R. E. Harding and C. T. Burns executed a lease for a period of 42 months to Maud Lovelady on a portion of a building situated in the city of Ft. Wbrth, which was the separate property of Mrs. Merle R. Harding, wife of R. E. Harding, and Mrs. Ella R. Burns, wife of O. T. Burns. The property was used by the lessee as a hotel and rooming house.
This suit was instituted by R. E. Harding and wife and C. T. Burns and wife to recover a balance alleged to be due as rents for the period of time covered by the lease and for 10 months after the termination of that period. It was alleged in plaintiffs’ petition that by the terms of the lease, which was in writing, a lien was created upon all property which the lessee might place in the leased premises, and plaintiffs prayed for a foreclosure of that lien, and also the statutory landlord’s lien upon certain articles of furniture which the lessee had used in conducting a hotel and rooming house.
It was further alleged that Mrs. J. A. Nay-lor had, by written instrument and for a valuable consideration, agreed to pay and guaranteed the payment of $350 of the rents accruing under said lease, and she was made a party defendant in order to recover of her that sum with interest thereon. It was further alleged that Fakes & Co. and the Ft. Worth Wlarehouse '& Transfer Company, both private corporations, had wrongfully converted to their own use the furniture upon which plaintiffs claimed a lien for the rents alleged to be due, and those two corporations were likewise made defendants, and judgment was sought against them for the value of the property so alleged to have been converted.
Fakes & Co. filed a cross-action, in which it sought judgments over against Maud Love-lady and also Mrs. J. A. Naylor for the purchase price of some of the furniture which had been placed in the leased premises, and also for foreclosure of a chattel mortgage given to secure the payment of the same.
After the institution of the suit plaintiffs sued out a writ of sequestration, which was levied upon certain articles of furniture; but later the same was replevied by Maud Love-lady by giving a statutory replevy bond with sureties thereon. Plaintiffs recovered judgment against Maud Lovelady for the balance of the rents claimed in their petition, also for foreclosure of the lien alleged to secure the same, said foreclosure being against all of the defendants, and the lien being decreed as superior to the chattel mortgage lien claimed by Fakes & Co. upon the same property. In the judgment it was recited that the property so replevied by Maud Love-lady had since been disposed of by her, and that she was unable to return the same to the ’ officer who levied the writ of sequestration, and accordingly a personal judgment was rendered in plaintiffs’ favor against the sureties on the replevy bond for the value of the property so replevied, but no personal judgment was rendered in plaintiffs’ favor against Fakes & Co. or the Ft. W|orth Warehouse & Transfer Company.
Judgment was also rendered in favor of Fakes & Co. against Maud Lovelady for the sum of indebtedness, it claimed she owed, and for a foreclosure of its mortgage lien against the furniture, upon which plaintiffs were given a foreclosure, but subject to plaintiffs’ lien, which was decreed to be a prior and superior lien. Fakes & Co. also recovered a personal judgment against Mrs. J. A. Naylor for the amount shown to be due upon promissory notes executed by her in favor of Fakes & Co.
From the judgment so rendered Maud Lovelady and Fakes & Co. have appealed.
“demised and leased to said defendant Maud Lovelady property located in precinct No. 1, Tarrant county, Texas, and known and described as the second and third floors of the building known as 1007½ Houston street, in the city of Ft. Worth, Tarrant county, Texas, the ground floor of which was at the time and is now occupied by the Wm. Henry Hwd. Co.”
Upon the trial plaintiffs introduced in evidence a lease describing the leased premises as follows:
“Being 2nd floor of building of which ground floor is now occupied by the Wm. Henry Hwd. Co., better known as 1107½ Houston street.”
Defendant Maud Lovelady objected to the introduction of the lease on the ground that it was a different instrument from that alleged in plaintiffs’ petition, and that the variance was fatal. In overruling that objection we think the court erred.
It will be observed that the written lease was to the second floor only of the building, while the pleading of the plaintiffs alleged it to cover the second and third floors, and this discrepancy, we think, constituted a fatal variance, even though it should be said, but which we do not feel called upon to decide, that the designation of the premises in the pleadings and the lease as being a building, the ground floor of which was occupied by the “Wm. Henry Hwd. Co.,” would be sufficient to render unimportant the further variance in the description of the building in the lease as 1107½ instead of 1007½ Houston street.
