In 1913 the Hickcox-Whyman Engineering Corporation was under contract with the Fairview Land & Cattle Company to drill five certain wells on the property of said Land & Cattle Company, four of which are designated in this record as the “four small wells”; the other as “the large well.” The wells were to be dug in accordance with certain specifications, providing for certain excavations and tanks of certain dimensions, with dykes, with a stipulation in said contract that if the same were not completed within the time specified, $10 per day for delay in the completion of the small wells and $20 per day as to the large well would be paid as liquidated damages by the Engineering Company. The Foos Gas Engine Company, the appellant herein, was a creditor of the Engineering Company to the amount of about $7,000, and sued said company in the district court of Potter county, aiding it with a 'writ of garnishment, served upon the Fairview Land & Cattle CompanjL
The appellee Land & Cattle Company answered by setting up its contract with the Engineering Company that the latter had agreed to construct and equip the four small wells at a cost of $4,400, and a large well at a cost of $3,900, alleging a failure to construct all the wells within the time prescribed, or according to specifications, and that on August 7, 1913, after notice, it declared the contracts at an end, and resumed possession of its lands; that the work done upon the four small wells was not worth over $3,514.34, pleading that it had expended certain amounts and was required to expend a further amount for the completion of said small wells; and that, after deducting the *384 liquidated damages, owing by tbe Engineering Company, ior delay to all the wells, it did not owe said engineering corporation more than $1,513.24, tendering the same into court. The appellee Land & Cattle Company also filed a separate cross-action and enumerated certain parties who were claiming liens upon its property on account of labor performed or material furnished, making them parties to the suit.
There were also several interventions in the case by other parties holding the same character of claims, setting up their alleged liens and praying for a participation in the fund.
We particularly call attention to the intervention of the Amarillo Hardware Company, claiming an indebtedness of $668.51, against the engineering corporation, with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, based upon a Judgment obtained September 30, 1913, against said corporation, the Hardware Company also alleging that on the 7th day of July, 1913, the defendant engineering corporation executed and delivered to it an assignment and transfer of $3,600, out of any sum due by the Land & Cattle Company, to secure the payment of the account, which thereafter had been merged into the judgment, and a certain note of $3,348.24, dated May 2, 1913, with 10 per cent, interest and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, alleging the payment of the note, but also claiming the collateral as a continuous security for the payment of the $668.61.
D. It. Hiekcox and one Busby were sureties for the engineering corporation, on the $3,300 note, executed by it, as principal, to the Hardware Company. The total satisfaction to the Hardware Company of said note consisted of a payment of $1,725.19 by Hick-cox; the balance paid by the engineering corporation. Hiekcox also intervened, alleging his previous suretyship on said note, the total satisfaction of same as above stated, and the part payment by him of the $1,-725, and a transfer of said note for the balance paid by him> also setting up the transfer of the well-drilling contract to the Hardware Company as collateral security for the note, and that by his part payment he was subrogated to that company’s rights in the sum paid, with interest.
The case was submitted to the jury upon special issues, who found that the engineering corporation did not substantially construct the four small wells and reservoir in compliance with the written contract, and that these particular wells were received by the appellee on August 7, 1913; that it was necessary for appellee Land & Cattle Company to expend $600, to have the wells and reservoirs substantially conform to the contracts; that the larger well was mutually abandoned on July 1, 1913; that the company, under the contracts (excluding the question of liquidated damages), was indebted to the engineering corporation, for work on the four small wells, in the sum of $3,800; that the Land Company terminated the contract for the larger well on July 1,1913, and answered that said company did not have in its possession any effects of the engineering corporation, but that certain machinery of the value of $1,600 was still upon its lands. The record also shows that the Land Company, on August 7, 1913, wrote the engineering corporation that the latter had breached the contract, declaring the same at an end, stating that it would resume exclusive possession of its premises, and did not waive its right to damages. The Fair-view Land & Cattle Company made a motion for judgment as to the liquidated damages, claiming delay of 83 days of the four small wells in violation of the contract, at $10 per day, aggregating $830, and a delay as to the large well of 21 days, at $20 per day, aggregating $420. The appellant and appel-lee Fair view Land & Cattle Company seem to agree, according to their briefs, that this motion was sustained by the court, which accounts for the judgment against the Land & Cattle Company, in the sum of $2,550, the court deducting $1,250 as liquidated damages.
The appellants’ thirty-first and thirty-second assignments are, in substance, as follows: (1) That the trial court erred in entering judgment for the sum of $2,550, because the jury found that the garnishee owed the engineering corporation, at the time it filed its answer, the sum of $3,800, and that said garnishee had in its possession effects belonging to the engineering corporation of the value of $1,600, as evidenced by the jury’s findings; (2) the court erred in entering judgment in accordance with the motion of the garnishee, and allowing the Land & Cattle Company the offset as liquidated damages, the sum of $10 a day, for the reason that there is no testimony showing that the garnishee suffered any damages on account of the wells not having been completed.
