211 S.W.2d 357 | Tex. App. | 1948
This is a plea of privilege case in which the plaintiff sought to retain venue in Harris County against defendant, a resident of Bexar County, under Subdivision 5, R.C.S. Article 1995, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 1995, subd. 5. The court, trying the controversy without a jury, overruled the defendant's plea. No conclusions of fact or law were requested.
Plaintiffs suit against the defendant was upon two certain contracts in writing whereby plaintiff had leased certain equipment and machinery to defendant to be used on two certain pipe laying jobs. Plaintiff alleged that the terms of the first of the said written contracts, which was dated March 14, 1944, provided that defendant was "to be responsible for all machinery and equipment from the time of acceptance by defendant until returned to Anderson's (plaintiff's) warehouse in Houston, Harris County, Texas * * * and upon the expiration or termination of said contract (that defendant was obligated) to return said machinery and equipment to Anderson at its warehouse in Houston, Harris County, Texas, in as good condition as when received by defendant, except for ordinary wear under usual *358 and normal operating conditions". And plaintiff alleged that, when returned, the equipment was not in the specified condition and sued for the amount alleged as necessary to restore such condition. With respect to the second of said written contracts, which was dated August 8, 1945, plaintiff alleged that defendant therein expressly agreed in writing that all payments to be made thereunder "should be made to the Second National Bank of Houston, in Houston, Harris County, Texas, for the account of Anderson" (i. e., plaintiff). By its suit, plaintiff sought to recover such payments as it alleged to be due under said contract.
The defendant predicates his appeal upon two points, wherein he urges that the court erred in overruling his plea of privilege because:
1-2. The evidence was insufficient, and there was no evidence, to support a finding that there was a contract in writing for defendant to perform an obligation in Harris County, expressly naming such county. We overrule the points.
If the terms of either of the written contracts sued on bring them within the provisions of Subdivision 5 so as to make the suit properly maintainable in Harris County, proof of such terms will serve to fix venue in Harris County as to the remainder of the subject matter of the suit in order to avoid multiplicity of suits. Middlebrook v. David Bradley Mfg. Co.,
When defendant subscribed to said obligation just quoted from the contract of August 8, 1945, he was bound to know that he thereby obligated himself to make the required payments as the banking house of the Second National Bank of Houston during office hours. See Harrison v. Nueces Royalty Company, Tex. Civ. App.
Here defendant was obligated to make the payments to the Second National Bank of Houston which obligation included the duty to make payments at the Second National Bank. This, defendant was bound to know when he executed the contract; but if the defendant did not in fact know that the Second National Bank of Houston was at Houston when he executed the contract, he was bound, by assuming the obligation to so make said payments, to provide himself with that information to meet the obligation which the contract he made imposed on him. The court below judicially knew that Houston is the county seat of Harris County, and as such, the seat of his own court. It was stipulated by counsel at the trial that "the corporate name of the bank here in Houston is the Second National Bank of Houston". While this stipulation was sufficient to support the court's action in overruling the plea of privilege, if it were necessary to prove by parole that the bank was in Houston, we decline to hold that the obligation to make the payments to the "Second National Bank of Houston" as expressed in the contract was not sufficient to make manifest that defendant was to make such payments at the banking house of said bank, at Houston. The contract would have gained nothing in clarity of meaning had it stated that the payments were to be made to the Second National Bank of Houston, in Houston. Said added words "in Houston" would have constituted that species of redundancy known as tautology. "Houston", as used in the corporate name of The Second National Bank, is a place-name and its signification would be identical, with respect to a contractural obligation to make a payment or payments thereto, whether it were "Second National Bank at Houston" or "Second National Bank in Houston", instead of "Second National Bank of Houston".
The judgment is affirmed.