While the answer of Maud Lovelady did contain such special pleas, nevertheless those pleas followed and were subordinate to a plea containing a general denial of all the allegations contained in plaintiffs’ petition, coupled with a demand for strict proof of such allegations.
In Bauman v. Chambers,
“When a fact alleged in the petition is denied, either generally or specially, by the defendant in his answer, the plaintiff must prove it, although the defendant may, in another plea, aver the same fact. We have so held at the present term of this court. Silliman v. Gano,90 Tex. 637 [39 S. W. 559 ,40 S. W. 391 ].”
As said in substance in that decision, to hold otherwise would virtually destroy the right given by our statutes to file inconsistent pleas, if they are filed in the due order of pleading.
“October 30, 1916.
“Miss Maud Lovelady, Eort Worth, Texas:
“Dear Madam: Upon receipt of your check for $625, and the return of the Yictrola, Buck Range, all records, and six carpets, we will give you a receipt in full of all indebtedness. This, of course, includes the goods delivered to our warehouse off of the Interurban. Dismissal of suit now pending. Yours very truly,
“Eakes & Company,
“E. A. Martin, Mgr.
“Accepted:
“Fakes & Company.
“F. A. Martin.
“Maud Lovelady.”
Miss Lovelady sought to avoid the instrument by a special plea to the effect that she was induced to sign it by reason of an alleged contemporaneous parol agreement of the agent of Eakes & Co. that in consideration therefor said company would pay off and discharge all the claims against her in this suit by all parties, and that she executed the instrument with that understanding, and under the belief that such was the legal import of the instrument, and that she was not then indebted to Fakes & Co. in the amount named in the instrument. Upon the trial she offered to testify substantially to the facts so pleaded, but upon objection of plaintiffs such testimony was excluded by the court, although the ground of the objection was not stated. Furthermore, the objection was addressed to the testimony as a whole. The special plea mentioned was wholly insufficient as a plea of mutual mistake or fraud inducing the execution of the instrument, and none of the testimony excluded was admissible upon that theory, which is the theory upon which appellant now insists that it was admissible. But in view of another trial we deem it proper to say that, in view of the fact that the indebtedness mentioned in the instrument therein which Fakes & Co. agreed to discharge upon payment of the $625 is not definitely stated, and in view of the further fact that the instrument also contemplated the dismissal of the present suit which was then pending, we think it would be permissible for Miss Lovelady to testify that the agent of Fakes & Co. who procured her signature to the instrument agreed as a consideration therefor that said company would satisfy all claims asserted against Miss Lovelady in this suit:
■ The alleged lease contract by its terms expired July 7, 1915, and according to allegations in plaintiffs’ petition Miss Lovelady paid all the rents accruing thereunder up jto November 14, 1914, but still owes a balance for the remainder of the term covered by the lease, aggregating $350, and she also owes a balance aggregating $575 for the period of ten months during which she held the property after the expiration of the period fixed by the lease, and in that connection it is alleged that she made partial payments of rents during that period, aggregating $675. Plaintiffs alleged that, by virtue of the fact that Miss Lovelady held the premises over after the expiration of the lease, she was obligated to pay rents at the rate per month stipulated in the lease, thereby invoking the rule announced in Woodward v. F. W. & D. C. Ry. Co.,
Fakes & Co. claimed a chattel mortgage lien upon some of the furniture situated in the building, which the proof shows was dated April 6, 1914, and was filed for record on the following day. And said company now insists that the payments made after the termination of the lease should be by the court applied, first, to the liquidation of the balance due upon the written lease, and then to the satisfaction of the rents accruing from month to month during the hold-over period. This contention is based upon the further contention that there was never any application made of these payments to any particular demands, and therefore the court, should apply them to the satisfaction, of the debts in the order named. And upon the assumption of the correctness of those contentions complaint is now made of the refusal of said company’s request for an instructed verdict to the effect that its chattel mortgage pleaded was a superior lien to plaintiffs’ contract lien stipulated in the written lease, as well as their alleged liens for rents accruing during the' hold-over period, thus invoking the rule announced in such cases as H. R. E. B. & B. Ass’n v. Cochran,
For the reasons indicated the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
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