Adams v. Stark

280 S.W. 1074
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 1925
DocketNo. 11298. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 1074 (Adams v. Stark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Stark, 280 S.W. 1074 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

L. T. Adams and his wife, Mrs. N. Adams, defendants in the trial court, have appealed from a personal judgment rendered against defendant L. T. Adams in favor of S. V. Stark and L. P. Penwell as independent executors of the last will'and testament of Sil Stark, deceased, for the principal and ■ accrued interest thereon of two promissory notes executed by both defendants, and for a foreclosure of a mortgage lien as against both the defendants on a tract of land consisting of 231 acres situated in Jack county.

One of the notes sued on was for the principal sum of $2,280, dated September 4, 1919, due on or before March 4, 1920, drawing interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from date, payable to the order of Sil Stark, since deceased, and the other was .for the principal sum of $1,438.08, dated June 13, 1922, due June 13, 1923, drawing interest from date at the rate of 10 per cent, per an-num, payable to the order of said decedent. Both notes were executed by defendants L. T. Adams and N. Adams, and both contained the usual provisions for the payment of 10 per cent, additional on the amount due as attorney’s fees for collection.

The mortgage for which a foreclosure was prayed was executed by the defendants on June 13, 1922, on 231 acres of land in Jack county, and was given to secure the payment of the second note described above.

The defendants pleaded that the notes were given for the purchase money of certain oil leases executed by Sil Stark, deceased, to L. T. Adams, and the principal defense was based upon a document in writing, alleged to have been executed by Sil Stark, deceased, on August 1,1920, addressed to L. T. Adams, Jacksboro, Tex., and reading as follows:

“Since our deal on oil leases Sept. 4th last year and more recently you have been contending that the oil business in Jack county was not on the uplook and that ten dollars was too much for the leases, and in that connection I hereby agree with you that if an oil field is not developed in Jack county within four years from this date to such an extent that the said leases will sell for a profit, I will take oil leases on yours and your wife’s land at ten dollars per acre, or the same price, in pay-, ment of all you owe me at that date.
“Yours very truly, Sil Stark.”

The defendants alleged that before the expiration of the four-year period of time stated in that document Sil Stark died; that no oil field of any consequence was developed in Jack county during the said period, and none has been developed since, and that the leases for which the notes were given are now of no practical value, and could not he sold for *1075 any sum. Defendants further averred their willingness to execute to plaintiffs, as executors of the estate of the last will and testament of said decedent, leases on lands owned by the defendants covering acreage sufficient to liquidate said notes at the price of $10 an acre fixed in said purported agreement.

Only one issue was submitted to the jury, and that was as to whether or not Sil Stark, the deceased, executed the purported agreement by him, dated August 1, 1920, and pleaded by the defendants. To that issue the jury returned an answer in the negative. The defendants introduced two witnesses who testified that they saw the deceased sign the disputed document. Those witnesses were J. B. Tillman and Grover Clayton. The document shows to have been written on a typewriter, and the witness Tillman testified he saw the deceased write the instrument on the typewriter then in his office and hand it to L. T. Adams after deceased had signed it. But, according to the testimony of the other witness, Grover Clayton, who said he was in the office of the deceased before Tillman came in, and remained there until after the instrument was executed and delivered to Adams, the same was not written out on the typewriter by the deceased.

Plaintiffs introduced testimony of two witnesses, one the cashier and the other the assistant • cashier of the Jacksboro National Bank, in which the deceased was a director, both of whom testified that they were familiar with the handwriting of the deceased, and that in their opinion the purported signature of the deceased to the document in controversy was not his signature. Plaintiffs also introduced testimony strongly tending to show that the deceased did not write the body of the instrument, and that the same was not written upon the typewriter kept by the deceased in his office where the defendants’ witness Tillman said he saw the same written. The date of the instrument was on Sunday, and plaintiff introduced testimony to the effect that the deceased never transacted- any business on Sunday.

In view of the testimony noted, we overrule the assignment complaining that the verdict was so contrary to the weight of the evidence that a new trial should have been granted.

Two other assignments are presented to the refusal of the court to grant a new trial, for two reasons, one on account of the alleged misconduct of the jury while considering the case, and the other on account of newly discovered testimony after the conclusion of the trial.

Attached to the motion for new trial was the affidavit of one of the jurors containing the statement that, while considering the verdict, and after 11 of the jurors had voted that the disputed document was not signed by the deceased, Sil Stark, and affiant had voted in the affirmative on that issue, the af-fiant was induced to change his vote and vote in the negative by a statement made in the jury room by some of the jurors to the effect that they knew the deceased well, and knew that he did not work or do any business on Sunday, and that therefore he did not sign the document which was dated on Sunday.

Attached to the motion for new trial was also an affidavit of one D. B. Leggett to the effect that during the month of June, 1922, he was in the office of deceased while the de-' fendant L. T. Adams was present, and heard a conversation between them during which the statement was made by the deceased that he hoped they would bring in a good oil field in Jack county on account of the agreement which he (Stark) had given Adams to take back leases theretofore executed by him to Adams at $10 per acre, if such an oil field was not developed, and that in that manner the notes theretofore executed by Adams to him would be liquidated. The affiant further stated, in substance, that in that conversation the deceased further said that, if the Box-Anna Oil Company brought in a good field, Adams could sell the leases at a profit and pay him off; that, if an oil field was not developed, and the leases did not sell above, $10, deceased would stand by his agreement with Adams to take back the leases on lands sufficient at the rate of $10 per acre to cover Adams’ indebtedness to' the deceased according to his agreement, which he had reduced to writing. The affidavit of Leggett contains the further statement that what he knew about the matters above stated was never mentioned by him to defendant L. T. Adams until after the trial of the case, and he (affiant) had heard of the verdict of the jury, and that he was not interested in any manner in the issues involved.

Attached to the motion for new trial was another affidavit by defendant L. T. Adams that, after the judgment had been rendered in the case, D. B.

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 1074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-stark-texapp-1925.