31 Tex. 411 | Tex. | 1868
—An agreement in writing was entered into between the appellant and appellee in this case on the 23d of July, 1856, in which it was stipulated, among other things, that the appellant was to take charge of, and give Ms attention to the entire stock of the appellee until the year 1860, for which said appellant was to receive, as a compensation for such service, one-fourth of the increase of said stock. The appellant brought suit upon the agreement, setting it out, totidem verbis, in his petition, and alleging that the date of the terminus of the agreement had been altered from 1861, as originally written, to 1860; and that the appellee had come, with force and arms, at the beginning of the year 1860, and had taken possession of the stock, and thus deprived him of the profits of the in
The defendant answered, admitting that there had been an agreement entered into, by which the appellant was to take charge and control of appellee’s stock until the year 1860 for one-fourth of the increase; excepted to the allegation in the petition charging an alteration in the agreement, on the ground that the petition was not sworn to; and pleaded that he had sustained losses in the stock to the amount of $5,000, by reason of the failure of the appellant to fulfill his engagement, for which he claimed damages in reconvention.
Upon the issue thus formed there was a trial by a jury, who made a general finding for the defendant.
The plaintiff, upon the trial, failed to produce the writing upon which the action was founded, and introduced a witness, who was set forth as a subscribing witness to the written instrument declared upon in his petition, to prove the existence, the nature, and character of the instrument. The court refused to hear this testimony. The plaintiff then offered to file his affidavit of the loss and destruction of the agreement by fire. This was also denied by the court.
Two errors are assigned in the record:
1. That the court erred in rejecting the testimony of the subscribing witness to prove and explain the terms of the contract between the parties.
2. That the court erred in refusing permission to the plaintiff to file an affidavit of the loss of the written contract by fire.
The written agreement having been made the basis of the action, its production at the time of the trial would have entitled the plaintiff to offer it in evidence without proof of its execution, unless its execution had been denied under oath by the defendant. So other notice of the intern
The gravamen of the complaint in this case was the injury sustained in consequence of the deprivation of the plaintiff of the increase of the stock for the year 1860, brought about by the defendant in taking forcible possession of them at the beginning of that year, when the agreement was, as alleged, that the plaintiff was to continue in the possession and be entitled to one-fourth of the increase under the contract for the year 1860; also, the success of the plaintiff, in the establishment of his claim, was dependent upon two alleged facts: the loss or destruction of the written instrument, of which he was the presumed custodian, and the fraudulent alteration of it.
From what was developed by the pleadings, a question arises whether the plaintiff, who admits himself to have been once the custodian of the paper, and that, while so possessed of it, it was lost or destroyed, should be permitted to prove its loss or its alteration under the circumstances of the case as he presented it. His chance of recovery
Affirmed.