287 S.W. 115 | Tex. App. | 1926
On January 30, 1922, appellants executed their promissory note for $3,000, payable to appellee May 1, 1922, bearing 8 per cent. interest per annum from date and providing for 10 per cent. attorney's fees. In the summer of 1922 appellee filed suit on said note; in October, 1922, appellants paid $100 interest; on November 29, $250, and on December 11, $1,250 on the principal; and the suit then pending was dismissed. The remaining $1,500 and interest was not paid, and this suit was instituted to recover same. The amended petition, on which the case was tried, was filed March 30, appellants' answer was filed April 1, and the cause was tried April 2, 1925.
Appellants, in their answer as well as in their testimony, admit the justness of the note sued on, their only defense being that suit was prematurely brought because the note was not due. They allege that they paid the $1,500 on the note in the fall of 1922 to appellee and $300, in addition, to his attorney, and that in consideration therefor appellee agreed to extend the time of payment of the remainder of said note until they (appellants) completed an oil well they were digging at Denny, Tex., and that if that well was dry, he would extend the time of payment until they could sell certain oil leases in Louisiana and obtain funds therefrom with which to discharge said note. They alleged the Denny well has been abandoned as a dry hole, and that they had not had a reasonable time in which to sell the leases. They further alleged that it was agreed and understood that they were to pay appellee interest on the note until same was paid.
The cause was submitted to a jury on special issues, and it found that appellee made a contract with appellants in the fall of 1922 to the effect that, in consideration of appellants' paying the $1,500 on the note, he agreed to extend the time of payment of the remainder thereof until such time as same could be paid out of the proceeds of the Denny well or the sale of certain oil leases in Louisiana owned by appellants; and further found that appellants had not had a reasonable time in which to sell the Louisiana leases. No other issues were submitted. The trial court, non obstante veredicto, on motion of appellee, entered judgment for him for the full amount unpaid on said note, with interest and attorney's fees.
The controlling question in this case is whether the trial court, non obstante veredicto, had a right to enter a judgment for appellee. The rule seems to be well settled that before the trial court is authorized to render a judgment non obstante veredicto, it must appear, as a matter of law, from the pleadings and the undisputed testimony that no other judgment could have been rendered, and that the issues found by the jury were immaterial and should not have been submitted by the trial court. Where that is the condition of the record, it is the duty of the trial court to disregard the immaterial findings of the jury and render the judgment which the record requires should be rendered. Klock v. Dowd (Tex.Com.App.)
This court recently held that a partial payment on a note that was already due was not a sufficient consideration to support an extension of the time for payment of the remainder of the note (Neyland v. Lanier [Tex. Civ. App.]
"There was no fixed time in our agreement because I didn't know when I could get the money. I was going to pay him just as soon as I could get the money."
The rule seems to be well established by the decisions of our own courts that an agreement on the part of a holder of a note to extend the time of payment to a definite time, in consideration of the fact that the party owing same agrees to pay it with interest on the date to which it is extended and not to pay same prior thereto, is a valid contract. Benson v. Phipps,
Where, however, there is no definite time fixed to which the payment of the note is extended and the debtor does not agree that he will not pay until the end of the extension period, there is no consideration for the extension and same is not binding. Austin Real Estate Abstract Co. v. Bahm,
We think, under the admitted facts of all the parties litigant in this case, there was no definite time fixed in the extension agreement for the payment of said note. Appellee did not agree to withhold suit to any definite time. Neither did the appellants agree not to pay until a fixed date. If it could be said there was a sufficient consideration paid appellee for the extension of the payment of said note and that the same had been extended for a reasonable time, it occurs to us that, as a matter of law, an extension of three years after the note became due is a reasonable time. It has now been more than four years since said note became due, and more than four years since the alleged extension agreement was made. Appellants admit, both by their pleadings and testimony, that the note is a valid obligation and that they expect to pay same when it becomes due.
We do not think that the issues found by the jury were material for the reason that, if the only consideration paid for the extension agreement was the payment by appellants of one-half the note, it was not, under Neyland v. Lanier, supra, a sufficient consideration therefor. We do not think the trial court committed any error in entering judgment for appellee.
We have examined all of appellants' assignments of error, and same are overruled. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed, and the motion of appellants for new trial is overruled.