172 S.W. 560 | Tex. App. | 1915
Appellant sued appellees in the court below for $250, the amount paid by appellant for a half interest in a cold drink and bowling alley business being conducted in Corsicana at the time of the purchase by appellee H. B. White. The ground upon which recovery was sought was that appellee White, at the time of the purchase, fraudulently concealed from appellant the existence of a mortgage securing a debt of approximately $275, under which the property was subsequently sold, because of appellant's inability to discharge the debt. Among other defenses, appellees alleged an agreement on the part of appellant to pay the mortgage debt. There was a jury trial, which resulted in verdict for appellees followed by similar judgment.
This is the second appeal of this case. Elliott v. Clark,
If, as a matter of fact, appellant, after ascertaining the existence of the debt and mortgage, and even though appellees had fraudulently concealed its existence, agreed, in consideration of appellee White surrendering to him his interest in the business, to assume and pay off such pre-existing debt, such agreement was lawful and enforceable, and the original concealment of the mortgage debt became immaterial.
Appellee testified to such an agreement and appellant denied it. The conflict was submitted to the jury, and the jury resolved the conflict in favor of appellee. Hence appellant's first and third assignments of error, which, in substance, assert that the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict and judgment, are not well taken, and must be overruled.
The fourth assignment complains of the fifth paragraph of the court's general charge, while the record fails to affirmatively show by bill of exceptions that the objections urged on appeal were urged in the court below and were presented to the trial judge before he read his general charge to the jury.
The fifth assignment shows a similar *561 condition. While the sixth and seventh assignments do disclose objections in the record, they fail to disclose that such objections were preserved by bill of exceptions.
None of them as a result comply with the recent amendments of the practice acts, and cannot be considered. Insurance Co. v. Rhoderick,
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.