63 Tex. Civ. App. 514 | Tex. App. | 1911
John P. Hughes, deceased, under a contract with appellant, constructed for it the roadbed for a line of railway between the town of Burnet and the town of Lampasas. By the terms of the contract appellant was to pay Hughes specified prices for the different kinds of work necessary in the construction of the roadbed, among which was $6 per cubic yard for box culvert masonry and $5 per cubic yard for paving grouted. By direction of appellant’s engineer the paving to be done in the .culverts was changed from grouted, as specified in the contract, to rubble. One hundred and ninety-seven cubic yards of this kind- of work was done by Hughes, and was classed by appellant’s' engineer and carried into his estimates by which settlements between the parties were made, as work it was to pay for at the rate specified in the contract for paving grouted—that is, at the rate of $5 per cubic yard. Hughes having objected to this classification, it vns agreed that P n rabble paving should be classed and paid for as lox culvert n:aso..'y at $5 ¡ :r cubic yard. Of box culvert masonry
The first contention made by appellant, and the only one we think it necessary to consider, in view of the disposition to be made of the appeal, is that the trial court erred in instructing the jury as follows: “If you believe from the evidence in this case that the defendant, J. P. Hughes received from the plaintiff, by mistake, double pay for 197 cubic yards of masonry you will find for the plaintiff, H. & T. C. By. Co., against the defendant Mrs. M. J. Hughes for the sum of $985, unless you further find that the defendant J. P. Hughes paid said double amount, if any, so received to subcontractors before defendant had any knowledge of said double payment, and if you believe that the said defendant paid the said amount so received as a double payment ' to said subcontractors before he had any knowledge of said mistake and double pajunent you tvill find for the defendant.”
The limitation in the instruction on the right of appellant to recover if it paid the money to Hughes by mistake, we think was not authorized by principles controlling in such cases. The rule has been stated to be that “subject to the exception that money paid under a mistake of fact can not be recovered where the payer has derived a substantial benefit from the payment, nor where the payee received it in good faith in satisfaction of an equitable claim, nor where it was due in honor and conscience, a payment made by mistake of fact, which the party is not bound by law to make, under ignorance of the facts or in misapprehension in regard thereto, may be recovered back.” 30 Cyc., 1316;.
Reversed and remmded.