Barrier v. Brinkmann

109 S.W.2d 462, 130 Tex. 350, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 282
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1937
DocketNo. 6919.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 462 (Barrier v. Brinkmann) 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
Barrier v. Brinkmann, 109 S.W.2d 462, 130 Tex. 350, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 282 (Tex. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge Harvey

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

This suit is comprised of what we shall term a main suit and a receivership suit, which were consolidated in the Court of *352 Civil Appeals. We shall first address ourselves to the main suit, laying aside the receivership suit until we have concluded examination and discussion of the questions pertaining to the main suit. In the main suit, the defendants in error, H. E. Brinkmann, and his children, George, Louis and Amanda Brinkmann, all of whom were adults before the year 1928, sued the plaintiff in error, N. M. Barrier, for damages. The cause of action for the damages claimed is alleged alternatively to be fraud and breach of contract on the part of Barrier, which caused the Brinkmanns to lose their property by the foreclosure of a deed of trust executed to secure a loan obtained by them from the American National Insurance Company of Galveston, which will be hereinafter called the Insurance Company. In the trial court the case was tried before a jury on special issues, resulting in a judgment against Barrier for damages in the sum of $94,-750.00. The Court of Civil Appeals found that $15,000.00 of this amount was awarded as exemplary damages, and in this single respect reversed the judgment and remanded the cause. As to the remainder, amounting to $79,750.00, the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. 80 S. W. (2d) 365. Barrier has been granted the writ of error.

Although we are convinced that various special issues, in the manner and form submitted to the jury by the trial court, are erroneous, we have concluded that a proper disposition of the case calls for a determination of the broader question, duly raised by Barrier, as to whether or not the evidence raises a fact question as to Barrier’s liability for damages, either in respect of fraud or of breach of contract, as claimed by the Brinkmanns. Stated in a few words, the fraud, upon which the claim for damages is founded, consisted, according to the averments of the plaintiffs’ petition, of a series of fraudulent acts and fraudulent conduct on the part of Barrier, which caused the Brinkmanns to lose their property by the foreclosure of the Insurance Company deed of trust, as hereinafter explained. The breach of contract declared upon is, substantially, the alleged failure of Barrier to negotiate a contract with the Insurance Company, which would operate to save the property from foreclosure under the deed of trust.

Since we are now primarily concerned with the matter of evidence, we shall notice the averments of the plaintiff’s petition no further than to say that the above is, in substance, the grounds alleged as a basis for the claim for damages.

Upon the trial of the case, the following facts were shown in evidence, and upon which the judgment of the trial court depends.

*353 H. E. Brinkmann and his wife owned all the real estate hereinafter mentioned, which was community property. His wife died, intestate, in the year 1916, and thereafter until sometime in November, 1930, H. E. Brinkmann controlled the management of the property in behalf of himself and children, all of whom were adults. All matters relating to their interest in the property inherited from their mother, except the mere act of signing deeds to or mortgages on the property, were committed by the children to their father, H. E. Brinkmann. Shortly before June, 1928, H. E. Brinkmann, who will be referred to simply as Brinkmann, negotiated for a loan from the Insurance Company. The negotiations were concluded and the loan, amounting to $125,000.00, was made on June 4, 1928. For the amount of the loan, all the Brinkmanns executed a note bearing interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum. The note was payable in annual installments of $12,500.00 each, and the interest on the indebtedness was payable annually as it accrued. As security for the indebtedness, Brinkmann and his children duly executed a deed of trust which embraced the property in question, which consisted mainly of several city lots in Port Arthur, upon which were a number of large brick store buildings. Other property embraced by the deed of trust was unimproved city lots and some acreage property. In the deed of trust it was provided that failure in payment of principal and interest as same fell due, would, at the election of the Insurance Company, mature the entire indebtedness. It was also provided in said deed of trust that the entire indebtedness to the Insurance Company would mature, at the election of the company, in case a second or subsequent lien was placed on said property. On August 20, 1928, Brinkmann borrowed from J. H. Phelan the sum of $35,-000.00, for which all the Brinkmanns executed their note, which was payable one year after date; and to secure its payment Brinkmann and his children executed a deed of trust which embraced, among other real estate, the property embraced by the Insurance Company’s deed of trust. As further security for the Phelan loan, Barrier, at the instance of Brinkmann’s attorney, indorsed the Phelan note, for which indorsement Barrier charged $1,000.00, which Brinkmann paid. About this time Barrier (who was in the real estate business in Port Arthur), had a conversation with Mrs. Alma Ware Crosby, who testified that she had occasion to go to Barrier’s office upon a mission of her own. Incidentally, the fact of Brinkmann mortgaging his property became a subject of the conversation. The substance of the conversation on this subject was given by Mrs. Crosby in her testimony upon the trial of this case, in the following words:

*354 “And he told me he had just arranged a loan, or had something to do with it, for Mr. Brinkmann; that he had gotten Mr. Phelan to take a second lien and he seemed pleased over it. He said he had indorsed it and that Mr. Brinkmann had paid him $1,000 to indorse the second lien; that if he (Brinkmann) had known it he (Barrier) would rather indorse it than not, as he would control the loan; that the Brinkmanns were not good business people and if they fell down on the loan he could own the property some day. He said it was worth around a half million dollars; that the loan against it was not half — I think around $180,000. He seemed to think the loan was not half the value of the property. I said to him, ‘Well, you’ll have to pay it off,’ and he said that with his credit he could get a new loan on it; that he and his boys were rental people and could work it out.”

On June 4, 1929, the first installment of $12,500.00 of the principal of the Insurance Company note, together with a year’s interest on the whole debt, fell due. Brinkmann paid the accrued interest at that time, but was unable, for want of funds, to pay the $12,500.00 installment of the principal.

On August 20, 1929, the Phelan note fell due and a renewal note was executed by the Brinkmanns which extended the time of payment of the entire amount of the Phelan debt for one year. Barrier indorsed this renewal note, and for this indorsement Brinkmann paid him the sum of $1,000.00.

About June 4, 1929, Brinkmann, through his attorney, opened negotiations with the Insurance Company to procure a reduction in the amount of the annual installments of principal provided in the Insurance Company note and deed of trust.

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 462, 130 Tex. 350, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrier-v-brinkmann-tex-1937.