Gеorge Steve Long was adjudged monetarily liable to Tascosa National Bank of Amarillo on his continuing guaranties of payment of indebtedness owed by Holiday South Development Company, Inc. to the bank. The judgment was rendered on a jury’s verdict after the court disregarded one of the jury’s answers to an issue found by the court to be conclusively established. Inasmuch as we deem that Long has not demonstrated reversible error by his points of error, we affirm.
Long, the president of the development corporation, guaranteed, with his written continuing guaranty, the payment of $250,-000 the corporation borrowed from, and secured by the conveyance of land in trust to, the bank on 18 July 1979. The loan was payable on 18 January 1981. In connection with the loan transaction, the corporation provided the bank with a letter of commitment or “take-out” agreement, whereby AMI, Inc., Shreveрort, Louisiana, agreed, upon notification of nonpayment of the loan after eighteen months, to purchase the note, plus accrued interest, and the collateral.
Thereafter on 1 April 1980, the corporation borrowed from the bank an additional $232,600, to be received as needed for construction, with repayment, secured by conveyance of land in trust, to be made on 25 June 1980. Long and the corporation’s vice-president, Larry R. Martin, each of whom then owned one-half of the corporation’s shares of stock, guaranteed the payment of the loan by their continuing guaranty.
Later on 5 August 1980, the corporation borrowed $35,000 more from the bank, agreeing to repay it on 4 September 1980. However, on 29 August 1980, the corporation had overdrawn its two checking accounts at the bank, one in the sum of $2,126.63 and the other in the sum of $14,-877.35.
The corporation had not discharged any of the notes representing the loans when, on 2 March 1981, it filed a bankruptcy action. Three days later, the bank initiated the litigation underlying this appeal. In its original petition, the bank sought recovery against Long and Martin on their continu *702 ing guaranty of payment agreements; however, upon the bank’s later filed suggestion of Martin’s death and motion for severance, the bank’s alleged cause of action against Mаrtin was severed and re-docketed. Twenty-six days later, the bank’s cause of action against Long proceeded to jury trial and court judgment decreeing his $875,120.59 liability to the bank.
In appealing, Long presents ten points of error which are to be considered. 1 At the outset, however, we notice he has waived his seventh-point contention that the court erred in failing to abate this action and grant him leave to file a cross-actiоn against the estate of Martin for contribution as a co-guarantor.
At the end of the first day of trial, after all of the evidence had been presented to the jury and court had recessed, Long filed pleadings which included a motion to abate the cause because of the absence of the estate of Martin and a cross-action against the estate. Long does not suggest, nor do we find a recording, that the motion was called to the attention of or ruled upon by the court. It is axiomatic that a nonju-risdictional plea in abatement must be urged before the trial on the merits; and, if the plea is not timely called to the attention of and acted on by the court, it is waived.
Garcia v. Texas Emp. Ins. Ass’n,
Included with Long’s answer to the bank’s petition was his counterclaim for damages allegedly occasioned by the bank’s negligence in failing and refusing to call the take-out offer of AMI, Inc. The bank specially excepted to the counterclaim, asserting that, among other things, it fails to state any facts upon which a cause of action can be based, particularly because it fails to allege any facts that would constitute the breach of any legal duty owed to Long. The court sustained the special exceptions. Long amended his pleadings, repeating the substance of the counterclaim based on negligence. Once more, the bank specially excepted to the negligence counterclaim for the reasons originally asserted, and again the court sustained the special exceptions.
Thereafter, the bank filed its motion in limine. By it, the bank moved the court to prohibit Long, in the absence of a previously secured favorable ruling outside the jury’s presence and hearing, from adducing any evidence of, among other subjects, collateral agreements, and particularly an AMI, Inc. letter concerning the take-out agreement, that are inconsistent with or vary the terms of the written instruments sued on by the bank. The following day, Long filed amended pleadings containing substantially the same counterclaim, except that the bank was not alleged to have been negligent in its omission to call upon AMI, Inc. to honor the take-out agreement. The amended counterclaim escaped exception; but, at the beginning of the trial, the court granted the bank’s motion in limine.
By his second point of error, Long charges the court with error in sustaining the bank’s special exception and in granting the motion in limine directed to his negligence counterclaim. The court also erred in sustaining the special exception, Long asserts with his sixth point, because it constituted a prohibited general demurrer. We are not persuaded that Long has shown reversible error by these points.
The decision in
Hartford Accident and Indemnity Co. v. McCardell,
Nor is reversible error presented in any facet of the court’s action in sustaining the bank’s special exceptions. When the court sustained the special exceptions, Long did not object or except to the court’s action and elect to stand on his pleadings as filed so as to preserve the contentions he now makes on appeal.
Minus v. Doyle,
*704
The lack of live pleadings counterclaiming for negligence would effectively moot Long’s eighth-point contention that the court erred in granting the bank’s motions for orders protecting a bank officer and the bank’s attorney from submitting to depositions and subpoenas duces tecum оn matters relevant to Long’s negligence counterclaim. Without pleadings raising the issue of negligence, the evidence of negligence was not admissible.
Erisman v. Thompson,
Allied with points two, six and eight, which we have just overruled, is Long’s eleventh point, by which he asserts the court committed cumulative error in exercising its discretion to prohibit him from presenting his claim of the bank’s negligence to the jury, thereby denying him a fair trial. We accept the holding in Long’s cited
Scott v. McLennan County,
In this cause, there has been no determination that the trial court erred in any action taken with respect to Long’s claim of negligence on the part of the bank. Rather, the determination, in fine, is that the court did not err in its actions, or, even if it did err, no reversible error was preserved and presеnted for appellate review of the matters not otherwise waived by Long. In this situation, there is no basis for holding that the collective actions of the court present reversible error.
Accord, Cook v. Wofford,
In submitting the cause to the jury, the court asked the jury, in special issue no. 5, what sum “is due and owing as principal and accrued interest on the [$35,000] Note dated August 5, 1980?” The jury answered “0.00.” Upon the bank’s motion and after notice and hearing, the court disregarded the jury’s answеr, found the sum due and owing on the note to be $45,789.80, and included this amount in its judgment.
Long attacks the court’s actions with his fifth point. The court erred, he insists, because it has no authority to substitute its finding for that of the jury, particularly since, he proposes, there is some evidence from which the jury could infer that the bank had not allowed the corporation all the credit due on the note.
Under our law, if there is in the record any conflicting evidence of a рrobative nature on a material issue, the determination of the issue is for the jury,
Air Conditioning v. Harrison-Wilson-Pearson,
Applying these principles to the evidential record, we observe that the evidence of unallowed note credit to which Long refers is clearly referenced in the record to the $250,000 note and not to the $35,000 note. He does not mention any other evidence, and in our review of the record we detected none, that conflicts with the proved principal amount of the $35,000 note and accrued interest thereon uncredited with any payments. On this record, then, the sum due and owing on the $35,-000 note was conclusively established as $45,789.80 by mathematical calculation from the undisputed evidence; therefore, the court properly disregarded the jury’s answer and found that amount was due аnd owing on the note as a matter of law.
Tennell v. Esteve Cotton Co.,
In seeking recovery on the July, 1979 and the April, 1980 notes, the bank included in its trial pleadings allegations that the corporation’s property securing payment of the notes had been sold, and that “Long is entitled to a credit for the proceeds from the sales of such property after deductions ... of all taxes paid by Bank on the property sоld.” The bank specifically prayed for recovery of the sums due and owing on the two notes “less credit for proceeds received from the sale of property securing said note[s],” and generally prayed for such other and further relief to which it may be justly entitled. Long did not specially except to the pleadings to require the bank to specify the amount claimed. See Rule 47.
The court submitted special issue no. 9 inquiring of the amount, found by the jury to be $9,059.63, that the bank paid as ad valorem taxes on the corporation’s property described in the 1979 and 1980 deeds of trust. Long did not object to the propriety of the issue at the time of its submission or in his motion for new trial, and he does not question the correctness of the jury’s answer.
