Goodhue v. J. Meyers & Co.

West, Associate Justice.

A judgment by default was taken on the 18th of November, 1882, by appellees against the appellant for three hundred and thirty-one TV¡r dollars ($331.76), being on an open account for goods, wares and merchandise sold to him.

On the 20th of November, 1882, appellant filed his motion to set aside this judgment, and to permit him to file an answer setting up just and meritorious defenses to the appellees’ cause of action. The motion was based on two grounds: first, the serious sickness and absence from that cause of his attorney to whom he had confided the duty of filing his answer and of setting up the defenses upon Avhich he relied to defeat appellees’ recovery. His own severe illness at that time and at the time Avhcn the motion was made, he also set forth as a reason why he had been unable to move in the matter so as to avoid a judgment by default.

*407His second ground was, that he had a just and meritorious defense to the suit itself, and that he had fully explained to his absent attorney the nature of this defense and put him in possession of the facts on which it was based, and expected him to set that up in an answer in time to avoid a judgment by default. This defense was in substance to the following effect: That appellant, on or about the-5th of June, 1882 (this suit was filed in September, 1882), after the indebtedness sued on had accrued, entered into an agreement and contract with appellees, providing for its payment by appellant in a particular way; that at the date last mentioned the firm of Hostetter & McCoy, who were at that time also indebted to appellees, and who shortly afterwards became indebted to appellant, had on hand in the Colcasieu river a lot of railroad cross-ties, two thousand three hundred in number; that appellant purchased from them with the knowledge and consent of appellees for the sum of thirty-six cents a piece, amounting in all to the sum of $828; that by a contract and agreement then entered into between the appellant and the appellees, it was arranged and understood that appellant was to ship the ties to Houston, he having already sold them to the H. & Texas Central E. E. Co. at fifty cents per cross-tie; that at this time he made an agreement with appellees to pay over tó them the amount of money that would be due to Hostetter & McCoy for the ties, on their account, and the appellees agreed to give appellant credit on his account (being the account sued on) with appellees the amount of the difference after paying to Hostetter & McCoy the amount due them by appellant on the purchase of the cross-ties, and the amount for which the cross-ties Avere sold to the railroad company, being at the rate of fifty cents per tie, and amounting to the sum of $1,150. But that just before the ties were delivered to the railroad company, about July 9, 1882, the appellees unlaAvfully took possession of said ties and sold them to other parties, and deprived appellant of the amount of profit he would have made on said sale. That the amount of profit appellant would have received and realized on said sale, which had already been made to the railroad company through their agent W. D. Cleveland, of Houston, after deducting the three cents to be paid for the timber in each tie, and two cents on each tie for the expenses of loading them on the cars, Avould have been nine cents on each Me; that clear of all expenses of all kinds there would have remained $207; and by the acts of the appellees in violation of their agreement with him, he was damaged and injured in that amount. The appellant further alleges, in connection with this contract of appellees, in reference to *408the sale and appropriation of the proceeds of the sale of said ties, that the firm of Hostetter & McCoy were, in connection with said contract, indebted to appellant in the sum of $33.16, and that appellees agreed and promised to pay or give the appellant a credit on his account with them for the sum of $33.16, when the said ties should be delivered to the railroad company; that they would not give him this credit, and he has in addition to his other losses sustained also this loss of $33.16. He also claimed that appellees owed him, growing out of this transaction, the sum of $25, expended by him in bringing the ties down the Colcasieu river to the city of Lake Charles, where the appellees, in violation of their contract ■with appellant, seized the said ties. The appellant also sets up that the appellees at the time, and before he had quite consummated the contract with Hostetter & McCoy, knew of the same, and were fully informed as to the terms and objects of it, and that at that time an arrangement was made, agreed upon and entered into between appellees and appellant in regard to the purchase of said ties, and based on the same, and appellees were then and there fully informed of the particulars of appellant’s contract with the II. & T. C. R. R. Co. as to the ties, and as to the price agreed to be paid appellant for them; that it was then understood and agreed by and between appellees and appellant, that the whole transaction then on hand -was made and intended to enable the appellant to make and realize the profit expected, so that he might 'apply the amount so realized to the payment of the debt due by appellant to appellees, being the debt sued on in this case; that it was arranged and agreed that all the money arising from the transaction was to pass through the hands of the appellees, so that they could apply the amount received to the payment of the debt owing to them from appellant, and also a debt due them from Hostetter & McCoy. Appellant further says that he obtained the actual possession of the ties, and had them in his possession from the 5th to the 9fch of June, 1882, and that appellees during that period of time recognized his possession of them as lawful, and in accordance with their contract, and insisted on appellant’s having the ties loaded on the cars and shipped by him as fast as cars could be procured; and that when appellees seized the ties ■ in violation of their said contract with appellant, a portion of the ties’ were actually on the cars and ready to be shipped to Houston in pursuance of the arrangement and agreement between the appellant and the appellees above detailed. To this the appellant made oath.

We think that, under the facts sworn to by the appellant, and *409there was no counter-affidavit filed, that he sufficiently accounted for his own absence and that of his attorney from the court house, and for his failure to file his defenses in time. We are also of the opinion that if all the facts set forth in the affidavit are true, and can be sustained by competent evidence, that the subject matter of the transactions are so closely connected with the debt sued on, that he could set up these matters by way of defense and offset to the account of appellees under the contract and agreement to that effect alleged to have existed between the appellees and appellant.

[Opinion delivered January 26, 1883.]

This case is a great deal-stronger than that of Power v. Gillespie, 27 Tex., 370, or the case of Watson v. Newsham, 17 Tex., 437, or that of Foster y. Martin, 20 Tex., 118, and differs from them in the facts. In this case, unlike the others, the motion was made promptly and in ample time. It also contains a good and sufficient excuse why his defense was not filed before default day, and, unlike the cases cited, he sets forth and shows in detail all the particulars of a defense, "which, if sustained on the trial by evidence to the satisfaction of a jury, will entitle him to a reduction of the appellees’ demand.

Under all the circumstances, the case seems to come rather within the rule laid down in Dorn v. Best, 15 Tex., 66, and Spencer v. Kennard, 12 Tex., 187, than that of Power v. Gillespie or Foster v. Martin.

The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.