DocketNumber: No. 952.
Judges: Hall
Filed Date: 3/29/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Appellee, Biggerstaff, instituted this suit in the county court to recover alleged damages for the breach of a contract by appellant, entered into between them on the 21st day of October, 1912. It is alleged that by the terms of the contract certain goods were sold to him, and that shipment should be made, unless otherwise ordered, on the 1st day of February, 1913; that it was afterwards agreed that shipment should be made on January 1, 1913, but that defendant negligently, carelessly, and without just excuse, failed and refused to make the shipment until about the latter part of March, 1913, resulting in plaintiff's damage. The defendant duly filed its plea of privilege to be sued in Dallas county, alleging that it is a corporation; that its place of residence and domicile was at the time of filing the suit, of service of process upon it, and at the time of tiling the plea, in the city of Dallas, in Dallas county; and that none of the exceptions to exclusive venue in the county of its residence existed.
The contract of sale provides that the goods purchased should be delivered on board the cars at Moline, Ill., that all payments should be made in Dallas, with express charges or by exchange on Dallas, St. Louis, and New York, and contains this paragraph:
"It is further covenanted and agreed that all rights, remedies and relief and all claims, causes of action or complaints, accruing or to accrue, to or by, for or against, either of the parties *Page 342 or the party to this contract, from any cause or by reason of any breach or any failure of either party to comply with this, or any part of this, or any other contract, as well as all payments to be made under or in pursuance of this contract, or any other contract, shall be and are hereby made performable and recoverable in the city and county of Dallas."
C. B. Marsh, manager of appellant company, testified that the Texas Moline Plow Company was a corporation, having its domicile, principal office, and place of business in the city of Dallas, in Dallas county, Tex., and has at all times prior to and since the filing of this suit had its domicile, principal office, and place of business in said city: that it has never had any local agent, agency, or representative, except its traveling men, in Childress county, or in any other county in Texas, except Dallas; that it did not have any agent or representative in Childress county on April 6, 1914, and had no agency or representative in that county at any time since or prior to said date. R.S. Fields, the traveling salesman of appellant company, testified that he knew appellee and sold him the goods in question during the month of October, 1912, in Dallas, at the company's place of business, while appellee was attending the Dallas Fair; that the written contract was executed there at that time. These facts being undisputed, we think under article 1830, Vernon's Sayles' Civil Statutes, §§ 5 and 24, the plea of privilege should have been sustained. Upon another ground, the plea of privilege was good: The above-quoted paragraph, by agreement, fixed the venue of any suit growing out of a breach of the contract in Dallas county. Such a stipulation has been held valid in this state (Ft. Worth Board of Trade v. Cooke,
The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to transfer the same to the proper court of Dallas county.
Reversed and remanded.
Fort Worth Board of Trade v. Cooke ( 1894 )
Southern Plow Co. v. Dunlap Hardware Co. ( 1920 )
Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Co. v. Mitchell ( 1926 )
Avery Co. of Texas v. Walker ( 1921 )
Garrett v. J. A. Hughes Grain Co. ( 1919 )
Bayou Properties Company v. Gobble ( 1961 )
Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company v. Evans ( 1971 )
Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company v. Evans ( 1972 )
Pavlidis v. Bishop & Babcock Sales Co. ( 1931 )
Howard v. Barthold & Casey, Inc. ( 1918 )
Merchants' Reciprocal Underwriters of Dallas v. First Nat. ... ( 1917 )