138 S.W. 197 | Tex. App. | 1911
This suit, although for $2,000 lease money as well as $27,800 damages, resolved itself into a contest over the amount of money due on a lease of certain land, which it was alleged was due appellees, John E. Linn and W. E. Austin, by R. L. Autrey, F. Kalb, H. Hamilton, and H. Prince, the appellants herein. There was a plea of misjoinder of parties and of privilege, general and special demurrers, and general denial and special answers. The First National Bank of Bay City was also made a party, which was, however, dismissed from the suit on the ground of misjoinder. The trial was had with a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellees for $2,000, with interest at 6 per cent. from date of the judgment The evidence showed that appellants bound themselves to pay appellees $2,000 for the lease of certain land, thought to be oil land, and then breached the contract, without fault on the part of appellees.
The first nine assignments of error are devoted to exceptions to the petition, all of which were overruled by the court, and all of those applying to misjoinder become mere abstractions in view of the action of the court in presenting but one issue to the jury, that of the liability of appellants for the $2,000 lease money. The petition stated a cause of action for that sum, and was not subject to general demurrer, and the issue as to the other damages arising from a breach of the contract having been eliminated from the case by the charge, it would be a useless and prodigal waste of time to discuss the question of the misjoinder of the causes of action. If the court overruled the pleas of misjoinder it gave appellants all they could possibly have been entitled to by ignoring in the charge every issue but the one of the money due under the written contract.
The petition stated that appellees owned a tract of land; that on June 30, 1908, Autrey, acting for himself and his silent partners, F. Kalb, H. Hamilton and H. Prince, entered into a lease contract with appellees whereby he bound appellants to pay appellees the sum of $2,000; that appellees had fully complied with their part of the contract and that appellants refused to comply with their part. These allegations were sufficient to admit evidence that would sustain them. The terms of the contract were full enough to sustain a judgment for specific performance.
The second, third, fifth, sixth, seventh, ninth, and tenth assignments of error are not followed by such statements as are required by the rules. The criticised parts of the petition should have been copied into the statement, instead of a reference to the record. However, we do not think the court erred in overruling the exceptions, and this is especially true in view of the action of the court in eliminating all issues except that as to the $2,000.
The eleventh assignment of error is not followed by a statement. Reference to the transcript is not a compliance with the rule and the assignment will be overruled.
The twelfth and thirteenth assignments of error should not be considered. The statements thereunder fail to show that a bill of exceptions was taken to the evidence objected to, if any objection was urged to the admission of the testimony in the court below. No reference even is made under the assignments of error to the record for bills of exceptions, perhaps for the good reason that none were reserved in the trial court.
The court did not err, as claimed in the fourteenth assignment of error, in permitting Linn to testify that he told Autrey in the presence of Nevill that he had made a lease contract with the latter, and that Autrey said that Nevill was a good man and did serviceable work for them. The evidence tended to show the agency of Nevill in making the lease contract for Autrey and his associates, and was clearly admissible, as was the testimony of Nevill that he was acting for appellants in making the lease contract. Appellants cite the case of Insurance Co. v. Hanna,
The direct evidence of Nevill in the trial of the cause is not a declaration of agency on the part of the agent condemned by the general rule. Those are declarations made in connection with the acts claimed to be those of an agent. The evidence of an agent in court as to his agency does not come within the rule that agency cannot be proved by the declarations of the agent. It is the well-established rule that while the declarations and admissions of the agent are inadmissible to prove agency, yet the agent himself is competent to testify as to the alleged agency and its extent. Cunningham v. Mathews (Tex.Civ.App.)
The sixteenth assignment presents the proposition that evidence "as to the transactions, discussions, or agreements between the said F. I. Nevill and the plaintiffs prior to the making of the contract of lease" was inadmissible to qualify, modify, or extend such contract. The evidence objected to had no such tendency, and it was not objected to on that ground, but the only objections urged were that it was not admissible, the suit being based on a written instrument, and that it was "irrelevant and immaterial and inadmissible to bind the parties." The assignment is overruled. There was no attempt to vary the terms of the written contract. This also disposes of the seventeenth assignment of error.
It was shown that Nevill was the agent of appellants and fully authorized to make the agreement he did with Gainor in regard to a vendor's lien note given by Hurlbut. Knowledge that Nevill had agreed to take up the note was brought directly home to Autrey, and he agreed to settle according to the agreement made by Nevill. Hamilton also knew of the agreement and ratified it. The pleadings justified the evidence.
The statement under the nineteenth assignment fails to set out the bill of exceptions on which the assignment of error is based, and it will not be considered. No such objections were urged to the evidence as are set out in the twentieth assignment of error, and it is overruled.
The twenty-first assignment of error is not followed by any statement and the twenty-second assignment does not refer to any bill of exceptions on which the objection to the testimony is based, and it will not be considered.
The court properly refused special charge No. 1 presented by appellants. Appellees had fully complied with every detail of their contract, and they were under no obligation to take up the vendor's lien note. Appellants had assumed that burden, and could not advance a failure to take up the note as a justification of their conduct in refusing to fulfill their contract. Nevill's testimony disclosed the true reason for the breach of the contract, and it was that the oil field was rapidly being converted into a salt water field.
The issues in the case were properly presented by the charge of the court, and the court properly refused to give instruction No. 2 asked by appellants. That instruction sought to inject a false issue into the case not sustained by the law or evidence. It was clearly an invasion of the facts, and was properly refused on that ground. The issues in the case having been presented by the general charge the court did not err in refusing the charge, the refusal of which is complained of in the twenty-fifth assignment of error.
The court instructed the jury as to the issues in the case and properly refused to make an issue of the matter of the assumption of the payment of the vendor's lien note by appellants. All the testimony tended to show that fact. The court properly refused to allow issues presented to the jury not made by the facts. This disposes of all the special charges requested by appellants, as well as of the objections to the general charge. Appellants were shown to be partners, and they were bound by the acts of their agent, acting within the scope of the agency, and by the acts of each partner, acting within the scope of the partnership. The evidence clearly met those conditions.
None of the assignments is well founded, and the judgment is affirmed.