The Southland Life Insurance Company was a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Texas, doing a life insurance business in said state, with its principal office in the city of Dallas, Dallas county, Tex. The appellee, San Antonio Life Insurance Company, was a corporation doing a life insurance business in said state, with its principal office in the city of San Antonio, Bexar county, Tex., and the appellant, L. T. Adams, was a resident citizen of Jacksboro, Jack county, Tex. In October, 1910, L. T. Adams was the agent of the San Antonio Life Insurance Company, and during that month Roland J. Johnson of Young county, Tex., made application to said Adams for a life insurance policy on his life to be issued by that company. Later the policy thus applied for was issued and delivered to the said Johnson by the San Antonio Life Insurance Company by and through its said agent, L. T. Adams. Adams took Johnson’s note in the sum of $1,160.20, evidencing the amount of the first premium agreed to be paid by Johnson for the insurance. This note is dated November 23, 1910, and is made payable to the order of the said L. T. Adams on or before the 15th day of January, 1911. On the 19th day of January, 1911, L. T. Adams, having ceased to be the agent of the San Antonio Life Insurance Company, represented to Roland J. Johnson that he was then agent for the Southland Life Insurance Company and desired to change the said Johnson’s policy for one in the Southland Life Insurance Company. Adams said:
“I will take up the San Antonio policy and send it in for cancellation and get you [Johnson] one in the Southland.”
Johnson then gave Adams the insurance policy which had been issued to him by the San Antonio Life Insurance Company, and also at the instance of Adams gave him an application for a similar policy to be issued by the Southland Life Insurance Company. For the policy to be issued by the Southland Life Insurance Company on the application just mentioned Johnson executed and delivered to the said Adams at the date of said application his promissory note in the sum of $1,160.20, and Adams returned to Johnson the note which Johnson had given for the policy issued by the San Antonio Life Insurance Company. The note given by Johnson to Adams for the policy to be issued to him by the Southland Life Insurance Company was dated January 19, 1911, and payable to the order of the said Adams on or before the 1st day of October, 1911. When Johnson I delivered to L. T. Adams the policy issued *612 to him by the San Antonio Life Insurance Company Adams sent it to that company for cancellation, but cancellation was refused and the policy returned to Johnson about the 23d day of January, 1911. The South-land Life Insurance Company denied Johnson’s application given to Adams for a policy of insurance in that company and refused to issue to him such a policy. When the Southland Life Insurance Company refused to issue Johnson the policy applied for in that company, it wrote him a letter to that effect, and advised him that if he had paid the agent anything to recall it at once. Johnson mailed this letter to Adams and requested him to return the note given for the policy of insurance which he expected would be issued to him by the Southland Life Insurance Company. Johnson says the exact date when this letter was received by him and forwarded to Adams he does not remember. Adams says he received the letter of Johnson demanding a return of the note about March 15, 1911. Adams did not return the note to Johnson, and did not reply in any manner to the demand for its return. He had, prior to such demand, and about 30 days after receiving the note from Johnson, sold and transferred the note to the Eirst National Bank of Jacksboro, Jack county, Tex. Some time during the latter part of September, or about the 1st of October, 1911, Johnson received notice from the First National Bank of Jacksboro that it held the note; that it would be due on the first day of October, 1911, and must be paid. This was the first actual notice Johnson had received that Adams had sold and assigned the note. He testified that from the 19th day of January, 1911, until about the 1st day of October, 1911, he did not know where the note he had given for the policy to be issued by the Southland Life Insurance Company was. Except the demand made upon Adams in March, 1911, to return him the note, Johnson made no effort, so far as the record discloses, to find out where the, note was or to obtain its possession. About December 19, 1911, Johnson, upon demand of the First National Bank of Jacksboro, paid to that bank the note of $1,160.20 given by him to Adams for the policy which Adams promised and agreed should be issued by the Southland Life Insurance Company, and neither Adams nor the Southland Life Insurance Company has ever repaid Johnson or the appellee herein the amount of said note. After the San Antonio Life Insurance Company refused to cancel the .policy delivered by it to Roland J. Johnson and returned said policy to the said Johnson, he (Johnson) retained the same, and thereafter, on June 21, 1913, acknowledged that he owed to that company, as the first annual premium for the policy so returned, the sum of $1,160.20, and in consideration of $10 paid and the further consideration of a receipt for the amount of said first annual premium, sold and transferred, by an instrument in writing, to the San Antonio Life Insurance Company, all his right, title, and interest in and to the said sum of $1,160.20 paid by Johnson on the note given by him to Adams for the insurance policy which Adams agreed the Southland Life Insurance Company would issue and the claim he had against Adams by reason of Adams’ sale and conversion of said note, and expressly conferred upon said San Antonio Life Insurance Company the right to collect said claim or to sue upon it. Johnson testified that, when Adams made the statement to him that he (Adams) would have the policy in the San Antonio Life Insurance Company canceled, he believed him, that said statement induced him to change the policy, and that he would not have given Adams a new note if he had not made that statement. Having thus acquired the said claim of Roland J. Johnson against the appellant, Adams, the San Antonio Life Insurance Company instituted this suit upon it and made the Southland Life Insurance Company a party to the suit.
