Berry v. Thomason

261 S.W. 154, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 355
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 1924
DocketNo. 10502.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 261 S.W. 154 (Berry v. Thomason) 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
Berry v. Thomason, 261 S.W. 154, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 355 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinions

This suit was instituted by G. W. Thomason and Y. L. Thomason against the Boggy Valley Oil Company, a corporation incorporated under the laws of the state of Texas, and A. V. De Pascle, W. L. Berry, and Calvin H. Henson, to recover the balance claimed to be due plaintiffs for rent on a welldrilling machine and implements used in connection therewith, and also for the value of a rig which plaintiffs alleged defendants failed to return after the expiration of the lease period, and which it was further alleged the defendants converted to their own use.

Judgment by default was rendered against the oil company, and defendants have made no complaint in this court of that decree. Judgment was also rendered in plaintiffs' favor against the defendants Berry, as vice president of the oil company, and Henson, as secretary and treasurer, and against those two persons individually. From the personal judgment against them, Berry and Henson have prosecuted this appeal. Although the judgment recites that De Pascle was duly cited as president of the oil company and also in his individual capacity, he failed to answer but wholly made default. Notwithstanding that recital, judgment was rendered in favor of De Pascle.

The lease contract upon which plaintiffs sought a recovery for rentals on the welldrilling rig is as follows:

"The State of Texas, Throckmorton County.

"Know all men by these presents that this contract or agreement, this day made and entered into by and between G. W. Thomason and Y. L. Thomason of Throckmorton county, Texas, parties of the first part, and the Boggy Valley Oil Company, a corporation duly incorporated under the laws of the state of Texas, and having its principal place of business in Throckmorton county, Texas, and A. V. De Pascle of Dallas, Texas, president, Dr. W. L. Berry, vice president, and Calvin J. Henson, Sec. and Treas., of said company, of Throckmorton county, Texas, both in their official capacity as officers of said corporation and in their individual capacity, each for themselves, parties of the second part, witnesseth: That the parties of the first part do hereby lease and rent to the parties of the second part for the period of ninety days from date hereof, one National well machine, one stem, 20 feet long, one ten-inch bit, one eight-inch bit, one six-inch bit, one Barrett jack, one set of wrenches, at a rental of seven dollars and fifty cents per day for each day of said ninety days — Sundays excepted unless machine and tools are used on Sundays, and if used to be paid for at the same rate; said rental to be paid weekly at the end of each week.

"The said Boggy Valley Oil Company in its corporate capacity, and the said A. V. De Pascle, Dr. W. L. Berry and Calvin J. Henson, each in their official and individual capacity, severally and jointly, bind and obligate themselves to pay to the parties of the first part the rental for the machine and tools as agreed herein for the time herein specified and at the end of said term to return said machine and tools to the parties of the first part where they received them free of cost to the parties of the first part and in as good condition as they, the second parties, receive them; and if the said second parties should lose or break any of said tools, they are to replace the same with new tools and if said machine is damaged to place the same in as good repair as when received.

"Witness our hands, this the 2d day of May, A. D. Y. L. Thomason, Parties of the First Part. W. L. Berry, Vice President, Calvin J. Henson, Sec.-Treas., Parties of the Second Part."

In their pleadings plaintiffs alleged that by oversight the contract sued on was not signed by plaintiff G. W. Thomason, nor by the Boggy Valley Oil Company, nor by A. V. De Pascle. But it was further alleged that G. W. Thomason was bound by it because Y. L. Thomason acted for him in the making of it, and that the oil company and De Pascle were bound because they were represented by Berry and Henson in its execution, and that all the defendants were liable because they acquiesced in the contract as binding upon them individually and accepted the benefits arising therefrom.

Defendants Berry and Henson filed numerous exceptions to the sufficiency of the petition to show a cause of action against them personally. They also pleaded specially that prior to the execution of the contract the oil company was the owner of oil and gas leases which is desired to develop, and in order to accomplish that it sent defendant Henson and another agent to procure a drilling rig. According to further allegations, Henson and the other agent entered into an oral contract with plaintiffs for and in behalf of the company only to rent the machine and tools described in plaintiffs' petition. Plaintiffs then undertook to reduce the oral contract to writing, but before doing so represented to Henson that they desired the three officers named to become guarantors for the oil company in the performance of the contract, but Henson declined to accede to that demand, since it was not in accordance with the prior oral contract. But Henson told plaintiffs at the same time that if De Pascle would execute the contract so as to make him individually liable, then Berry and Henson would consider whether or not they would also become personally bound. Plaintiffs then agreed that if Berry and Henson would sign the contract officially they should *Page 156 not be liable personally unless De Pascle should also sign it so as to bind him individually. Berry was not then present, but later he and Henson signed the contract as vice president and secretary-treasurer of the defendant company, respectively, with the intention of thereby binding the company, but with no intention of binding themselves to individual liability, and plaintiffs accepted the same with that understanding and intention.

According to further allegations, Berry and Henson had no personal interest in the lease of the machinery and tools, and there was no consideration passing to them to bind them individually.

Defendants further pleaded that if, as alleged in plaintiffs' petition, it was understood and agreed that the three officials named should all be individually liable, as well as the company, then the contract is incomplete and unenforceable because not executed by De Pascle nor by the company.

Upon the trial defendants Berry and Henson each requested the court to submit to the jury special issues, which, in substance, required findings as to whether or not they executed the contract with understanding between them and plaintiffs that those defendants would not be individually liable thereon, unless De Pascle should also sign the same in a manner to bind himself to individual liability, and whether or not they individually accepted and used the leased property. There was ample evidence to support findings in appellants' favor on the issues. The court refused to submit those requested issues; the only issue submitted by the court being as to the market value of the machinery and tools leased at the date of the termination of the lease. And judgment was rendered in plaintiffs' favor for the amount of rentals stipulated in the lease contract plus the market value of the property as found by the jury.

Aside from the question of its apparent incompleteness for lack of the signature of De Pascle and the lack of its execution by defendant company as alleged in plaintiffs' pleadings, the contract, as executed, did not clearly import the individual liability thereon of Berry and Henson. To say the least, it was ambiguous, and, in recognition of that fact, plaintiffs sought to hold appellants individually liable by alleging the facts already cited which were dehors the written instrument, and by introducing testimony in support of such allegations.

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Bluebook (online)
261 S.W. 154, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-thomason-texapp-1924.