Tbe jury found that none of tbe small wells were completed according to specifications wben tbe appellee took possession. Tbe testimony was that tbe Land & Cattle Company intended to use tbe land around tbe wells during 1913, for tbe purpose of irrigation, but were not able to do so, these wells being intended for that purpose; that tbe company broke tbe land, leveled tbe same for irrigation, and constructed ditches, and shows that if tbe four small wells bad been finished by May 15th, it would bave been in time to bave farmed the lands for that year, and if it could bave obtained tbe 'large well by June 10th, other land also could bave been irrigated and farmed by tbe use of that well; that tbe company had men and teams for tbe purpose of doing tbe farm work, and used them to some extent, but without any benefit, and made no crops' at all, and unable to make any for that year, not being able to plant anything. It is easily seen that tbe damages resulting to tbe Land Company are difficult of ascertainment. We think tbe compensation for the. breach was evidently fixed in consequence of this difficulty, in estimating such damages. Indianola v. Railway Co.,
“If the damages be in their very nature uncertain or their amount indeterminate, the sum specified will be treated as fixing by stipulation the amount of the recovery.” Collier v. Betterton,87 Tex. 442 ,29 S. W. 468 .
We are not able to say that tbe stipulations in tbe contract are obviously unconscionable; and, the parties having provided for the compensation to be paid in tbe event of tbe loss, under the conditions as shown here, we think the contract should control.
“Upon appeal or writ of error, an issue not submitted and not requested, shall be deemed as found by the court in such manner as to support the judgment, provided there be evidence to sustain such finding.”
Tbe trial court, in submitting tbe issue of damages, specifically excluded tbe question of liquidated damages from tbe jury, and tbe parties were upon notice of tbe manner of submission, as well as tbe fact of intended reservation by tbe court of that issue.' Tbe trial court could not bave submitted actual damages in this case resulting from delay as to tbe use of the land because none were proven, nor could bave been proven. Justice Williams of tbe Supreme Court said, in Moore v. Pierson,
“The consequences must necessarily be that when the trial court had expressly submitted some issues and excluded others, and neither party has put in writing a request for the submission of those excluded, they must be regarded in the appellate court as having acquiesced in such action and consented for the trial judge to determine from the evidence the issue not sub: mitted.”
“the liability ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ must be referred to tbe terms of tbe agreement to cancel; and, in order to interpret that agreement, we must look to *386 the intention of the parties, the character of the contract to be canceled, and the situation of the parties at the time, as well as the attending facts and circumstances which throw light upon the question of intent. If it appears from these facts and circumstances that it was not the intention of the parties that the.act of cancellation should have a retroactive effect to destroy previously vested rights, then the contract will be so construed as to preserve those rights.” Ala. Oil & Pipe Line Co. v. Sun Co.,99 Tex. 612 ,92 S. W. 254 (citing’ numerous authorities).
If the conversation mentioned could be stretched to a mutual abandonment or rescission of the contract, we think under the conditions that the damages and matured rights were not waived. Whatever view the trial court considered the matter, we think, in permitting liquidated damages as to the large well, his action was correct.
“It is a well-settled rule that before subrogation can be enforced the debt must be paid and substitution cannot be made as long as the debt of the party ⅜ ⅜ ⅜ remains unsatisfied.
The point is also made that the jury found, in response to a submission by the court, that it was agreed that the assignment by the engineering corporation of its well-drilling contract to the Amarillo Hardware Company should not pass as security for the payment made by D. L. Hickcox to said Amarillo Hardware Company when the note was satisfied. There was no such issue made in this record, and should not have been submitted. Appellant’s own statements under the assignment exhibits its inappropriateness:
“E. W. Hardin, the president of the Amarillo Hardware Company, testified that the contract of the Pairview Land & Cattle Company, was sold to the Amarillo Hardware Company, with the understanding that the same would be accepted by the Cattle Company, which was not done, and thereafter the Amarillo Hardware Company, by agreement, held the same for the purpose of securing the indebtedness due it by the engineering corporation, which indebtedness consisted of one note for $3,848.24, and an open account, which was reduced to judgment, in the sum of $668.61, on September 30, 1913.”
“If the surety has made partial payments upon a debt secured by a mortgage from the principal debtor, then upon foreclosure any surplus proceeds over the amount needed to pay the creditor in full must be applied to repay the surety.” ■
See, also, Bowen v. Barksdale, 33 S. C. 142,
There can be no objection to the claim of the Amarillo Haijdware Company, which was reduced to judgment before this litigation in the amount of $668.51, except that under the evidence it did not have the collateral, which is wholly untenable.
Believing that no complaint, sufficient to reverse the court’s action, referable to the question of liquidated damages (deducted by the court from the jury’s verdict), is presented, and that the claim of Hickcox is correctly sustained in the main, and that the Amarillo Hardware Company’s recovery cannot be denied, appellant’s objection against the laborers’ and materialmen’s claims, even if any were tenable, are wholly fruitless to it as a practical question — the two claims mentioned, with the laborers and material-men out of the way, would more than absorb the judgment.
Upon the whole, we think the judgment of the lower court should be affirmed. Affirmed.
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