129 S.W. 1136 | Tex. App. | 1910
This suit was instituted by the appellant, Mosteller, against the appellee on a promissory note for $1,200, dated August 22, 1907, due August 22, 1908, with interest from date at eight percent per annum, and providing for the payment of ten percent additional as attorney's fees if placed in the hands of an attorney or collected by suit. The note was given by appellee to appellant as part of the consideration for a tract of land in Haskell County sold by appellant to appellee. A vendor's lien was *459 retained in the deed of conveyance to secure the payment of said note. The plaintiff made the usual allegations incident to such a suit, and alleged that he had contracted with attorneys to bring the suit; that he had agreed to pay them as compensation ten percent on the principal and interest of said note, and asked for a judgment for his debt, interest, attorney's fees and a foreclosure of the lien on said land.
The defendant by amended answer plead a general demurrer, general denial, and specially, in substance: That the note sued upon was given in part payment for the tract of land described in plaintiff's petition; that the consideration for said land was based upon the acreage thereof to the extent of 160 acres; that in contracting to purchase said land and in purchasing same the defendant was to pay at the rate of $15 per acre to the extent of 160 acres, and that the amount he paid and contracted to pay was for 160 acres at $15 per acre; that the tract of land conveyed did not and does not contain 160 acres, but on the contrary only 155 acres; but that if he is mistaken in this, then the plaintiff did not have possession of five acres on the west part of said tract, had never had possession of same, and that he never placed defendant in possession of the same, and it is adversely held by another under a superior title; that at the time he purchased said land he did not know of such shortage, and that to the extent of same the consideration for the note sued on has failed, and plaintiff should be required either to allow a credit for the amount of such shortage or execution should be delayed until he places defendant in possession of the same; that by his deed the plaintiff warranted to the defendant that said tract of land contained 160 acres or more, and that the defendant has overpaid the plaintiff for said land the sum of $75, and the consideration has to that extent entirely failed.
Defendant also alleged in substance that when said note became due he notified plaintiff that he was ready and willing to pay said note, but desired to have the matter of the shortage in said land adjusted and allowed; that pending negotiations looking to such settlement, and without any notice whatever to the defendant, the plaintiff placed said note in the hands of attorneys for collection, rushed into court with this suit, claiming that he had contracted with said attorneys to pay them ten percent on the entire amount of said note, when in truth and in fact there was not but $75 of said note in dispute; that the amount he claimed to pay said attorneys was grossly excessive, and that plaintiff's conduct in the premises was an act of bad faith as a matter of law; that the defendant had offered to put the amount in controversy in bank to await an adjustment of the shortage; that defendant had at all times been ready, willing and able to pay what he really owes, and here now tenders in court the amount of said note less the shortage aforesaid.
Appellant filed a supplemental petition, demurring generally to appellee's answer, and specially excepting to various allegations of same. The exceptions having been overruled, the case was tried before a jury and resulted in a judgment for appellant for $1,125, with interest from the date of the note sued upon at eight percent per annum, and $25 for attorney's fees, with a foreclosure of the vendor's *460 lien on the land described in plaintiff's petition. Appellant's motion for a new trial being overruled, he appealed.
The assignments of error need not be quoted and discussed in detail. The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial for the following reasons: (1) Because the deed executed and delivered by the plaintiff to defendant evidences a sale of land in gross or bulk with no warranty of acreage, and it was not alleged either that there was fraud, accident or mistake in the preparation of said deed, and parol evidence was inadmissible to show that the defendant, Astin, bought the land from appellant by the acre at $15 per acre, and not in bulk; (2) Because the court erred in overruling plaintiff's special exception to that part of defendant's answer reading as follows: "But if he is mistaken in this, then the plaintiff did not have possession of five acres on the west part of said tract, had never had possession of same, and that he (plaintiff) never placed defendant in possession of the same, and it is adversely held by another under a superior title;" (2) Because the court erred in charging the jury to allow plaintiff such reasonable compensation as attorney's fees as they believed from the evidence he was entitled to, and in refusing to give instead appellant's special charge as follows: "The note sued upon in this case provides that if said note is placed in the hands of an attorney for collection or if collected by suit, that the defendant will pay ten percent additional as attorney's fees, therefore you are instructed that after arriving at the amount of principal and interest due the plaintiff, you will allow him ten percent additional on said principal and interest as attorney's fees."
It seems to be settled law by the decisions of this State that the general covenant of warranty in a conveyance of land applied to the title and not to the quantity of the land, and hence such covenant is not broken by a deficit in the number of acres named in the deed even though the land may have been sold by the acre. Daughtrey v. Knolle,
Appellee's counsel insists that notwithstanding the deed in this case shows a sale in gross and not by the acre, yet if the land was as a matter of fact sold by the acre, the fact of the deficiency alone was all that was necessary for the defendant to allege in order to show a partial failure of consideration; that in such case it is not necessary to allege fraud or mutual mistake to render admissible parol evidence of such failure of consideration. This view is plausible, but at variance, we believe, with our decisions on the subject and can not be adopted. *461
Appellee's plea that five acres of the land sold to him by appellant was held by another under a superior title, was clearly defective, we think, in that said plea wholly failed, as contended by appellant, to allege the name of the adverse claimant or show the nature of such superior title or the character and the length of time of his adverse holding. Appellant's special exception to the sufficiency of this plea on the grounds stated should have been sustained, and therefore a verdict and judgment in favor of appellee based upon this phase of the case was not authorized and can not be upheld, however well sustained by the evidence. A judgment must be supported by both pleading and proof.
The only evidence bearing upon the issue of plaintiff's right to recover attorney's fees, aside from the testimony that appellee, before the note sued on was placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, offered to pay the entire amount of said note, less $75 and to put this $75 in the bank subject to appellant's order upon an adjustment of the shortage in the acreage of land claimed, and that pending negotiations to adjust the claim of shortage appellant, without notice to appellee, filed this suit, is the provision in said note to the effect that if it was placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, or if collected by suit, the appellee would pay ten percent additional on the principal and interest then owing therein, as attorney's fees; and the testimony of the witness, R. D. Thompson, that appellant authorized him to bring suit on the note and agreed to pay him for his services the ten percent attorney's fees provided for in the note, and that the amount thereof was reasonable for the services rendered and to be rendered in this case, and that ordinarily he did not consider $125 to $135 reasonable attorney's fees for collecting a contested claim of $75. In this state of the evidence we think the plaintiff was entitled to recover ten percent of whatever amount the jury found was due and owing to him on the note sued on, and that his special charge quoted above to that effect should have been given.
While it seems to be well settled by the decisions in this State that a stipulation to pay attorney's fees, such as appears in the note the foundation of this action, is a mere contract of indemnity, still when the holder of such note employs an attorney and contracts to pay him the amount stipulated therein for his services in collecting the note, the maker can not defeat his liability therefor on the ground that said amount is unreasonable. Dunovant's Estate v. Stafford
Co., 36 Texas Civ. App. 33[
But, if it can be said that plaintiff was only entitled to recover reasonable attorney's fees, still no warrant is found in the evidence for the verdict and judgment of $25 therefor. There is no testimony that a less amount than that stipulated in the note was reasonable for the attorney's services in this case. The witness Thompson, as shown, testified that ordinarily he would not consider $125 or $135 reasonable attorney's fees for collecting a contested claim of $75, but neither he nor any other witness stated what would be a reasonable fee for collecting such a claim, or, treating this case as one involving a contested claim of only $75, what would be a reasonable attorney's fee for prosecuting it and collecting such an amount.
The judgment of the court below, for the reasons indicated, is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.