228 S.W. 975 | Tex. App. | 1921
The answer of the defendants alleged the agreement under which the stock was sold to be substantially as alleged by plaintiffs, but specially answered that the said well had been drilled to said depth of 2,000 feet, as agreed. It was undisputed that a well to some considerable depth had been drilled by the defendants; that no oil or gas was discovered, and the well was abandoned and filled up and the lease forfeited. The depth of the well so drilled was the controverted issue of fact. The jury found that the defendants had not drilled the well to the depth provided by their contract, and this finding is supported by the evidence. On such finding the court rendered judgment for the plaintiffs for the recovery of the amounts paid the defendants for said stock.
The appellees object to the consideration of appellants' assignments on the ground that the statements made thereunder are not sufficient. The statements of the proceedings made in connection with the presentation of the assignments are not sufficient to enable us to pass on the assignments without an independent examination of the record and search for some of the proceedings, and we might properly refuse to consider these assignments. However, this is a matter within our discretion, and, as the examination of the record necessary to enable us to pass on the assignments has not entailed any undue amount of work, and there is not any real controversy as to such matters, we have considered the assignments on their merits.
The first two assignments complain of the overruling of appellants' exceptions to the plaintiffs' petition, on the ground of misjoinder of causes of action and of parties. We overrule these assignments. If it be true that the sale of stock to each purchaser was evidenced by a separate and independent contract between the defendants and such purchaser, and that each purchaser might have maintained a suit against the defendants for the breach of such contract, still each of these claims were assignable, and it was alleged that all claims sued on had been assigned to the plaintiffs. Under the allegations of the petition there were no several interests in any of the plaintiffs, but they owned jointly all the claims arising out of the sales to each of the purchasers named, including the plaintiffs themselves. It is well settled that a plaintiff may, subject to some limitations which we need not state, include in one suit separate and distinct demands held by the plaintiff against the same defendant. There seems to us to be no good reason why, under our liberal practice in regard to joinder of parties and causes of action, the plaintiffs might not litigate all the claims set out in the petition in this one suit. In fact, there is every reason to favor such course. All of the claims were based on a contract identical in terms, and the same state of facts is alleged as constituting a breach of each contract. See the following authorities for discussion of the practice of our courts in such matters. Clegg v. Varnell,
The third assignment complains of the admission of some testimony of the witness Kimmelman. The assignment and bill of exception on which it is based embrace a number of questions propounded to the witness and their answers. The questions and answers are in reference to different matters. To some of them no objection was urged, and different objections were urged as to different answers. These circumstances alone would require that we overrule the assignment. The proposition under the assignment complains of the admission of a portion of the answer to only one of the questions. A part of this answer is objectionable as being hearsay, but the objection was made to the whole of the answer, and was that the evidence was "incompetent, irrelevant, and prejudicial." A part of this answer itself was admissible; the inadmissible part being only a voluntary interjection by the witness. So that, if the assignment should be considered as properly presenting an objection to this particular part of the evidence embraced in the assignment, and if *977 the objection is sufficient to warrant the appellant in now complaining of a portion of the answer as being hearsay, still the assignment should be overruled because error cannot be assigned in the overruling of a general objection to testimony, a part of which was admissible.
The fourth assignment should be overruled for two reasons: In the first place, we think the conversation referred to in the assignment was admissible as tending to support plaintiffs' contention that the well was not drilled down to a depth of 2,000 feet. The evidence on the issue was sharply contradictory. There was evidence which tended to prove that the testimony of the drillers who swore that they drilled the well down from 1,200 to 2,000 feet was positively false, and that the driller and one of the defendants had attempted to fabricate testimony in support of the contention that the well had been drilled 2,000 feet. The conversation referred to was between the witness and another one of the defendants and occurred at a time when the well had been drilled to a depth of about 1,200 feet. In this conversation reference was made to the dissatisfaction of the purchasers of the stock with the conduct of the defendants, and the said defendant engaged in the conversation admitted that the well at that time had not been drilled 2,000 feet, but stated that the defendants were going to drill to such depth. The witness then suggested that, if they should drill on down, they should let somebody be there to measure the well so that there would be no dissatisfaction, and the said defendant replied that, if he had anything to do with it, he intended to see that it was measured. Other testimony showed that the well had been filled up soon after the time when the defendants claimed to have completed it to the depth of 2,000 feet, and there was no evidence of its being measured except by the employees of the defendants doing the drilling. As stated, we think this testimony was admissible as a circumstance tending to support the plaintiffs' contention that the well had not as a matter of fact been drilled from 1,200 feet to 2,000 feet. In the second place, no exception was taken to the admission of the testimony, but the defendants cross-examined the witness and moved to exclude the evidence thereafter. Such a motion is addressed largely to the discretion of the trial court, and no facts appear which would warrant us in holding that this discretion was abused. Knights of Maccabees v. Johnson,
The fifth assignment complains of no ruling of the court. It consists of a recital of numerous facts and proceedings, but makes no specific complaint of an error in reference to any of them.
It seems to be the purpose of the sixth assignment to complain of the action of the court in refusing to grant a new trial on account of newly discovered evidence. The testimony referred to seems to be cumulative; it is not shown when it was discovered nor why it was not produced on the trial, so that no error is shown in the action of the court in overruling the motion on this account.
The seventh assignment complains that the judgment is unsupported by the evidence in that it was pleaded that the sole consideration for the plaintiffs' purchase of the stock was the agreement on the part of the defendants to dig a well to a depth of 2,000 feet, unless oil or gas should be found in paying quantities before such depth should be reached, and the evidence fails to establish such fact. The whole undertaking on the part of the defendant was, according to the evidence and their own pleading, to drill the well as stated. So we think the evidence fully sustains the case as made by the pleading.
We find no reversible error assigned, and the judgment will be affirmed.