However, on appeal, Long has drafted his fourth point to charge the court with error in including the sum in the judgment on the theory that the bank failed to plead fоr the recovery of ad valorem taxes. The point is untenable.
By failing to furnish a record showing an objection to the submission of the issue for the reason now raised on appeal and an adverse ruling thereon, Long has waived the alleged error now presented. Rule 272;
Cogburn v. Harbour,
The July, 1979 note and the April, 1980 note each provided that “in the event default is made ... [and] suit is brought on same ... then the makers agree and promise to pay ten per cent (10%) additional on the amount of principal and interest
then owing,
as attorney’s fees.” (Emphasis added.) By separate issues for each note, the jury found a total amount of $404,-658.29 to be due and owing on the two notes at the time the suit was filed, and $259,407.72 to be due and owing at the time of judgment. Long does not challenge these findings, which are binding on appeal.
Adams v. American Quarter Horse Ass’n,
Upon motion of the bank, the court included in its judgment the sum of $40,-465.82 for contractual attorney’s fees. By his third point, Long contends the court erred in granting judgment for any sum in excess of the $3,500 reasonable attorney’s fee found by the jury on the theory that the bank waived any attorney’s fees not submitted to the jury. But, if not, then he contends with his tеnth point that the additional sum of $40,465.82 awarded for attorney’s fees is excessive for the work done. On this record, we are not persuaded to adopt either contention.
Arguing for waiver, Long cites
Wilie v. Montgomery Ward & Company,
At least since
Kuper v. Schmidt,
Long neither pleaded nor proved that the contractual attorney’s fees were unreasonable, nor did he adduce any evidence of reasonable fees under the circumstances, nor did he request an issue on reasonable attorney’s fees. Consequently,
*707
there was no fact issue as to thе bank’s entitlement to recover the attorney’s fees stipulated in the notes, and the court properly allowed the bank a recovery for the undisputed amounts.
Id.
The judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. Although Long appealed on eleven points of error, the crux of his first point is that he was entitled to the requested abatement of the suit against him as guarantor until Holiday South Development Company, Inc., the principal, is joined; but, on submission, he candidly conceded thаt the point is untenable since a guarantor of payment may be sued apart from, and without action having been taken against the maker of the note.
Hopkins v. First Nat. Bank at Brownsville,
. In this regard, then, reversible error could occur only from the exclusion of relevant evidence,
Zoner v. Hertz Equipment Rental Corporation,
. Were the merits of the pоints before us, we still would overrule them. This obtains without regard to Long’s concession by brief and oral argument that even if he prevailed on his negligence counterclaim, his liability under his guaranties would not be altered.
In connection with Long’s second-point complaint to the court’s sustaining the bank’s special exceptions, it is observed that to recover by counterclaim on a cause of action for negligence, Long was requirеd to plead that cause of action,
Safety Casualty Co. v. Wright,
The
Herring
decision, that a special exception is properly leveled at a pleading failing to state a cause of action, would be a sufficient ground for overruling Long's sixth point, by which he contends that because the bank’s repeated special exception is based on his failure "to allеge any facts whatsoever upon which a cause of action can be based," it is, on the authority of
Maxwell v. Maxwell,
. All references to rules are to the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.
. Our overruling the fifth point destroys the predicate for Long’s ninth point. With the latter point, he contends that the court erred in rendering judgment for $3,500 found by the jury, in answering special issue no. 6, to be the reasonable attorney’s collection fee provided for by the $35,000 note, because the answer conflicts with the jury’s special issue no. 5 answer of "0.00" owed on the note, and argues that there can be no recovery of attorney’s fee without a recovery on the note. Since we have determined that the court correctly disregarded the jury’s special issue no. 5 answer and found the bank’s recovery on the note, there is, apart from the bank’s insistence on another ground for recovery of the attorney’s fee, no basis for the ninth point, and it is overruled.
