89 S.W.2d 1068 | Tex. App. | 1936
This suit was instituted by Rollen J. Windrow against appellee Abe Chanowsky, to recover the sum of $432.35 principal, with interest, on a paving certificate issued to him by the city of Bryan in pursuance of an ordinance levying an assessment against appellee individually and purporting to fix a lien to secure the same on a house and lot in said city. During the pendency of the suit appellant, Mercantile National Bank at Dallas, intervened and alleged that said certificate had been assigned to it. The regularity of the proceedings and the validity of said certificate at the time it was issued are not questioned. Said certificate provided for payment of the amount thereof in a lump sum, or, in the alternative, for payment in six equal annual installments, with interest from the *1069 date thereof. Appellant alleged that the first installment was paid, and sued to recover the sum aforesaid as the aggregate of the five remaining installments, with interest and attorney's fees. Appellee alleged that said assessment was ineffective to fix a lien on his house and lot because the same were his homestead, and that appellant's action for the recovery of a personal judgment against him was barred by the two years' statute of limitation (Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 5526).
A trial was had, the issues of law and fact submitted to the court, and judgment rendered that appellee Windrow take nothing by his suit because he had not at that time any interest in said certificate, that appellant take nothing by its suit because its cause of action was barred by the statute of limitation and said house and lot exempt as a homestead, and that appellee recover his costs.
Reference was made in said certificate to installment coupons attached thereto, and, as introduced in evidence, it had attached five principal coupons, numbered from 2 to 6, inclusive, all dated May 13, 1930, and one due on May 13th of each year from 1931 to 1935, inclusive. Appellant alleged that the first coupon was paid, but the testimony nowhere discloses what became of the same. Appellant alleged that default had been made in the payment of the second and third installments and that the whole unpaid balance had been declared due. This suit was filed September 7, 1932, more than two years after the date of said certificate and the first maturity date named therein.
Appellee's contention that the cause of action on said certificate arose on May 13, 1930, and that same was barred by limitation when this suit was filed, is based solely on the following provision contained in the above-quoted excerpt from the certificate: "That said assessment is payable * * * as follows: All cash on or before the 13 day of May, 1930, or at the option of the said owner * * * in six equal installments." The manner in which such option should be manifested was nowhere prescribed. Appellee contends in this connection, in substance, that it devolved upon appellant to show an affirmative election by him to pay in installments in order to defeat his plea of limitation. An option is defined in Malone v. Meres,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded.