Baker v. Brown

186 S.W. 813, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 677
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 25, 1916
DocketNo. 589.
StatusPublished

This text of 186 S.W. 813 (Baker v. Brown) 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
Baker v. Brown, 186 S.W. 813, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 677 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

Brown sued Baker upon the

latter’s promissory note in sum of $550, payable to order of J. F. Barron, R. E. Simpson, and Mit Akin, due October 1, 1911. The payees indorsed the note without recourse and transferred and delivered the same to T. J. O’Donnell who, in turn, transferred it to one Daniel, and Daniel transferred it to Brown. The defendant answered that in the year 1909 O’Donnell was soliciting, subscriptions to a bonus to be given to induce the construction of a branch of the Santa Fé Railway System to the town of Lamesa in Dawson county; that a guaranty contract had been given O’Donnell by various citizens, which guaranty reads:

“We, the undersigned citizens of Lamesa and Dawson county, Texas, for the purpose of assisting T. J. O’Donnell in securing a branch of the Santa Fé Railway System from some point on their main line now in course of construction from Texico to Coleman, to Lamesa in Dawson county, Texas, do each with the other agree and bind ourselves, and our heirs, executors, and administrators, to pay to T. J. O’Donnell or his assigns the sum of fifty thousand dollars in cash upon the completion of the above-named railroad to the town of Lamesa, Texas. We further agree and bind ourselves to deliver to the Santa E’e System or its allied lines a complete right of way, station grounds, and stock pen grounds whenever the same has been surveyed and adopted. If condemnation proceedings be necessary to acquire title to the right of way, the Santa Fé Railroad System will allow the use of their name to file suit, that the title to the right of way may be acquired, and we agree, jointly and severally, to indemnify the Santa Fé Railway Company against the cost of any such suit. It is further understood and agreed that in accepting this guaranty the Santa Fé Railway Company agrees and binds itself to build and place in operation a railroad to the town of Lamesa, Texas, on or before December 31st, 1910.”

This guaranty was signed by the payees in the note and various others, but not by defendant. This instrument was transferred by O’Donnell to the Pecos & Northern Railway Company. Defendant further alleged that the note sued upon was given in renewal of notes which he had originally given in aid of the bonus and guaranty contract, and that said notes had been obtained by false and fraudulent representations made by O’Donnell. It was further alleged that the notes executed by defendant and others in aid of said bonus and guaranty contract were given to the payees named in the note for the purpose of collecting same and applying proceeds to the payment of the guaranty; that the payees were duly authorized to collect the notes and renew same and apply proceeds to the liquidation of the indebtedness evidenced by the guaranty contract, and that no other authority was possessed by them; that the guaranty contract had been settled and discharged and the guarantors released therefrom. Upon trial before a jury a peremptory instruction was given to find for the plaintiff:, in accordance wherewith verdict was returned and judgment rendered.

The Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Company had filed suit in the district court of Dawson county against the signers of the guaranty contract to recover a balance of 836,000 due thereon. This suit was number 109, and on November 15, 1912, the parties thereto entered into a written agreement, the material portions of which are as follows:

“1. In consideration only of the adverse conditions which have confronted the people of Dawson county during the past few years, and *814 a desire upon tiie part of the plaintiff to aid and assist the said people Of Dawson county and obligors on said original contract and others who may be indirectly obligated thereon to said obligors, defendants herein, the plaintiff agrees that the above-styled and numbered cause shall be dismissed, and that the original obligation executed, and which was the basis of this action, shall be surrendered to said obligors and canceled. Payments made to plaintiff not to be effected, being property of plaintiffs, nor one right of way provision of contract.”

In accordance with this agreement, judgment was entered on March 18, 1913, as follows:

“In accordance with said agreement, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that this cause be dismissed and that the obligation sued on by the plaintiff be canceled and declared of naught in so far as provided in the foregoing agreement and that said agreement be in all things the judgment of this court.”

There was some kind of a suit pending in Nolan county by O’Donnell against the Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Company, and on November 15, 1912, an agreement was entered into with respect thereto by O’Donnell and the payees named in the note upon which the instant suit is based. This agreement reads:

, “This agreement this day made by and between T. J. O’Donnell, of Nolan county, Texas, and the guaranty committee of Dawson county, -Texas, by which guaranty committee is meant the persons in authority and authorized to act for each and every guarantor to the Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Company, under contract in suit in cause number 1102, styled T. J. O’Donnell v. Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Company, now pending in Nolan county Texas, that said O’Donnell is to dismiss said suit upon consideration that said committee will indorse over to the said O’Donnell without recourse on them, all instruments in writing evidencing a promise to pay any money or thing of value by said citizens to said committee, or to said T. J. O’Donnell. In other words, ^ every subscriber thereto in any manner or ' form, and it is a part of the consideration for the dismissal of said suit, that said T. J. O’Donnell shall own and hold and possess every subscription made by every individual subscribing thereto directly or indirectly in said Dawson county, Texas, with no limitation whatever save and except that each subscriber if he makes satisfactory arrangements with the said T. J. O’Donnell within 60 days’ time-for the payment of fifty per cent, of his subscription now due, then and in the event, the said T. J. O’Donnell shall accept the said fifty per cent, of said subscription now due in payment thereof and shall receipt therefor. Other-wise the said T. J. O’Donnell shall have full power as this committee has to collect the full amount of the subscription of any individual that is now due, and the consideration moving these guarantors to make this contract is that, by virtue hereof, we save each subscriber one-half of Ms subscription, provided within 60 days he arranges payment of one-half thereof. Unless he so arranges with the said T. J. O’Donnell, it is expressly agreed and understood that he shall have and claim no rights under this contract. It being understood that this passes no rights to O’Donnell in the original contract executed to O’Donnell by guaranty committee.”

On the same day (November 15, 1912) O’Donnell transferred to E. O'. Daniel all bonus notes which he had received from said Akin, Barron, and Simpson. On August 22, 1913, Daniel transferred the notes to plaintiff Brown. On November 15, 1912, judgment was rendered in the suit of O’Donnell against the Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Company that O’Donnell take nothing. O’Donnell testified:

“I am the same T. J. O’Donnell mentioned in the pleadings in this case. I helped to get up the subscriptions for the bonus in Dawson county.

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Related

Gaines v. Brown
177 S.W. 220 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 813, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-brown-texapp-1916.