285 S.W. 838 | Tex. App. | 1926
This suit was instituted in the county court of Collin county on March 15, 1917, by appellees C. E. Hood and F. T. N. Hood, doing business under the firm name of Hood Realty Company against appellant E. P. Harbin. The parties will be designated as in the trial court. Defendant interposed a plea of privilege, and the case was transferred to Ellis county. Defendant, on the 4th day of June, 1917, filed his original answer, consisting of a general denial only. On March 24, 1920, plaintiffs filed an amended petition, and alleged that they were engaged as real estate agents in Collin county, selling lands for others on commission, and that the defendant was engaged in the same kind of business, and that they, plaintiffs and defendant, frequently acted together in the sale of lands, and divided the commissions; that they, so acting together, made a sale of certain lands, and that their commission for such sale was embraced in a certain vendor's lien note, which defendant, with their consent, on July 17, 1917, sold for cash; that the entire proceeds of such sale were received by the defendant, and that in dividing such proceeds defendant retained and refused to pay over to them the said sum of $400 which belonged to them. No further proceedings were had in said cause until November 22, 1924, at which time defendant filed his first amended answer, in which he pleaded a counterclaim in the sum of $400. As a basis for said counterclaim he alleged, in substance, that plaintiff C. E. Hood and another employed him to find a purchaser for a certain tract of land containing 160 acres, and agreed to pay him out of the proceeds of sale thereof $5 per acre for such service; that he found a purchaser, and said sale was consummated, and said C. E. Hood collected the entire proceeds of such sale, including $5 per acre, amounting in the aggregate to $800, which was due him as commission; that said Hood paid him only the sum of $400 of the amount so collected and due to him as aforesaid, and retained the remaining $400, and applied the same to the use of plaintiffs' firm, composed as aforesaid. He alleged that said $400 so withheld from him was due on November 20, 1916, and that he retained the $400 sued for by plaintiffs out of the proceeds of said note in payment of the amount due him and retained by plaintiffs as aforesaid.
Plaintiffs, by supplemental petition, excepted to defendant's counterclaim on the ground that it showed on its face: (a) That it was barred by the two-year statute of limitation; (b) that it was barred by the four-year statute of limitation; (c) that the cause of action so set up was not incident to, connected with, or arising out of the transaction on which their suit was based, and that it was not a proper set-off under the statute; and (d) that it showed a misjoinder of actions, in that it set up a transaction involving the interest and liability of the other owner of the land referred to therein and of the other member of plaintiffs' firm not alleged to have owned any interest in said land. Among other defenses, plaintiffs pleaded that under the agreement between them and defendant the commission for the sale of the land as set out in said counterclaim was to be divided equally between plaintiffs and defendant, and that they had paid to defendant the sum of $400, the same being his half of said commission, and all that he was entitled to receive out of the same. Plaintiffs also pleaded that they at that time, and also at the time of the transaction sued on by them, constituted the firm known as Hood Realty Company; that they issued a check on the First Guaranty State Bank for the sum of $400, payable to defendant and signed the same in their firm name, and delivered the same to defendant; that he accepted the same, and on or about January 13, 1917, received the money therefore; that he agreed to receive, and did receive, the same in full satisfaction of all claims against them growing out of said transaction.
The case came on for trial. The court sustained all of plaintiffs' exceptions to defendant's counterclaim, and, after hearing the evidence, instructed a verdict for plaintiffs for the sum sued for, with interest from *840 January 12, 1917, amounting in the aggregate to $568.53. Judgment was duly rendered in favor of plaintiffs against defendant for said sum.
The statute provides, in substance, that whenever any suit is brought for the recovery of any debt the defendant shall be permitted to plead any counterclaim which he may have against the plaintiff. R.S. 1911, art. 1325. The word "debt" is used in said statute in a general sense to denote any sort of promise or obligation to pay money, and the term "certain demand" used in article 1329 of said statutes has the same meaning, Duncan v. Magette,
Plaintiffs filed their suit on March 14, 1917. Defendant alleged in his counterclaim that the cause of action there asserted accrued on November 20, 1916. It was clearly not barred by limitation at the time plaintiffs instituted the suit. The rule in this state is that, where there are mutual debts held by the respective parties, and defendant's debt is not barred by limitation at the time plaintiffs' suit is instituted, defendant may by counterclaim set up his debt as a set-off to plaintiffs' demand, notwithstanding it may be barred as the basis of an independent suit at the time such counterclaim is filed. Crook v. McGreal,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and the cause remanded.