The Southland Life Insurance Company answered by a general demurrer, a general denial, and by special answer alleged that, if there was any liability on its part, it was secondary only, that the appellant, L. T. Adams, was solely liable, and prayed that, if any judgment should be rendered against it, it have judgment for a like amount over and against the said L. T. Adams, and for such other relief as it was entitled to. Appellant, Adams, answered by demurrers, pleas of res adjudicata and of limitation of two years, and by a special answer denying the allegations of appellee’s petition. The plea of res adjudicata is, in substance, that at the March term of the district court in and for Jack county, Tex., A. D. 1913, in a certain suit therein pending, numbered on the docket of said court 1742, wherein the San Antonio Life Insurance Company was plaintiff, and this appellant, L. T. Adams, was defendant, the same cause of action was pleaded in that suit, and set out in plaintiff’s petition in this suit, together with other transactions therein sued on, as is fully shown by plaintiff’s original petition filed therein, a certified copy of which is thereto attached and marked “Exhibit A,” and made a part thereof. The plea of limitation is as follows:
“Defendant, further answering herein, shows to the court that said cause of action,' as set out in plaintiff’s amended original petition, is barred by the statute of limitation of two years, for the reason that said plaintiff alleges and it is so shown that prior to the alleged transfer and assignment of said claim by said Roland J. Johnson to the said San Antonio Life Insurance Company the said Roland J. Johnson made and demanded a return to him of the note given by the said Roland J. Johnson in payment of the premium for a policy to be issued by the South-land Life Insurance Company; that said demand was made at said time, and limitation against the alleged claim of the said Roland J. Johnson began to run from said time; that suit *613 thereon on said claim was not brought by said Roland J. Johnson or this plaintiff until the 14th day of August, A. D. 1913. And in the alternative said L. T. Adams further pleads that, if said cause of action did not accrue and limitations did not begin to run at date of demand, said limitations against said claim began to run from the date of the transfer of said note by said L. T. Adams to the First National Bank of Jacksboro, Tex. Wherefore defendant L. T. Adams prays that said claim be declared barred by the statute of limitations of two years, because more than two years have elapsed since plaintiff’s cause of action accrued and the filing of this suit, and that he be dismissed with his cost, and such other and further relief both general and special.”
Other portions of the answer need not be stated. By supplemental petition the San Antonio Life Insurance Company demurred to that portion of the appellant’s answer pleading res adjudicata in bar of its action upon the ground, in substance, that said plea showed upon its face that the suit in the district court of Jack county, Tex., in 1913 did not include the cause of action sued on in this suit, and this demurrer was by the court sustained. The court, after hearing the evidence of appellant and appellee, a jury being waived, rendered judgment in favor of appellee, the San Antonio Life Insurance Company, against appellant, L. T. Adams, in the sum of $1,160.20, with interest from December 1, 1914, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, together with costs, and further adjudged that the San Antonio Ufe Insurance Company take nothing by its suit against defendant the Southland Life Insurance Company. Motion for new trial by Adams being overruled, he appeals.
“The court erred in sustaining the exceptions of the plaintiff, San Antonio Life Insurance Company, to the defendants’ plea of res adjudi-cata, and in holding that said plea shows upon its face that the suit at Jacksboro, Tex., therein pleaded was an entirely different transaction from the one set up in case at bar, as shown in defendant Adams’ motion for new trial, paragraph 1, and bill of exception No. 1.”
We conclude there was no error in this ruling of the court. The petition filed in the suit brought in Jack county, was, as is alleged in appellant’s plea of res adjudicata, made a part of said plea, and shows, we think, as held by the trial court, that the cause of action declared on in that suit was entirely different from the one heroin sued on.
“I sent the letter declining the application to Mr. Adams. I don’t remember the date, but it must have been two or three months after I got the letter from the Southland Life Insurance Company stating that I was rejected, and if I had paid the agent anything to recall it at once.”
In another place in his testimony he said:
“I don’t remember the exact date that the Southland Life Insurance Company wrote me a Jotter notifying me that I had been rejected, but when I got the letter I sent it on to Mr. Adams. It was some little time after the 19th day of January, 1911, but I don’t know for sure just when it was.”
On cross-examination he said:
“I don’t remember just when it was that Dr. Turner was there. I didn’t keep any date of it. It must have been something like a month after I received my -application back from the South-land Life. ⅜ ⅞ * It was after Dr. Turner’s visit that I received the letter from the South-land Life Insurance Company. It gave no reason for turning me down; just said: ‘You are hereby notified that you have been rejected, and if you have paid the agent anything to recall it at once.’ ”
Tire appellant, L. T. Adams, testified in this connection that he received the letter from Mr. Johnson demanding a return of his note about the 15th of March, 1911. The evidence is undisputed that Adams made no reply to Johnson’s demand for the return of the note and failed or refused to return it, and there is absolutely no evidence that he made any further demand for a return of the note, or exercised any diligence whatever to ascertain whether it was still held by Adams or had been sold and transferred to some third party. In other words, the record is bafren of any evidence showing or tending t'o show that Johnson used any diligence whatever to discover the conversion of the note by Adams. In this state of the evidence the plea of limitation interposed by the appellant should have prevailed.
The other assignments need not be considered. What we have said effectually disposes of the case. The case seems to have been fully developed, and we shall render in this court such judgment as we think should have been rendered in the court below. It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the district court be reversed, and that judgment be here rendered for appellant.
Reversed and rendered.
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