4 S.W.2d 1029 | Tex. App. | 1927
On April 30, 1925, the appellant J. N. Morrison owned a creamery and bottling works in the city of Plainview, and on that date contracted with the appellee, Sewell, to assist him in the business. The substance of the written contract is: That on May 1 an inventory should be taken of everything in the way of raw materials and all merchandise in stock either for sale or manufacturing purposes, also all bottles, tubs, cans, cases, and any other thing that may be used in the sale of manufactured products. That a complete statement of all assets and liabilities showing the actual condition of the business on May 1st should also be made. It is further stipulated: That all operating expenses were to be deducted; this to include repairs, but not machinery broken or damaged, repairs on automobiles, and trucks, including casings, oil, and gasoline used in the operation of the business; also, all taxes and insurance on the plant, and interest on $6,000 now owing on machinery by Morrison; also, all necessary traveling expenses to be paid out of the business." That any accounts contracted during the life of the written contract, which were lost, should be deducted from the net profits of the business. It was further provided that Morrison was to receive a monthly salary of $150 and the further sum of $250 per month for the use of buildings, machinery, and equipment of all kinds used in the business, that Sewell was to receive $150 per month as salary, and that on December 31st of each year, during the life of the contract, a complete inventory, the same as the first, should be taken, and that the net profits as shown by the difference between the inventories, "after deducting all of above items, shall be divided as follows: First party to receive two-thirds, and second party to receive one-third." It is expressly provided that the contract is simply an employment contract, and that the part received by Sewell from the profits of the business was understood to be additional compensation, and that no partnership agreement had been formed. It further provided that the contract should be in force until December 31, 1925, provided only that after Morrison makes a bona fide sale of the plant, in which event the contract was to be terminated, and the net profits to be figured as if it was the end of the year.
It appears from the record that about the 1st of December, 1925, Morrison organized a corporation known as the Plains Coca-Cola Bottling Company, and that M. A. Marcus purchased the stock in 1927. On May 12, 1927, Sewell filed this suit against Morrison, Marcus, and the corporation, alleging that the net profits of the business during the time amounted to $4,916.16, and that he was entitled to one-third thereof, or $1,638.72. Marcus and the corporation answered by general denials, and Morrison answered by general denial and specially pleaded, among other matters which he claimed should be deducted from the gross earnings, loss caused by depreciation of new machinery and equipment purchased after the execution of the contract, and further specially pleaded worthless accounts, "cold checks," and the loss of bottles, which should be deducted from the gross earnings in arriving at the net profits. Such other portions of the pleadings as may be necessary in considering the several propositions will be hereinafter set out.
No auditor was appointed to audit the books and accounts of the parties.
The court submitted only one special issue, as follows:
"What do you find, from all of the facts and circumstances before you, were the net profits, if any, from the entire business of the Plainview Creamery, from May 1, 1925, to December 31, 1925?"
To which the jury answered:
"We, the jury, find the net profits of the business $4,820.31."
Based upon this verdict, the court rendered judgment for Sewell in the sum of $1,606.77, with interest from the 1st day of January, 1926, at the legal rate. The judgment was rendered the 22d day of February, 1927. The appellant requested several special issues, which the court refused to give; one relating to the reasonable value of the services of Mrs. J. N. Morrison; another, asking what was the value of bottles and other equipment lost; and a third, inquiring what was the amount of dollars and cents of worthless checks and accounts, at the close of the business. These issues should have been given. H. E. W. T. Ry. Co. v. Snelling,
Error was assigned in the motion for new trial, upon the court's refusal to submit these issues, but the points are not urged in this court by any propositions based thereon and are waived.
Under all of the pleadings and evidence, we think the issue given was one of mixed law and fact (Watson v. Patrick [Tex. Civ. App.]
Complaint is made by the first proposition that the court erred in sustaining the plaintiff's exception to that part of Morrison's answer wherein he claimed a deduction for depreciation to the extent of $735.67, of new machinery, which he had purchased. *1031 We think the court properly sustained the exception.
Deterioration in the value of the manufacturer's plant and equipment by reason of use cannot, as a general rule, be classed and allowed as an expense to be deducted in the absence of an express agreement to that effect. Mack v. Shortle,
Under several propositions it is insisted that the court erred in rendering judgment against the Plains Coca-cola Bottling Company, and holding it liable under what is known as the Bulk Sales Law (Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. 1925, arts. 4001-4003), because Sewell's petition did not allege that the bottling company and Morrison had failed to comply with all of the requirements of the Bulk Sales Law. He did allege that Morrison sold and transferred the merchandise, fixtures, and equipment to the bottling company, without first paying his debt to the plaintiff and without giving notice of the sale to plaintiff, or without giving notice that the business was about to become incorporated, and that that corporation did not, within 10 days before taking possession of the business, notify the plaintiff in person or otherwise, as required by law, of such transfer and sale of business, and that the sale and transfer were out of the ordinary and usual course of trade, and not in the regular prosecution of said business. The proof shows that some of these things were not done, and under the law the sale was voidable. So it was not necessary for the plaintiff to make further specific allegations or proof showing a failure to comply with any other requirement of said law. Smith-Calhoun Rubber Co. v. McGee Rubber Co. (Tex.Civ.App.)
It does not appear from the record that the court rendered a judgment against the bottling company, under the provisions of the Bulk Sales Law, but if it be admitted that it was so rendered, still, under the holding in Gardner v. Goodner Wholesale Gro. Co.,
But, aside from the Bulk Sales Law, it was shown that Morrison owned the original business known as the "Plainview Creamery," and the uncontradicted testimony shows that the assets of the creamery "went in as assets to account for and pay for the capital stated in the incorporation, and that consisted of the capital stock of the Plains Coca-Cola Bottling Company, and in that way the business was transferred from Morrison to the corporation." Morrison so testified. Morrison was the owner of the capital stock in the corporation, and under such circumstances the corporation is presumed to have assumed the creamery's debts and is prima facie liable therefor. 1 Fletcher, Cyc. Corp. § 399; Modern Dairy v. Blanke (Tex.Civ.App.) 116 S.W. on p. 154; Texas Loan Agency v. Hunter,
Where a correct judgment has been rendered, it will not be reversed because the trial court based it upon a mistaken theory of the law.
The appellant filed a motion for rehearing alleging that there was a unanimous mistake on the part of the jury, in that certain deductions which the jury had unanimously agreed that the defendant was entitled to have were not deducted from the figures representing the amount of the claim asserted by plaintiff, and it was a clerical mistake on the part of the jury entitling the appellant to a new trial. Upon a hearing of this motion, A. G. Cox, the foreman of the jury, alone testified. His testimony is: That the settlement showed that the net profits were something over $5,000. That the jurors had various ideas of what ought to be deducted therefrom, which was the only point of disagreement. That they deducted and discussed several items, which they thought should come off of that sum.
"And as a result of our deliberations, there was a unanimous agreement on the part of the jury that the balance remaining and showing the true net profits of the business, was the amount stated in our verdict Some of them would contend for one item, and some of them for another. I had my individual ideas and line of figures from which I calculated was right, and others had like ideas about it, and after *1032 discussing the matter there was such a concensus between us that we reached the amount stated in our verdict, and after having reached that amount, we returned that as the verdict of the jury, and the amount returned was the result of the joint opinions of the jury boiled down to the point where we could all agree on the amounts."
The appellant cites the case of Caylat v. H. E. W. T. Ry. Co.,
There being no reversible error shown in the record, the judgment is affirmed.