Allison v. Harrison

137 Tex. 582
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1941
DocketNo. 7696
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 137 Tex. 582 (Allison v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison v. Harrison, 137 Tex. 582 (Tex. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Taylor

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

This suit was by A. B. Allison and wife for cancellation of a conveyance of 290 acres of land and certain royalties thereon, and for a reinvestment of title; and in the alternative for damages. The suit was originally against P. F. Campbell and G. A. Harrison. Campbell died about three months, before the case was tried and Mrs. Campbell, executrix of his will, was made co-defendant with Harrison. Mrs. Allison was dismissed from the suit. The cause as now before us is by Allison, plaintiff in error, against Mrs. Campbell, executrix, and Harrison, defendants in error.

The trial court at the conclusion of plaintiff’s case and before defendants had offered their case, instructed a verdict against plaintiff. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment. 134 S. W. (2d) 399.

The suit is predicated upon misrepresentations and concealment of material facts by Campbell and Harrison in procuring from Allison a conveyance of the land to Campbell on March 6, 1937, and from Campbell to Harrison on March 10 following.

Plaintiff alleges that about September, 1936, Campbell and Harrison learned that a drilling block in the vicinity of plaintiff’s land near Palacios, Matagorda County, had been formed and that it was planned to drill a test well on the block for oil and gas; that plaintiff was a non-resident, seventy-one years • of age, resided at Charleston, Illinois, and for a long period of [585]*585time had not seen his land and had entrusted its care to his friend Campbell as his agent and fiduciary and relied upon him for information concerning the land; that after Campbell and Harrkon had acquired knowledge of the drilling test to be made they concocted and perpetrated a fraud upon plaintiff by false representations and concealments in order to get his land and a part of his royalties at a price greatly below their market value; that through a course of letters and written communications they represented they were desirous of selling the land to the State for an airport provided plaintiff would sell at $30.00 an acre ($8,700.00) with reservation of half the minerals; that Campbell and Harrison represented they were planning to sell the land to the State for an airport and that in order to effect a sale a long period of time would have to be allowed, and it would be necessary for plaintiff to execute an instrument in writing to be presented to the legislature or its committees (showing the land could be delivered by them) ; that in reliance upon the representations made, plaintiff executed, in the latter part of 1936, an agreement giving Campbell the exclusive right until July 1, 1937, to sell the land upon the terms just stated; that Campbell in turn placed the same in the hands of Harrison, representing to Allison that he had done so because Harrison and he were actively negotiating a sale to the State; that Campbell and Harrison, acting in conjunction, made such representations concerning the deal as caused, and were calculated to cause, plaintiff to believe that they, as his confidential agents, were pressing the airport deal.

Plaintiff alleges that about the latter part of February, 1937, trading in leases and mineral interests became very active in the vicinity of the land; that the test well was shut down and the parties drilling same became very active in such trading, and in fact made through Harrison many royalty deals during the latter part of February and the early part of March, 1937; that shortly prior thereto (about February 21, 1937) plaintiff learned through sources other than Campbell and Harrison of drilling operations in the vicinity of Palacios and wrote Campbell requesting that they call off the deal with the State, offering to pay them for their efforts in that behalf; that on February 25, Campbell wrote plaintiff that before receiving his request he had sold the land to Harrison upon the same terms set forth in the exclusive sales agreement with him (Campbell) and that Harrison was taking title to the land to hold for the State until the Legislature would reimburse him; and that he (Harrison) had gone so far in the deal with [586]*586the State that it was impossible to “back out”; that the price was fair and plaintiff, by reservation of his part of the minerals, would receive more than the land would ever have brought under any other circumstances; that the representations caused, and were calculated to cause, plaintiff to believe a sale of the land had been consummated by Harrison with the State officials, or that the closing of such a deal was in such state that the only thing remaining to be done was to obtain the money from the Legislature, and that it was impossible to then “back out”; that the deal “would have to be closed in order to> protect plaintiff, Campbell and Harrison”; that plaintiff was thereby induced to execute the deed of March 6, 1937, conveying the land to Campbell, for the purpose stated, and that Campbell, as plaintiff’s agent and trustee, on March 10, 1937, in keeping with' Harrison’s suggestion theretofore made, conveyed the land to Harrison.

It is alleged that prior to the time the deed was executed to Harrison, he and Campbell, or Harrison, acting for himself and Campbell, had highly profitable deals then pending, unbeknown to plaintiff, for sale of a part of the royalty on the land; that they had already ascertained at such time that the State would not take the land and knew plaintiff believed .a deal had been agreed upon with the. State subject to obtaining the purchase money from the Legislature; that notwithstanding their fiducial duty they withheld and concealed such facts from plaintiff and deliberately sought to keep him from ascertaining same by writing him that “big offers.” for leases and royalties had been heard of but that those receiving same “had failed to see the drafts paid”; and that the well was in “plenty of trouble” and plaintiff should be congratulated in getting the land off at $30.00 per acre, which was a fair price.

Plaintiff further alleges that he did not learn of the facts which Campbell and Harrison concealed from him nor of the falsity of the misrepresentations above referred to until a short time before the filing of this suit; that the land and minerals on the dates, of March 6, 1937, and March 10, 1937, were of a market value greatly in excess of $30.00 per acre and were reasonably worth not less than $36,250.00; that by reason of the false representations, statements and concealments plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $27,500.00 (its true market value less $8,700.00) ; and that but for such representations and concealments, he would not have executed the conveyance in question.

[587]*587Plaintiff made his allegations in such fashion as to predicate recovery upon the theory, first, that Campbell became his trustee and that the deed to him, and from him to Harrison, created a constructive trust; and prayed for recovery of the land accordingly, with allowance of credit for the $8,700.00 turned over to him. He so reiterated in his pleadings the basic facts as to set up, in the alternative, an action for damages in the sum stated above, ¡and, accordingly, prayed for such recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Tex. 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allison-v-harrison-tex-1941.