Beham v. Ghio

12 S.W. 996, 75 Tex. 87, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1032
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 12, 1889
DocketNo. 2846
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 12 S.W. 996 (Beham v. Ghio) 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
Beham v. Ghio, 12 S.W. 996, 75 Tex. 87, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1032 (Tex. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

GAINES, Associate Justice.

In the year 1885 an election was ordered in Bowie County to determine the question of the removal of the county seat. Boston, the county seat then existing, Texarkana, and two other places were candidates for the permanent location. In September of that year, and before the day fixed for the election, the appellants and appellees, and three others who have not appealed, entered into a joint obligation to pay Bowie County the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars in annual installments of five hundred dollars each on condition that the county seat of the county was located at Texarkana and they failed to provide for the use of the county a suitable court house for the period of five years. The bond was duly acknowledged by the obligors and was filed in the office of the county clerk. At the election Texarkana was selected as the county seat, and thereupon appellees leased to the county as a court house a portion of a building known as Ghio & Henry’s opera house for the term of five years. The consideration expressed was “the sum of twenty-five hundred dollars in hand paid.” The real consideration was the transfer to appellees by the county judge and the commissioners the bond above described. The demised premises were proved to be worth six hundred dollars per year. They were occupied as a court house from November 11, 1885, until January 21, 1889, when the house was destroyed by fire. There were eleven obligors on the bond, and this suit was brought by appellants to recover of their co-obligors nine-elevenths of two thousand dollars, that being the amount of the rent of the leased premises for four years. It resulted in a judgment in favor of appellees against each of the other obligors on the bond for one-eleventh of the rent from November, 1885, to January, 1889, at the rate of five hundred dollars per annum—that is to say, against each for the sum of one hundred and sixty-six and fourteen-one-hundredths dollars.

It appears from the record that upon the filing of the original petition the bond which is made the foundation of the action was properly marked and filed with the petition, and by a proper reference made a part thereof, but that it had been withdrawn by the counsel for plaintiffs for safe keep[89]*89ing and was not again deposited with the papers until the trial had begun. It was offered in evidence and was objected to upon the ground that it varied in tenor and effect from that declared on in the petition. On account of its withdrawal the court declined to consider it a part of the petition, and sustained the objection. Thereupon plaintiffs were permitted to withdraw their announcement and to amend their petition by making the bond a part thereof. They then again announced ready, and the defendants moved the court to continue the case on the ground of surprise. 'The motion was overruled, and the ruling was excepted to and is now assigned as error. The statement of the trial judge, appended to the bill of exceptions, shows that he knew of his otvn knowledge that upon an argument upon a demurrer to the petition on a former day the obligation had been read to the court, and that he was satisfied that the counsel for the -defendants were apprised of the contents of the instrument. Ho application was filed showing that it was probable that any additional testimony could be procured to meet the issues presented by the amendment or that any was desired. Under these circumstances we think the court did not err in requiring defendants to proceed with the trial. We do not understand that upon the coming in of an amendment presenting new issues the party who claims surprise is entitled to a continuance as a matter of absolute right. If the court be satisfied upon sufficient grounds that in fact there is no surprise, and that he is as ready to proceed as if the •amendment had been filed a sufficient length of time to enable him to prepare his case for trial, and that the application to continue is for delay only, the continuance should be refused.

The second assignment of error is that “The court erred in admitting in evidence, over' objections of defendants, the contract or bond •offered by plaintiffs marked exhibit rZ,’ because there is a fatal variance between the said instrument offered and the one described in plaintiffs’ •said petition; and because said contract and exhibit so offered had not been attached to said petition nor filed among the papers of said cause as such before the trial began, and was not so attached and filed until at the very time of the announcement of ready for trial by plaintiffs and defendants.’’

When the bond by amendment was attached to and made a part of the petition it was not error to admit it in evidence, although the pleader in the body of his petition may have erroneously declared its legal tenor •and effect. To say that there is a variance in such a case would be to say that an instrument can vary from itself. The question has been repeatedly decided in this court. Peters v. Crittenden, 8 Texas, 131; Greenwood v. Anderson, Id., 225; Spencer v. McCarty, 46 Texas, 213.

In Pyron v. Grinder, 25 Texas Supp., 162, Judge Wheeler states the ground to be, ‘ ‘ that the instrument itself, thus made a part of the petition .and filed with it for the inspection of the defendant, must control and [90]*90cure any misdescription of it in the body of the petition.” So also it is-the duty of the court to construe the instrument so declared on and attached itself, and to give it its proper legal tenor and effect, and thereby to control the legal effect as alleged in the petition. It follows that a false allegation as to the legal effect of an instrument annexed to a pleading is cured by the writing itself.

We are of the opinion that if the court erred in admitting the testimony of appellees as to what occurred at a public meeting in Texarkanain regard to leasing the opera house for a court house, it affords no ground for a reversal of the judgment. The case was tried by the court, and there was evidence to sustain the judgment without the aid of this testimony. The uncontroverted facts as shown by the evidence are, that the plaintiffs and defendants bound themselves to furnish a court house for the county in the event that the county seat was removed to Texarkana, or to pay five hundred dollars per annum for five years. The county seat was removed; the defendants did nothing towards complying with the contract, and the plaintiffs performed it and took for their protection a transfer of the bond. It would seem but just that the other obligors should contribute their part of the expense towards reimbursing plaintiffs. The latter did what they, as well as defendants, were bound to do, and what defendants failed to do, and we think they are entitled to receive contribution. It seems to us, therefore, wholly immaterial whether or not the defendants signed the obligation with the understanding that the opera houfee was to be used for the purpose of a court house.

Appellants’ fourth assignment of error raises the question of the legality of the contract evidenced by the bond. It maybe admitted that every contract made for the purpose of obstructing a free election of any character, though not positively prohibited by statute, is contrary to pmblic policy and void.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W. 996, 75 Tex. 87, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beham-v-ghio-texapp-1889.