225 S.W. 866 | Tex. App. | 1920
The appellant brought this suit against the appellee in the county court of *867 Childress county, alleging that on January 1, 1920, he paid the defendant the sum of $380, for "board, tuition, supplies, and other incidentals necessary for the keeping of plaintiff's son for the remainder of the school year of the defendant, in its college;" that the plaintiff's son remained in the school only three or four days, and was forced to leave on account of the treatment received there; that, whether this last allegation be true or not, the son did leave in about four days. It was further alleged that the defendant was claiming to have enlisted the plaintiff's son under a contract signed by the plaintiff, which made its catalogue a part of such contract and that by the terms of said catalogue, so made a part of said contract, the plaintiff forfeited any right to the return of any money upon the voluntary withdrawal of the pupil; that the plaintiff was induced to sign such contract by the fraud of the defendant. The plaintiff sought to recover said sum of $380, less such amount as should be awarded the defendant for the services rendered while his son was in the school.
The defendant is a corporation having its principal office in Bexar county, and pleaded its privilege of being sued there. The court sustained this plea, and the appeal is from this judgment of the court.
The plaintiff lived in Childress county, and the contract between him and the defendant for the board and tuition of his son was evidenced by telegrams and letters exchanged by the plaintiff at Childress and the defendant at San Antonio. The plaintiff, by letter and telegram sent from Childress, accepted the offer made by the defendant and transmitted to the plaintiff at Childress by letter and telegram, so that it may be said that the contract was made in Childress. Houston Packing Co. v. Cuero Cotton Oil Mill Co.,
The plaintiff's petition is very meager and indefinite, and it is only by indulging every presumption in its favor that we can say that it states a cause of action at all. It seems to be the pleader's idea that the contract is severable, and that the plaintiff could recover when his son left school, whether or not there was any breach on the part of the defendant of any of its obligations under the contract. We doubt the sufficiency of the allegations to support a cause of action on this theory. Peirce v. Peacock Military College,