Case ID: sw_298/html/0550-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "HARVEY, P. J. OURETON, O. J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

GREENVILLE GAS & FUEL CO. v. COMMERCIAL FINANCE CO.
    (No. 981-4832.)
    Commission of Appeals of Texas, Section A.
    Oct. 19, 1927.
    1. Pleading <§=1 11 — Plea of privilege should bo sustained unless facts depriving defendant of privilege are pleaded and proved.
    Where defendant has duly asserted the statutory privilege of being sued in county of his domicile, plea should be sustained, unless facts depriving him of privilege are proved as well as pleaded.
    2. Pleading <@=*l 11 — Where defendant filed affidavit denying indorsements on notes, plaintiff must prove, on trial of plea of privilege, that one indorsing had authority (Rev. St. 1925, art. 3734).
    Under Rev. St. 1925, art. 3734, where defendant filed affidavit denying executing or authorizing indorsements on notes sued on which plaintiff on trial of plea of privilege claimed were payable by defendant in county where suit was brought, plaintiff had burden of proving by extrinsic evidence authority of W. to execute indorsement in behalf of defendant, before notes could be offered in evidence in hearing on plea of privilege.
    3. Venue <§=>7 — 'That one was vice president and- general manager “in some respects” did not show authority to indorse note as regards venue.
    That W., who had indorsed notes for defendant company, was vice president of company and general manager “in some respects,” did not impliedly invest him with authority to indorse note sued on so as to authorize suit in county where contract was to be performed.
    4. Venue <§=37 — Thát one was general manager did not imply authority coextensive with general scope of company’s business as regards venue of suit on notes.
    That W., who had indorsed notes for defendant company, was general manager of company “in some respects,” did not imply authority in him coextensive with ■general scope of company’s business, so as to authorize suit on notes in county where contract was to be performed.
    5. Principal and agent <©==>(22(I) — Agent’s authority to do particular act cannot be shown by conduct and declarations of agent alone.
    Authority or apparent authority in agent to do particular act on behalf of principal cannot be proved by conduct and declarations of agent alone.
    6. Pleading ■§=>!! I — in trial of piea of privilege where defendant denied indorsement of notes sued on, under oath, and plaintiff did not prove indorsement, admitting notes in evidence held error (Rev. St. 1925-, art. 3734).
    In trial of plea of privilege where plaintiff claimed right to sue defendant on indorsement of note in county where suit was brought because notes which defendant had indorsed were payable in that county and defendant filed affidavit denying execution of indorsements and plaintiff failed to prove authority of defendant’s agent, who indorsed notes, to make indorsement, admitting notes in evidence together with indorsements thereon held error under Rev. St. 1925, art. 3734.
    Certified Questions from. Court of Civil Appeals of Tenth Supreme Judicial District.
    Action by the Commercial Finance Com-' pany against the Greenville Gas & Fuel Company, in which defendant filed a plea of privilege. From a judgment overruling the plea of privilege, defendant appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, which certifies questions to the Commission of Appeals. Questions answered.
    John T. Suggs, of Denison, and Spivey & Spivey, of Waco, for appellant.
    Bryan & Maxwell, of Waco, for appellee.
   HARVEY, P. J.

Certified questions from the Court of Civil Appeals for the Tenth District. The facts disclosed, by the certificate, in so far as they are material to the questions certified, are substantially as follows :

The defendant Greenville Gas & Fuel Company is a trading corporation engaged in tile business of selling gas ranges, stoves, etc., and whose domicile is in Hunt county, Tex. The plaintiff, Commercial Finance Company, a corporation, brought this suit in the district court of McLennan county. The sole defendant in the suit is the said gas and fuel company. The plaintiff seeks to recover of the defendant, as indorser, the amount due on a number of promissory notes purporting to have been executed to the defendant by various customers of that company, and alleged to have been indorsed to the plaintiff by the defendant for a valuable consideration. Each of the notes, according to its terms, is payable in McLennan county. The indorsement, which appears written on each of the notes, was made by one L. K. Wise, and reads as follows:

“The Greenville Gas & Fuel Company, by L. K. Wise, vice president,
“To Commercial Finance Company,' Waco, Texas.”

The defendant company, in due course, filed its plea of privilege to be sued in Hunt county. The plaintiff, in response to such plea, filed its controverting affidavit alleging, in substance and effect, that L. K. Wise was the vice president and general manager ■ of the defendant company when he made the indorsements above mentioned; that Wise had authority from the company to execute the indorsements; that Wise was held out by the company as apparently having such authority; that the company had subsequently ratified the acts of Wise in indorsing the notes to the plaintiff; that by such in-dorsements the defendant company became bound by contract in writing to perform, in McLennan county, the obligations sought to be enforced herein. The defendant thereupon filed its affidavit, in the form of a verified supplemental pleading, in which it denies the execution of the indorsements; and specifically denies that Wise had authority to execute them in behalf of the defendant; and denies a ratification of his acts in that respect. Upon the hearing on the plea of privilege the trial court rendered judgment overruling same. From this judgment the defendant prosecutes the appeal herein.

