs in error voluntarily abandoned their former appeal in such manner as to substantially delay the collection of the judgment appealed from. It is not denied that the prosecution of this writ of error is within the time prescribed by the statute, and that this court has jurisdiction to determine the controversy upon its merits. If the writ should be dismissed, it must be upon the ground that it is being employed as a means of delaying the defendants in error in the execution of their judgments procured in the court below. This, it seems, has been held to be a sufficient reason. Perez v. Garza,
The question then is: Could the defendants in error, Williams and the grain company, have pursued that remedy and secured an affirmance on certificate after the dismissal of the former appeal? They could unless it should be said that the defective appeal bond was insufficient to "perfect the appeal," or that it became unavailable for *238
that purpose after the judgment of dismissal rendered by this court. If that bond was sufficient to authorize this court to proceed to an adjudication of the appeal upon its merits, had there been no motion to dismiss, it would hardly be reasonable to say that it was not sufficient to form the basis of a motion to affirm on certificate, where no such objection would or could be raised. Let us suppose, by way of illustration, that after the filing of the defective appeal bond in the court below no transcript had been sent to this court within the time prescribed by law. In such an event one of two situations would have existed: (1) There would have been from the beginning no suspension of the judgment of the court below, because of the absence of a sufficient bond; or (2) if the bond was sufficient to suspend the judgment of that court, then the appeal was so far perfected as to authorize a motion in this court to affirm on certificate. It follows, therefore, that if the bond was so defective that it could not have formed the basis of a motion to affirm on certificate, it did not operate to suspend the execution of the judgment appealed from, and the parties interested might have proceeded in the proper manner to collect their money. Chambers v. Miller,
The statute provides three methods of having judgments from trial courts passed upon in the Courts of Civil Appeals: (1) By appeal in the usual form; (2) by writ of error; and (3) by a motion of the appellee to have the judgment affirmed on certificate. These are three separate and distinct methods of procedure, governed by the different provisions of the statute creating them. An appeal bond may be sufficient to form the basis of a motion to affirm on certificate, and still not be such a bond as the appellee, or defendant in error, has the right to insist upon having filed when the appeal, or writ of error, seeks to have the controversy reviewed upon its merits. Under the provisions of article
We come, then, to the consideration of the assignment of error complaining of the action of the court in overruling the exception to the answer of the Gribble-Carter Grain Company, making plaintiffs in error parties defendant and asking for a judgment against them in the event Williams recovered one against the Gribble-Carter Grain Company. It is difficult, if not impossible, to discover any clearly defined rule for determining when third parties may be brought *239 into a suit to answer the cross-complaint of a defendant. It seems that the courts have been disposed to regard the propriety of bringing in such new parties as largely dependent upon the facts of each particular case, and have been governed by what may appear as essential to an equitable and orderly determination of the particular controversy. The legal effect of the cross-complaint of the Gribble-Carter Grain Company is to allege substantially as follows: That it made a contract with Williams to sell and deliver to him a car load of No. 2 mixed corn of the kind and quality alleged by him and at the price named; that the corn in controversy was shipped by Keel Son in fulfillment of that contract; that it was damaged as claimed by Williams; that this corn was purchased by the Gribble-Carter Grain Company from Keel Son November 16, 1908, before it had concluded its contract for the sale of the corn to Williams, and for the special purpose of filling this order given by Williams, all of which was known to Keel Son; that the sale to Williams was made dependent upon the ability of the Gribble-Carter Grain Company to purchase the corn from Keel Son, which the latter knew; that the Gribble-Carter Grain Company did not know the condition of the corn, had never seen it, and depended upon Keel Son to ship the kind and quality called for in their contract, which the latter agreed to do; that Keel Son broke their contract with it, Gribble-Carter Grain Company, and thereby became liable to it for the difference between the market price of the corn at Brookston at the time it reached there and the market price of such corn as should have been furnished, claiming that the contract between Williams and the Gribble-Carter Grain Company and between the latter and Keel Son were in all things substantially the same; that Keel Son knew the true quality and grade of the corn which they shipped, or were duly notified of it and were given an opportunity to deal with the corn as they might desire to do, but failed to avail themselves of such right. This clearly sets out the making of two distinct and independent contracts; one by the Gibble-Carter Grain Company with Williams, and another by it with Keel Son. Williams had no concern with, or interest in, the contract made with Keel Son, and the latter had none in the contract made with Williams. Williams could not have sued Keel Son for their failure to deliver him the corn of the kind and quality he had contracted for; neither could Keel Son have sued Williams for the purchase price had he failed to make payment Keel Son were to fill the order given by the Gribble-Carter Grain Company in fulfillment of an engagement entered into before the contract was made with Williams, and they must look to that company for payment. The fact that they knew the purpose for which the corn was purchased by the grain company did not affect the terms of their written agreement with it, nor create any privity of contract between them and Williams. It may be that Keel Son failed to deliver corn of the kind and quality provided for in their contract and in the contract of the grain company with Williams. If so, their liability is to be determined by their own contractual engagement, and not by the engagement of the Gribble-Carter Grain Company with Williams. The latter's contract furnished no part of Keel Son's. They did not agree in terms to fill Williams' order according to its stipulations, but agreed to sell and deliver corn of the quality and quantity in their own contract. The fact that the two contracts called for the same quantity and quality of corn to be delivered at the same place to the same individual is a mere coincidence and cannot be looked to in determining the relationship between the parties. The fact that the two contracts are substantially the same in terms and conditions and times of performance does not of itself create identity. Each of the contracting parties must, after all, be governed by his own contract; one cannot be substituted for the other. If it be held that there was no privity of contract between Williams and Keel Son, and that Keel Son in no sense were considered as representatives of the grain company, then there is no basis for the contention that they are proper parties to this suit
In the case of Skipwith v. Hurt,
The sole purpose of bringing Keel Son into this suit was to have the judgment rendered against the Gribble-Carter Grain Company in favor of Williams form the basis of a judgment in its favor against Keel
Son. An objection to this method of procedure may be taken by demurrer. Frey v. Ft. Worth R. G. Co.,
The judgment of the county court overruling the exception and rendering judgment in favor of the Gribble-Carter Grain Company against the plaintiffs in error will be reversed, and judgment here rendered dismissing the cross-action, but without prejudice to the right of the Gribble-Carter Grain Company to bring an independent suit for the damages claimed. The judgment in favor of Williams against the Gribble-Carter Grain Company is not disturbed.
In some of the cases cited the position taken by this court, that an affirmance on certificate could be had after the transcript had been filed and the appeal dismissed, is sustained, and by others the contrary rule is announced. The matter is in such doubt that we are not disposed to rely upon that ground as a justification of the ruling made. However, we think that there are other and sufficient grounds besides that mentioned for overruling the motion. The appeal while pending in this court was dismissed at the special instance of the defendant in error Gribble-Carter Grain Company. But for its insistence upon having it dismissed the controversy might have been determined upon its merits during the last term of the court. While it is true the plaintiffs in error, who were then the appellants, might have amended their bond in this court, yet their refusal to do so does not furnish sufficient grounds for penalizing them by having the present writ dismissed.
We have again carefully considered the ruling made in disposing of the demurrer, and have reached the same conclusion.
The motion for rehearing is therefore overruled.