71 S.W.2d 1108 | Tex. App. | 1934
Clifford Pray, a resident of Terry county, Tex., brought suit against the First National Bank in Brownfield, Tex., hereinafter called the bank, also a resident of Terry county, Tex., and Cleveland Compress Service Company, Inc., A. S. Cleveland and Wm. D. Cleveland, Jr., composing the partnership of Wm. D. Cleveland Sons, residents of Harris county, Tex, alleging a Joint conversion of eighteen bales of cotton of the value of $2,000. The Harris county residents are the appellees in this suit. They duly filed their plea of privilege to be sued in Harris county, the county of their residence, which, being controverted by appellant, was heard by the trial court, who sustained same, from which order this appeal is prosecuted.
We deem it unnecessary to set out appellant's pleadings, as both his petition and his first amended controverting plea sufficiently, we think, stated a cause of action and showed venue in Terry county. Since the disposition of this case will turn upon the sufficiency of the evidence, we find it necessary to state all material parts of same.
In the early part of 1928, appellant shipped eighteen bales of cotton to his order at Houston, Tex., procured a bill of lading at the depot, went to the bank, indorsed same in blank, and asked the bank to forward same to appellees. This was done by the bank with instructions: "Hold for instructions account Clifford Pray," "make returns to us." On April 6, 1928, appellees wrote the bank in part acknowledging receipt of the cotton and containing the statement: "Just received for your account." This cotton was stored in the name of the bank, but apparently appellant was not advised of this for some time afterwards. The bank thereafter did advise appellees that such cotton belonged to appellant, to which on February 12, 1931, they replied, in part, to the bank: "We note you have no interest in cotton shipped by Mr. Clifford Pray and that we may deal directly with Mr. Pray in connection with the cotton." On March 25, 1931, appellees wrote appellant, in part: "We could sell your list of cotton carried in the account of First National Bank at 9.50." On June 1, 1931, thereafter, appellees sold this cotton without any authority or directions from either the bank or Pray, along with nearly one-hundred bales of other cotton belonging to customers of the bank. A claim apparently was made by appellees that the bank owed them a balance on cotton stored by another customer long prior to this time and used part of the proceeds of the sale of this last cotton, including that of appellant, in settlement of such account, and then forwarded the balance of about $300 to the bank, who immediately returned same and advised appellees that this money did not belong to them. It appears that the bank did not receive or claim any of the proceeds of the sale of appellant's cotton. It also further appears that the bank authorized their attorneys to file a suit in Harris county against appellees for a conversion of the cotton aforesaid. It was explained that this was merely to fix liability and was for the benefit of its customers, and that it, in fact, claimed none of the cotton as its own. Upon this state of facts appellant claims that a joint liability was prima facie established against the defendants in his suit.
The legal principles which control the disposition of this appeal are, we think, well settled. Confusion has arisen in the application of these to particular facts, and our problem here, as in most cases, is to properly discriminate between announcements in cases that have no application to this record, and those which rule it. It could serve no useful purpose to analyze and attempt to harmonize these various judicial expressions, and to conserve space we omit any discussion of these and go direct to the one question which will dispose of this appeal.
Manifestly, under the above facts, there could be no cause of action maintained against appellees in Terry county unless and until at least a prima facie case of joint liability is shown against the bank and appellees. This is but another way of saying that the defendants must be shown to be joint tort-feasors. To be such there must be shown some concert of action between them with respect to the alleged conversion, some participation therein by the bank, either actually, or by implication of law, or a ratification or adoption by it of appellees' acts respecting it. 62 C.J. p. 1131. To sustain venue against *1110
appellees, the burden of proof was upon appellant to show prima facie at least the truth of the allegations made in his said controverting affidavit. Yantis v. Gilliam (Tex.Civ.App.)
Subdivision 4 of article 1995 (Vernon's Ann.Civ.St.), relied on by appellant to authorize venue in Terry county, applies only where the same cause of action exists against two or more parties, one of whom resides in the county were suit is instituted. Fox v. Cone,
The judgment is affirmed.