Forrest v. Hull

267 S.W. 308 | Tex. App. | 1924

This is a suit instituted by appellants T. S. Forrest, J. W. Forrest, and John P. Forrest, a partnership doing business under the style of John P. Forrest Company, against appellee to recover on a note for $116.50, and on a check for $125, both executed by appellee. Appellee pleaded payment. The cause was submitted to a jury on two special issues. In answer to the two issues the jury found that the note and check had been paid off and discharged, and the court rendered judgment that appellants recover nothing by their suit and pay all costs of suit. The evidence is sufficient to show that appellee paid off and discharged the indebtedness evidenced by the instruments upon which the suit was based.

There is no merit in the first, second, third, and fourth assignments of error. The letter written by appellants which was not allowed in evidence contained the self-serving declarations of appellants, and there was no evidence tending to show that it was ever mailed by appellants or received by appellee. It is complained that the court allowed P. T. Black to swear that he had borrowed money from appellants, for which he had paid at the rate of 10 per cent. per month for 10 months, the same amounting to $18.70 a month on $187. The notes of the stenographer attached by the court as a qualification of bills of exception 2, 3, and 4 show that no objection was urged to the statement as to 10 per cent. interest, and further show that appellants followed up the testimony objected to by drawing out of the witness Black all of the testimony objected to, and other facts in connection therewith. They are in no position to complain.

All of the testimony as to the injunction obtained by Black was withdrawn from the jury, except that an injunction had been issued. That action could not have injured appellants. Appellants first elicited from the witness the fact that Black owed Forrest Company, and that he was resisting payment.

The requirements of article 3660, Revised Statutes, as to depositions, were substantially complied with. The court in qualifying the bill of exceptions found that the officer who took the deposition of J. C. Hull, Jr., in New Orleans, La., had not complied with the statute as to the matters appearing on the envelope in which the deposition was returned the first time, and the court permitted it to be withdrawn and returned to the officer in Louisiana, upon an agreement that it might be done by the parties to this suit. Under that agreement the notary public had certified that the answers of the witness were signed by him, and he had then sealed them up in an envelope with the commission and interrogatories and cross-interrogatories, and had written his name across the seal, and indorsed on the envelope the names of the parties to the suit and of the witness, had directed it to the clerk issuing the commission, and then had placed that *309 envelope in another envelope, and had addressed the package to the clerk of the court from which the commission had issued. The objection seems to be aimed at the fact that the deposition was put into two envelopes instead of one. There was a substantial, if not literal, compliance with the statute, and the objections are without merit.

midpage