Lange v. Interstate Sales Co.

166 S.W. 900 | Tex. App. | 1914

This is a suit instituted by appellee to recover the value of an automobile sold by it to appellant, a feme sole. The defense to the suit was that the automobile was never delivered to appellant. The cause was tried by jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee in the sum of $3,420.

The facts showed that appellant had, in the autumn of 1912, placed an order with appellee for a National, seven-passenger, touring automobile. Appellee did not have the automobile in stock, but it was to be ordered from the factory and was to be fully equipped as stated in the catalogue, besides additional equipment, to be a certain color, and to be guaranteed for a year, at the price of $3,520 in Galveston. Appellant went to New York, and while she was gone the automobile arrived in Galveston, and, according to the testimony of Toebelman, the general manager of appellee, Willie Lange, a minor son of appellant, assisted in unloading the car and went in it to the garage of appellee. The car was driven by an employé of appellee, and Willie requested that it be sent out to his mother's house on the next day. On the next day, which was Friday, the daughters of appellant telephoned that they wanted the automobile and it was sent out by appellee. Toebelman testified that he telephoned to Alvin Lange, an adult son of appellant, about delivering the car, and that he told the witness to deliver the car to the other children of appellant, as he had been informed that his mother had written to his sisters that they could use the car during her absence. Alvin Lange also promised to give a check for the car as soon as his mother arrived from New York,. Toebelman stated that after this conversation he ordered Billie Mather, a chauffeur, to take the car out and deliver it to the children of appellant. The children rode in the car, the chauffeur driving, or sitting by instructing a member of the family to drive. At night the car was carried back to the garage of appellee. On Saturday the automobile was again taken out by Billie Mather. There were three Lange young ladies and two minor boys living with their mother. The youngest boy was 14 years old. Mather, under instructions from appellee, on Saturday afternoon took the car out, and Oscar, the youngest boy, was permitted to drive the car, and while on the boulevard he lost control and the machine went over the seawall and was wrecked. Appellant and the young ladies denied that appellant had written a letter to them such as Toebelman swore that Alvin told him about, and the latter swore that he never told Toebelman that such a letter had been written, or that he had authorized a delivery of the car to his sisters and brothers. The young ladies and Willie Lange denied the delivery of the car to them.

The facts raised a sharp and direct issue as to the agency of appellant's children, as well as the delivery of the car to them. If they were the real or apparent agents of appellant and a delivery of the car was made to them, appellant is liable for the purchase price of the car. These were the crucial points in the case, and yet the question of agency was not submitted by the court to the jury; but, on the other hand, the question of agency of the children was eliminated by an instruction "that tender of delivery at the residence of Mrs. Lange, if made unconditionally, would be sufficient, whether she or any one authorized by her was there to receive it or not." Under that instruction, if appellee had sent the automobile to the residence of appellant in her absence, no one else being authorized to receive it, and left it standing at the curbing of her sidewalk, there was a delivery of the car. This is not the law as applied to the facts of this case at least

Appellant had ordered a certain kind of automobile, of a certain color, with certain equipment, and initials inscribed on it, and she had the undoubted right, the contract being executory, to inspect the car and see if it met the contract specifications. She could not be compelled to accept the car without the right of inspection being given her, or her duly constituted agent. The right of inspection carried with it a reasonable time in which to make such inspection, but under the charge of the court, the car could have been left at the residence of appellant, without notice to her, within an hour after its arrival in Galveston, and she would become absolutely responsible for its purchase price. The facts of this case create an executory sale, and it was so treated by appellee. It did not consider the car the property of appellant, as soon as it reached Galveston, but treated it as its property until, as it claims, it had been satisfied by Alvin Lange as to the purchase price and the agency of the members of the family. "Where, under a contract of sale, the property in the goods is transferred from the seller to the buyer, the contract is called a sale; but, where the transfer of the property in the *902 goods is to take effect at a future time or subject to some condition thereafter to be fulfilled, the contract is called an agreement to sell. An agreement to sell becomes a sale when the time elapses or the conditions are fulfilled subject to which the property in the goods is to be transferred." Mechem, Sales, § 6. The title of the car did not pass to appellant until she had inspected it. Railway v. Ogburn,26 Tex. Civ. App. 217, 63 S.W. 1072. "When the contract is executory, as it always is when a particular article is ordered, without being seen, from one who undertakes it shall be of a given quality or description, and the thing sent as such is never completely accepted, the buyer is not bound to keep it, or pay for the article on any terms, though no fraud was intended by the vendor." Fogel v. Brubaker, 122 Pa. 7, 15 A. 692.

Appellee did not consider that the title to the car had passed to appellant, because he refused to allow the sons and daughters of appellant to have possession of the car until another brother had agreed to pay for it. This refusal was made although appellee attempts to show that the children were the agents of appellant.

Appellant swore that under the terms of the contract she was to have the machine demonstrated to her and exhibited for approval before she was under any obligation to accept or pay for it, and yet in the face of that testimony the jury was informed that appellee could have delivered the car at her house, without her knowledge and she would be liable. The charge was clearly erroneous.

The declarations of Alvin Lange, or of any of the other children of appellant, could not bind appellant unless it had been shown that they were the agents of appellant. Agency could not be established by their declarations or admissions, nor could it be inferred from their relationship to appellant. To render such admissions or declarations admissible, the agency must be established, the admission must have been made in regard to something within the scope of the agency, and must constitute a part of the res gestee. White v. Miller, 71 N.Y. 118, 27 Am.Rep. 13.

We fail to see the appropriateness of the charge explaining to the jury the effect of the testimony as to a demonstrator being furnished to run the car and as to the housing of the car. These were facts to be passed upon, as any other, by the jury, and the trial court had no right to single them out and weaken or destroy their effect.

The anxiety of the children to obtain possession of the car before the return of their mother had no legal bearing on the case and it was error to admit such testimony. Such testimony had no probative force on the subject of agency. The acts and declarations of the young ladies and boys in connection with the automobile could not be used to prove agency.

The judgment is reversed and the canes remanded.

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