157 S.W. 457 | Tex. App. | 1913
By a written contract H. Brodkey agreed to purchase from M. A. Lesser certain real estate and to pay therefor the sum of $3,800. Brodkey having refused to comply with the contract, Lesser first sued him for a specific performance of the contract, but later dismissed the suit, sold the property for $3,100, and then instituted this suit to recover of Brodkey the difference between the sum so realized and the contract price as damages for the breach of the contract. In addition to a general demurrer and general denial, Brodkey by special plea alleged the former suit by Lesser to specifically enforce the contract and claimed that, as Lesser had thus elected that remedy, he could not thereafter maintain this suit for damages for breach of the contract, as the two remedies were inconsistent and both available to Lesser at the time of the institution of the first suit. Lesser recovered damages in the sum of $300, and from that judgment Brodkey has appealed.
The undisputed evidence shows that the former suit by Lesser to specifically enforce the contract was instituted and dismissed before he instituted the present suit, and appellant insists that the court erred in refusing to instruct a verdict in his favor based upon those facts.
This is the only assignment of error presented in the record and is predicated upon the proposition asserted in the special answer that at the time of the institution of the former suit Lesser had two valid, available, and inconsistent remedies, one of which was asserted in that suit, and the other was the remedy asserted in the present suit, and that his election to resort to the remedy for specific enforcement was a waiver of the remedy to sue for damages for the breach of the contract. In 15 Cyc. 259, it is said: "By a preponderance of authority the mere commencement of any proceeding to enforce one remedial right in a court having jurisdiction to entertain the same is such a decisive act as constitutes a conclusive election, barring the subsequent prosecution of the inconsistent remedial right. But in some of the states it is held that the mere commencement of a proceeding is not such a conclusive election as will prevent plaintiff from obtaining a dismissal thereof and from instituting another proceeding to enforce an inconsistent remedial right." Many Texas authorities are cited in appellant's brief, such as Greenwall Theatrical Circuit Co. v. Markowitz,
Furthermore, in order to sustain this special defense, it was incumbent upon appellant, at all events, to show that a specific enforcement of the contract by the suit first instituted was available; otherwise it cannot be said that appellee had two remedies from which he could elect. Bandy v. Cates,
The judgment is affirmed.