27 Tex. 113 | Tex. | 1863
We will not attempt to review the various questions that have been raised by the parties during the progress of this case. To discuss them would only be an useless consumption
The testimony shows that the subscription paper to which the ■appellants were parties, was intended to securé the building of the bridge across Mud Creek, in the place of one that had been burnt. That it was generally understood in the neighborhood, and among the parties to the subscription, that when the requisite amount should be subscribed, a committee was to be appointed, the contract let to the lowest bidder, and that the bridge was to be completed during the fall of 1857. The appellee seems to have taken ■an interest in getting up the subscription, and upon his representations that it was with the intention and purpose just indicated, he procured subscribers to it. The testimony also shows that there was a meeting of some of the subscribers in accordance with this general understanding among the parties interested in the matter. But so few of them attended the meeting that the enterprise was considered by those who were present as abandoned; and the party who then held the subscription paper, and from whom the appellee got it some twelve months afterwards, declared that he would have nothing further to do with the business. Under these circumstances, if the subscription can be regarded as an offer of the amount subscribed to any one who should build a
The judgment is reversed, and the'cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded,-