Bell v. Campbell

143 S.W. 953, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 541
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 143 S.W. 953 (Bell v. Campbell) 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
Bell v. Campbell, 143 S.W. 953, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 541 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

PRESLER, J.

In this suit M. T. Bell and! A. 'L. West, . a copartnership (appellants), sued H. L. Campbell, R. E. Campbell, and J. F. Hardin, for a certain sum named in appellant’s petition and alleged to be due for certain material furnished the said J. F. Hardin in the construction and erection of a certain building for appellees, R. E. and H. L. Campbell, in the town of Paducah, Cottle county, Tex., under and by virtue of a certain contract of building by and between the said J. F. Hardin, contractor, and appellees R. E. Campbell and H. L. Campbell, as owners. Appellants also claim the sum of $1,000 as against appellees R. E. and H. L. Campbell, as benefits received by them and appropriated to their own use, consisting of certain foundation and material remaining on appellee’s lot after the destruction of the building in question by fire, and alleged to have been converted by appellees to their own use. Appellants also asked for foreclosure of an alleged materialman’s lien upon said lot, to which suit appellees R. E. Campbell and H. L. Campbell answered by a denial of liability, and as a defense in bar to appellant’s suit also pleaded a certain award of arbitrators rendered in favor of said appellees and against said J. F. Hardin *954 and appellants, In accordance with an agreement to arbitrate which was embodied in said contract of building. Appellees Campbell brothers further alleged that appellants had guaranteed the fulfillment of said contract by becoming sureties upon the said Hardin bond, conditioned to secure the faithful performance of said building contract, and are bound by said award rendered in accordance with said contract. The defendant Hardin answered adopting the pleading of appellants as the contract sued on, and as against appellees alleged the practical completion of the building according to the contract, and that without fault of his the building was totally destroyed by fire, claimed a balance on the contract price of the building, and asked for judgment against appellees and for the foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien against the lot belonging to ap-pellees, upon which said building was erected. A demurrer having been sustained to said Hardin’s answer, he failed to amend and does not here appeal from the judgment rendered.

On the trial of the case the court instructed the jury, first, to render a verdict in favor of appellees R. E. Campbell and H. E. Campbell on said award of arbitration and against M. T. Bell, A. 'L. West, and J. F. Hardin for the sum of $2,026.50, and further to the effect that if the jury believed from the evidence that, after the rendition of said award, appellees had taken possession and control of any material and foundation, which was furnished by appellants for the construction of said building, and had appropriated the same to their own use and benefit, to estimate the reasonable value of said benefits and deduct such sum from the sum of $2,026.50, and render verdict for the difference in favor of appellees. Under this instruction, the jury found their verdict in favor of the said appellees R. E. and H. L. Campbell for $1,453.60 and costs of suit, and also against J. F. Hardin in favor of appellants for the same amount. Upon this verdict, judgment of the court was accordingly entered in favor of appellees and against appellants and J. F. Hardin in the sum of $1,453.60, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum and removing cloud from the title of appellees to lot No. 8, in block No. 5, in the town of Paducah, cast thereon by appellants’ alleged materialman’s lien, from which said judgment appellants have duly appealed and here assign error.

Appellants, under their second, eighth, fifteenth, and seventeenth assignments of error, which are grouped and relate to the award of arbitration and the effect given the same by the court, contend: (1) That the agreement to arbitrate, if any, contained in the original building contract, is void, because the same was an agreement to submit a possible controversy to arbitration made before the controversy had arisen, and that it involved the determination of the right of recovery, both as to law and fact, and tends to oust the courts of jurisdiction and substitute the contract tribunal instead of the one provided by law for the trial of lawsuits; (2) that appellants not having signed the original building contract, but their undertaking being evidenced by the bond only, they are at most guarantors, and are not bound by the arbitration and award unless they voluntarily submit to- arbitration and appear before the arbitrators; (3) that family relationship exists between one of the arbitrators and one of the parties, and on that ground the award was void; (4) which is a restatement (in part) of the first ground, to the effect that the arbitration in question is not valid as a statutory one, for the reason that the statute contemplates a disputed controversy shall already exist before the agreement to' arbitrate, and that all three 'arbitrators were chosen at the -time by the parties.

[1] We find from the evidence that the clause in the contract providing for arbitration is as follows: “And it lis further agreed by the parties hereto to submit and hereby do submit each, all, and every demand between them hereafter arising, if any, concerning the value of any changes of, or omissions in, or additions to, the aforementioned plans and specifications, or concerning the manner of performing or completing the work or the time or manner of and payment to be made under this agreement, or the quantity or quality of the labor or material, or both, to be done, furnished, or provided under this agreement, or any other cause or matter touching the work, the materials, or the damages contemplated, set forth, .or referred to in or by this agreement or concerning the construction of this agreement to the determination of T. J. Richards, J. B. Earle, and J. M. Barron, the award of whom or the award of the majority of whom being made and reported within 10 days from the time hereinbefore fixed upon the final completion of this agreement to the district, county, or justice’s court, whichever may have the jurisdiction of the amount in controversy, iin Cottle county, Tex., the judgment of which shall be final, and, if either of the parties shall neglect to appear before the arbitrators after due notice given of the time and place appointed for hearing the parties, the arbitrators may proceed upon his or tkelir absence.

That the arbitrators named in the agreement met and made the following award: “The undersigned arbitrators selected by the above-named parties in their agreement dated on the 7th day of February, A. D. 1910, and duly filed with J. O. Doolen, district clerk in and for Cottle county, Tex., being filed the 26th day of April, A. D. 1910, having on the 30th day of April, A. D. 1910, being the day assigned by the clerk for trial of said con *955 troversy, being duly sworn by said clerk, according to law, and finding that all tbe parties bad been duly and legally notified to be present to present tbeir side of this controversy on tbis date, and having beard tbe allegations and proof, together with tbe law incident to tbe said controversy, do render the following award: We do agree and do decide that tbe said J. F. Hardin entered into a contract with tbe above-mentioned Campbell brothers to build, construct, and complete a certain brick building in Paducah, Tex., for tbe said Campbell brothers, and that M. T. Bell and A. L.

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.W. 953, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-campbell-texapp-1911.