Alford v. Thomas

238 S.W. 270, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 406
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1922
DocketNo. 9721.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 238 S.W. 270 (Alford v. Thomas) 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
Alford v. Thomas, 238 S.W. 270, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 406 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

The appellee, Mrs. H. A. Thomas, filed this suit in the district court of Johnson county on the 31st day of December, 1919, against the appellants, J. T. Alford and S. P. Ramsey, on a note executed by the latter persons on the 23d day of September, 1916, in the sum of $700, and payable to the'order of Otho S. Houston on December 15, 1919. The plaintiff: alleged that the note had been given by the defendants in payment of the rent on the Klondike ranch, located in Johnson county, Tex., for the year 1919. There were other allegations in the plaintiff’s petition relating to the issuance of service of a distress warrant which are not deemed material to the present disposal of the case, and which, therefore, are omitted.

The appellants, Alford and Ramsey, filed an original answer containing a general denial and a plea in reconvention, in substance to the effect that in 1913 they had leased the Klondike ranch, consisting of some 800 acres of land, together with the buildings thereon, from Otho Houston, by virtue of which the defendants were entitled to quiet possession and occupancy of the .premises, to have as their own such hay, pecans, and cultivated crops as might grow thereon, and that in 1916 a renewal rental contract was made with the said Houston for the succeeding-three years; that it was upon the renewal occasion that the note declared upon by the plaintiff, together with two other notes of like amount, for the rental of 1917 and 1918, had been executed; that later, in March, 1919, Mrs. Otho Houston, Otho Houston having died in the meantime, sold the ranch to the plaintiff:, Mrs. H. A. Thomas, who, in the transaction then occurring, also acquired by assignment the note declared upon; that the defendant J. T. Alford, for himself and Ramsey, attorned to the plaintiff as her tenants under a contract which, with certain specified modifications, left the defendants with the same rights as had been conferred upon them by the lease from Otho Plouston; that defendant Alford was in the actual possession and management of said ranch, both for *271 himself and defendant Ramsey, who was jointly interested with him; that the plaintiff, Mrs. Thomas, soon aftef her acquisition of the ranch and' the notes sued upon, placed her son-in-law, one Webster Bradt, in possession of one of the houses upon said ranch which had been reserved by Mrs. Thomas, as her agent and manager; that said agent immediately began complaints against the defendant Alford, charging him with theft of certain personal property, and later made threats of personal violence for such time and under such circumstances as that the defendant Alford became alarmed for the safe.ty of himself and family, and, being actuated by the fear that Bradt would carry out his threats to kill him, the said Alford abandoned the said premises. The defendants further alleged that, at the time of such forced and unwilling abandonment, they had certain crops of corn and cotton and were entitled to certain crops of pecans which the said Bradt, as agent of the plaintiff, refused to permit them to save and gather. The several quantities of corn, cotton, pecans, hay, etc., so alleged to have been lost were specified in the plea, and the values thereof were also specified; but we deem it unnecessary to particularize in these respects. The defendants, however, claimed damages on account thereof in the aggregate amount of several thousand dollars.

The plea in reconvention was replete with averments of Bradt’s agency for the plaintiff, and further specifically averred that plaintiff, with full knowledge of Bradt’s unauthorized acts and threats, ratified what he had done in the premises.

The plaintiff, by supplemental petition, among other things presented a general demurrer to the answer of the defendants, and some 20 special exceptions to the defendants’ plea on reconvention.

The court overruled the general demurrer, but sustained exceptions 1 to 20, inclusive, and, the defendants having declined to further amend their plea, the case proceeded to trial, with the result of a judgment in plaintiff’s favor for the amount of the note, principal, interest, and attorneys’ fees declared upon, and the defendants have appealed.

The defendants excepted to the action of the court in sustaining the plaintiff’s said special exceptions, and the assignments of error here presented relate alone to that action of the court. The special exceptions are numerous, and' many .of them are also quite extended, and we think it would he altogether impractical to take up each exception and undertake to answer it. We will therefore endeavor to dispose of the court’s rulings in a general way.

[1, 2] The question ' most material, we think, presented by the exceptions to the defendant’s counterclaim is indicated by appellee’s first counter proposition in support of the court’s ruling, which reads as follows:

“Appellee’s cause of action as set out in her petition, filed herein, was based on a promissory note signed and executed by the appellants, J. T. Alford and S. P. Ramsey, and therefore constituted a liquidated demand, the correctness of which and their obligation to pay the same not being questioned or contested by the appellants. The plea in reconvention of the appellants did not arise out of the cause of action set up in plaintiff’s petition, but grew out of a personal difficulty arising between the appellant J. T. Alford and Webster Bradt, another tenant of the appellee, living on the Klondike ranch. Such a cause of action as that attempted to be set up by the defendants constituted an unliquidated demand, which did not arise out of and was not connected with or incident to plaintiff’s cause of action, and the court properly sustained plaintiff’s special exception to such plea in recónvention and counterclaim, and struck the same out of defendants’ answer.”

Articles 1325, 1329, and 1330, Y. S. Tex. Civ. Statutes, relating to the subject of counterclaims, read as follows:

Article 1325: “Whenever any suit shall be brought for the recovery of any debt due by judgment, bond, bill or otherwise, the defendant shall be permitted to plea therein any counterclaim which he may have against the plaintiff, subject to such limitations as may be prescribed by law.”
Article 1329: “If the plaintiff’s cause of action be a claim for unliquidated or uncertain damages, founded on a tort or breach of covenant, the defendant shall not be permitted to set off any debt due him by the plaintiff; and, if the suit be founded on a certain demand, the defendant shall not be permitted to set off un-liquidated or uncertain damages founded on a tort or breach of covenant on the part of the plaintiff.”
Article 1330: “Nothing in the preceding article shall be so construed as to prohibit the defendant from pleading*in set-off any counterclaim founded on a cause of action arising out of, or incident to, or connected with, the plaintiff’s cause of action.” •

We are of the opinion that appellants, by their pleading, showed themselves, within the purview of the articles quoted, entitled to the relief they prayed for. In testing the sufficiency of the answer on demurrer, the allegations must be accepted as true, and, if true, the defendants, by article 1325, were plainly given the right to plead their damages by way of a counterclaim to a cause of action declared upon by plaintiff, unless limited by some prescribed law.

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Bluebook (online)
238 S.W. 270, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alford-v-thomas-texapp-1922.