Arnold v. Chamberlain

39 S.W. 201, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 634, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 405
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 S.W. 201 (Arnold v. Chamberlain) 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
Arnold v. Chamberlain, 39 S.W. 201, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 634, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 405 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

Statement of the Nature and Result of the Suit.-—On February 3, 1892, appellee R. P. Chamberlain sued E. L. Heriot, a citizen of California, and appellant J. W. Arnold, a citizen of McLennan County, Texas, on a certain contract attached to the original petition for the sum of $522, being one-half the cost of a partition wall, and $87.50, one-half the cost of building a cistern—$609.50 in all—with interest thereon from the-day of-, 1891, and asked for a foreclosure on lot number 4, in block number 6, in East Waco, in McLennan County, Texas, and the improvements thereon. Judgment was asked establishing plaintiff’s (R. P. Chamberlain’s) alleged debt against the defendant E. L. Heriot, and that the alleged mortgage lien of plaintiff on said property be foreclosed as a superior right to any claim set up or owned by appellant Arnold. Plaintiff R. P. Chamberlain sued on the contract attached, to his original petition, which was executed on the 23rd day of October, 1872, by the firm of Flint & Chamberlain and defendant E. L. Heriot.

On the 20th day of February, 1893, appellant Arnoldx filed his first amended answer and plea in reconvention, and made his vendor, James I. Moore, a party to the suit. His pleadings consisted of a general demurrer and special exception, contending that by the terms of the contract sued on, Heriot bound himself, personally, upon a breach of its terms on his part, a lien could be enforced against said lot 4, in block 6, but that said contract does not contain a covenant which runs with the land in the possession of appellant, unless Heriot, before conveying the same, brought about a breach of said contract; and again, that the contract sued on shows on its face there was no consideration for its execution by Heriot, etc. Also, as to one-half the cost of the cistern and fixtures, limitation and stale demand, and specially, that Heriot sold lot 4, in block 6, to James I. Moore, and gave him a warranty deed to same, and on the 20th of November, 1888, James I. Moore conveyed, by warranty deed, said lot to appellant for the sum of $800, and he had no actual notice of the contract sued on; that the same was a personal contract of Heriot, and not a covenant which runs with the *637 land; that appellant, in 1891, being the owner of said lot and one-story house, did erect a second story on same; that at the time said partition wall was in a dilapidated condition and practically worthless, and did not keep out wind and rain, and would have tumbled down had it been left in the condition it was much longer, at the time appellant put on his second story; that, by building said second story, plaintiff’s property adjoining was increased in value the sum of §750, was plead in re-convention against plaintiff’s demand. Also, that at the time appellant built his second story, eighty-seven thousand of the best brick in Waco were not worth exceeding §650, and, if held liable at all, he ought to be bound for only §325. He further plead that he "was a married man and head of a family, before and at the time he built his one-story house two stories high and at the time it was erected; before, and now, said premises were both his residence and business homestead, and occupied and used as such by himself and family; and further, that he was an innocent purchaser of the premises on which foreclosure is sought from James I. Moore, who, for §800, gave him a general warranty deed to same, and he prayed that said Moore be required to defend the suit, and if plaintiff obtained a judgment decreeing that his lot shall be sold to pay the plaintiff’s claim, then that he have judgment for like amount over against said warrantor, Moore; that if his lot is held liable to pay plaintiff’s debt against Heriot he have judgment for §750 against plaintiff, the sum sued for in reconvention, for the benefit of his said property by building his said house two stories high; and if appellant’s lot is held liable at plaintiff’s suit, it be only to the extent of what one-half' of eighty-seven thousand brick would cost at the time appellant put the second story on Lis house.

Defendant Moore answered on the 3rd day of July, 1893, by general and special exceptions and special answer, in which he contended that Arnold did not show wherein he, Moore, had made or caused to be made, any breach of* his warranty, and that the covenant,’ made by Flint and Chamberlain and Heriot, was not such as runs with the land, and his warranty had not been violated, and that the contract sued on had been on record since the 24th day of October, 1872, and he had constructive notice of same at the time he purchased said lot from him in 1888; that Arnold built the second story on said building, and made the lien sued on effective after he became the owner of said lot, and he warned him not to build said second story, and his warranty went with the property in the condition it was when appellant bought it. He also adopted certain portions of appellant’s amended answer.

The case was tried by the court, without a jury, on the 21st day of November, 1894, and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff, declaring that Heriot was indebted to plaintiff in the sum of §525, with six per cent interest thereon from February 3, 1892, the date of filing of the plaintiff’s petition, amounting to §616.35, and adjudging a recovery against him and foreclosing the mortgage against appellant’s lot to satisfy the same, and in favor of Moore and against appellant for his costs. *638 Appellant perfected his appeal, assigned errors, and brings his case to this court, for revision of said judgment.

Statement of Material Facts Proved on the Trial of the Case.—Plaintiff introduced in evidence the following agreement:

“The State of Texas, ) “County of McLennan. \ This article of agreement, made and entered into this 16th day of October, 1872, by and between Flint & Chamberlain of the first part, and E. L. Heriot of the second part, witnesseth, to-wit:
“Item 1st. Flint and Chamberlain are the owners of the two story brick house built on lot (5), in block (6), in East Waco, in the city of Waco, and E. L. Heriot is the owner of the one story brick house built on lot (4), in block (6), adjoining the above, and all in the Railroad Addition to East Waco. The partition wall was built entirely by the said Flint and Chamberlain, containing eighty-seven thousand brick, at a cost of one thousand and forty-four dollars, gold.
“Item 2nd. Should the said Heriot, at any time, desire to build his said one story house up two stories high, he shall first pay to the said Flint and Chamberlain, their heirs or assigns, the full sum of five hundred and twenty-two dollars, gold, the one-half cost of said partition wall, and thereupon' he shall become half owner of the same, and until said sum be paid, as aforesaid, by said Heriot, he shall have the right to enjoy said partition wall with said Flint and Chamberlain for a partition wall for the one story now built, but no higher; and the said Flint and Chamberlain shall have the right to put windows in the upper story of said partition wall and enjoy the light and air to the same without obstruction from the said E. L. Heriot, until he pays said money as aforesaid to the said Flint and Chamberlain.
“Item 3rd. The' said Flint and Chamberlain, and the said E. L.

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W. 201, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 634, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-chamberlain-texapp-1896.