233 S.W. 310 | Tex. App. | 1921
Appellee brought this suit against appellant to recover stipulated damages for breach of a contract for the delivery of lumber. The petition declares on the contract, a copy of which is attached thereto as an exhibit, and then alleges in substance that in order to secure his compliance with said contract appellant executed his promissory note in favor of appellee for $750 and deposited it with the Royal National Bank of Palestine, with the understanding and agreement by and between appellant and appellee and the bank that in event appellant failed to comply with his contract for the delivery of the lumber the bank should deliver the note to appellee, but in case the lumber was delivered in accordance with the contract the note should be returned to appellant, that appellant had failed to deliver the lumber, and that appellee was entitled to said note, which was still in the possession of the bank, and to recover the sum due thereon according to its terms and effect, for which judgment is prayed.
The appellant filed an answer containing a general demurrer, general denial, except *311 as to facts thereinafter admitted, and special pleas denying the allegations of the petition that he had breached his contract for the delivery of the lumber and averring that he had been at all times and was now ready and willing to comply with his contract. He further pleaded an agreement by the appellee to extend the time for the delivery of the lumber, and that his failure to make delivery was not due to any fault on his part, but was brought about by the wrongful acts of the appellee.
The appellee interposed a general demurrer to this answer, which was sustained by the trial court, and thereupon, without any evidence being introduced or offered by appellee, judgment was rendered in his favor for the full amount of the note with interest and attorney's fees.
The proceedings in the court below are reflected in the following bill of exceptions, which was approved by the trial judge:
"This October 28, 1920."
We think the trial court erred in sustaining the general demurrer to the answer. This pleading, though very inartistically drawn, contains averments of facts which, if true, would defeat appellee's right to recover, and while portions of it, especially the prayer for affirmative relief, were subject to exception, a general demurrer to the whole of it should not have been sustained, and the defendant thus stripped of all of his defenses including his denial of the breach of the contract.
The answer of defendant having been eliminated from the case by the order sustaining the general demurrer, there was no admission of any facts before the court, and judgment should in no event have been rendered without any evidence on the part of plaintiff in support of his alleged cause of action, or without having the note upon which the judgment was rendered before the court.
These conclusions seem to us to be obvious and are well sustained by the authorities. The following cases are in point: Astin v. Mosteller, 144 S.W. 701; Cooper v. Robischung Bros.,
For the reasons indicated, the judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.