At the hearing there was no testimony introduced, which relates to the execution of the indorsements, or to the authority of Wise, except that of the witness Suggs, who testified that Wise made the indorsements in question, and that, at the time of making same, the said Wise — to quote the language of the witness — “was vice president and general manager of the Greenville Gas & Fuel Company, in some respects.” When this testimony was introduced, the plaintiff offered in evidence the several notes and the in-dorsements thereon, to the introduction of which the defendant objected on grounds which are specifically stated, and which are to the general effect that the execution of-the indorsements is not shown to be authorized by the defendant. The objection was overruled by the trial court, and the notes and indorsements were admitted in evidence. Upon the evidence which has been stated, the trial court based its judgment overruling the defendant’s plea of privilege.

Although unimportant, perhaps, in answering the particular questions which are certified herein, it may be proper to state further that when the notes and indorsements had been introduced in evidence, as above stated, the defendant offered testimony to prove that Wise had no authority, real or apparent, to execute the indorsements in behalf of the defendant company; and that the company had not ratified the acts of Wise in making the indorsements. Upon objection from the plaintiff, the offer of this testimony was rejected.

The questions certified herein by the Court of Civil Appeals read as follows;

“First Question. Did the trial court commit error in permitting appellee to introduce in evidence the notes together with the indorsements thereon, over the objection made by appellant?
“Second Question. In view of the fact that appellant had denied under oath the authority of its vice president to sign the indorsements on the note, was it necessary for plaintiff on the trial of the plea of privilege to prove that L. K. Wise was authorized to make the in-dorsements for the corporation, or that the defendant corporation held the said Wise out as having such authority or that it ratified the acts of said Wise in so doing, before the same could be offered in evidence in the hearing on the plea of privilege?
“Third Question. If the second question above has_ been answered in the negative, then can the defendant on a hearing on a plea of privilege defeat the jurisdiction of the court to try the case in McLennan county by proving the negative of each of the issues asked about in question No. 2?”

When a defendant has duly asserted his statutory privilege of being sued in the county of his domicile, his plea should be sustained unless facts which deprive him of such privilege are proved, as well as pleaded, by his adversary. Coalson v. Holmes, 111 Tex. 509, 240 S. W. 896; Hilliard v. Wilson, 76 Tex. 184, 13 S. W. 25; Lindheim v. Muschamp, 72 Tex. 35, 12 S. W. 125; Cohen v. Munson, 59 Tex. 237; Lasater v. Waits, 95 Tex. 555, 68 S. W. 500.

As depriving the defendant company of such ■ privilege in the present ease, the plaintiff, in its controverting affidavit, pleads a contract in writing by the defendant to perform, in McLennan county, the obligation sued on. This contract is alleged to consist of the indorsements themselves, the legal import of which indorsements is to impose upon the defendants the obligation to pay the notes in the county specified in the notes. In order, therefore, for the suic to be maintained in McLennan county, it was necessary for the plaintiff to prove that the execution of the indorsements is imputable to the defendant. In the absence of an affidavit by the defendant, denying the execution of the indorsements, the writings themselves would have supplied the required proof of this fact, by virtue of the provisions of article 8734 of the Revised Statutes 1925. But when the defendant filed its affidavit, in which it denies executing or authorizing the indorsements, the value of the writings, as evidence of their having been executed under the defendant’s authority, was destroyed; and the plaintiff became charged with the burden of proving, by extrinsic evidence, the authority of Wise to execute the indorsements in behalf of the defendant. Robertson v. Du Bose, 76 Tex. 6, 13 S. W. 300; Brashear v. Martin, 25 Tex. 203; Henderson Mercantile Co. v. Bank, 100 Tex. 347, 99 S. W. 850.

As furnishing such extrinsic evidence, the plaintiff relies solely upon testimony which shows that Wise was “the vice president and general manager of the Greenville Gas & Fuel Company, in some respects,” when the indorsements were made by him.

The mere fact that Wise was the vice president of the company did not impliedly invest him with authority to make contracts for the company. Henderson Mercantile Co. v. Bank, 100 Tex. 347, 99 S. W. 850.

It is believed, too, that the fact that Wise was “general manager” of the company “in some respects” does not imply an authority in him coextensive with the general scope of the company’s business. An authority of limited scope is shown by this proof, which is the only proof that tends to show any authority at all. Standing alone, this proof leaves no room for an implied authority respecting the company’s affairs generally. It is not thought that the simple circumstance that an agent is authorized to act for his principal in some unidentified respects tends to prove that the agent has authority to bind his principal in a particular matter in which the agent purports to act for the principal; or that he is held out as' apparently 'having such authority. For in. such a case, the proof of authority or apparent authority in the agent to do the particular act in behalf of the principal would rest in the conduct and declarations of the agent alone; which, according to the authorities, is not permissible.

The plaintiff having failed to prove that the acts of Wise, in executing the indorse-ments, are imputable to the defendant company, the indorsements are not evidence of the alleged fact that the defendant has contracted in writing to perform, in McLennan county, the obligations sought to- be enforced in this suit.

We recommend that both questions Nos. 1 and 2, as certified, be answered, “Tes.”

OURETON, O. J.

Opinion of the Commission of Appeals answering certified questions is adopted, and ordered certified to the Court of Civil Appeals. 
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