185 S.W. 323 | Tex. App. | 1916
We do not think the action of the court made the basis of the first assignment, in overruling the objection to a question propounded to appellant as a witness, which he refused to answer, was error. The question was not an improper one, in view of the issues made by the pleadings, and appellee had a right to ask it.
In his charge, the correctness of which appellant did not question in the court below and does not question here, the court instructed the jury to find for appellee if they believed appellant was not the owner of the drafts sued upon, or if they believed he "acted together with the National Novelty Import Company or C. P. Blackstad (its president), or either of them, in defrauding" appellee; and to find for appellant if they believed he purchased the drafts, "paying therefor a valuable consideration, before maturity thereof, without any knowledge of any defense" of appellee to same. The verdict involves findings against appellant on each of those issues. The disposition which should be made of the appeal depends upon whether there was testimony to support such findings, or any of them, or not.
The contract covering the sale and purchase of the jewelry was in writing. It was not copied in full in the record sent to this court, but, from a brief of it given there, it appears that the jewelry consisted of "many hundreds of articles," that appellee was to pay $296 for same, that the import company "warranted" the goods and agreed that appellee might exchange any of same for other jewelry it handled, and further agreed to make and deliver to appellee a bond to secure him in the performance by it of its undertaking. The bond was afterwards delivered to appellee.
Appellee and appellant, each testifying in his own behalf, were the only witnesses. Appellee testified that he was induced by representations made to him by the import company's selling agent as to the quality of the jewelry, which proved to be false, to buy same. But he further testified that he "could not say that all the jewelry was bad," and that in every instance when he complained to the import company about particular pieces of the jewelry, because they were not as it had represented and warranted them to be, the company promptly, as it had agreed to do, replaced such pieces with *324
others. If this testimony should be construed as sufficient to support a finding that the import company practiced fraud on appellee, its effect, it seems from the ruling made by the Supreme Court in Prouty v. Musquiz,
The judgment will be reversed, because without evidence sufficient to support it; and the cause will be remanded for a new trial, because the record indicates that other testimony on the issues referred to may be procurable.