Brann v. Arbuthnot

274 S.W. 660, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 638
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 30, 1925
DocketNo. 11181.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 274 S.W. 660 (Brann v. Arbuthnot) 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
Brann v. Arbuthnot, 274 S.W. 660, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 638 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

Charles A. Arbuthnot filed suit against J. P. Elliott and E. J. Brann. He alleged that he was a real estate broker, and had been employed to sell a house and lot belonging to Elliott, and that he procured a purchaser, in the person of B. P’Pool, who was ready, willing, and able to purchase the property upon terms satisfactory to the owner, and in fact said Elliott sold the property to the P’Pools at the price asked, to wit, $4,750. 1-Ie further alleged that E. J. Brann had secured the signature to the contract of sale by falsely and fraudulently representing to Elliott that one R. M. Bowen, who was the agent of Elliott for the care and sale of the property, had sent him to Elliott to secure such signature. That, by reason of the fraudulent conduct of said Brann, he had induced said Elliott to execute and deliver to him a promissory note for the commission. He prayed that he have judgment against Elliott for $237.50, 5 per cent, on the selling price, alleged in one count to be the commission agreed upon, and, in another count, to be the usual and customary charge for such services.- Elliott filed an answer, signed by him, but apparently prepared by some lawyer, and he testified:

“I never in my life promised to pay counsel a fee in any transaction. I have not asked counsel to represent me in this case, and have not promised to pay counsel anything. The last I knew, Mr. Bowen was representing me.”

Mr. Bowen is shown to be connected with one of the local banks, but evidently not a lawyer. Hence, perhaps we are justified in assuming that counsel referred to in the testimony of Elliott was the counsel of plaintiff below.

In defendant Elliott’s answer he alleged:

“Now comes J. P. Elliott defendant and respectfully shows the court that he stands ready to pay the commission sued for to whomsoever it belongs. That he had at the time of the transaction in question one R. M. Bowen acting as his agent in looking after his matters ; that the defendant Brann came out to see *661 your defendant, and told your defendant that’ your defendant’s agent, R. M. Bowen, said for your defendant to sign the contract of sale that was made with the purchaser and that your defendant, relying upon such statements and representations made by Brann signed the sale contract, and afterwards executed and gave defendant Brann a note for the commission in question, believing at the time the statements and representations made by Brann were true. Your defendant says that if such statements and representations were true, and if Brann was the procuring cause, he owes the commission to Brann, but that if same were false and untrue then he does not owe the commission to Brann. That your defendant had [has?] been advised by his agent Bowen, that he, Bowen, gave no instructions to Brann, such as Brann made to your defendant, and your defendant is a mere stakeholder and stands ready to pay the commission to whomsoever the court may find is lawfully entitled thereto, and defendant prays that he be dismissed with his costs, etc.”

Defendant Brann answered by general demurrer, by a plea of misjoinder, by a general denial, and by a plea that be was the procuring cause of the sale. By a cross-action, Brann sought to recover on the note given by Elliott, dated April 25, '1923, for the commission. He alleged that the payment of sai'd commission note was contingent upon the payment of a certain note given by the P’Pools in the payment for the place, and that the last-named note had been paid.

Elliott answered this cross-action by a plea that Brann had secured his signature to the contract of sale by falsely and fraudulently representing to him that he, Brann, had been sent to Elliott to secure such signature by Elliott’s agent Bowen, and that he would not have signed the contract had he not relied on such representation. This pleading was signed “J. E. Elliott, by R. N. Bowen, Agent,” probably meaning R. M. Bowen. He further alleged that he had signed said note believing that Brann was the procuring cause of the sale, when in truth and in fact he was not the procuring cause. That answer was not verified.

The cause was submitted to a jury on special issues, and the jury found: (1) That Brann told Elliott, prior to his signing the contract of sale, that R. M. Bowen had sent him to Elliott to secure his signature to such contract; (2) that such representation was untrue, and that Elliott would not have signed the contract, had he not relied thereon; (3) that Arbuthnot was the procuring cause of the sale.

Upon this verdict, the court entered judgment for Arbuthnot against Elliott for $237.-50, with interest from date of judgment, and against Brann and in favor of Elliott on Brann’s cross-action for recovery on the commission note. Costs of court were taxed •equally against Brann and Elliott. Brann appealed.

The evidence in the case shows that Elliott listed his property with both Arbuthnot and Brann. That on March 1, 1923, Arbuth-not showed the property to Mrs. P’Pool, and later to her and her husband, and that they offered to pay $4,500 for it, but, that, upon Arbuthnot’s referring the offer to Elliott, the latter said he woqld not take less than $4,-750. On or before April 9, thereafter, Brann showed the property to Mrs. P’Pool, and she finally agreed to pay $4,750 for the property. Mrs. P’Pool testified.

“My name is Mrs. B. P’Pool. I am the wife of the gentleman who signed this contract I see there. We closed the trade according to the terms of the contract. The first man who showed us that property was Charles Arbuthnot. The house was not completed then but it was very nearly completed. That was about three or four weeks before X looked at it with' Mr. Brann. I went out with Mr. Arbuthnot and there were several houses. We said we would like to get a house at $4,500, and he said he couldn’t take it. The price he made us was $4,750. Mr. Arbuthnot never came back any more about the house. Now I wanted a house, and I had notes that came due in July, on the 5th, and we waited some two or three or four tveeks or maybe a month. Two or three days later X saw Mr. Brann’s advertisement of several places. The next afternoon was Sunday, and he took Mr. P’Pool and I out and we looked around, and T told him I had been, out three or four times, and when I bought the house from Mr. Brann I told him the man’s name was Arbuthnot; and when I got home I called Mr. Arbuthnot, and called his office, and he never called about the house during that week. He said he didn’t get the telephone call, I don’t know. I bought the house from Mr. Brann because I couldn’t trade with Mr. Arbuthnot. I went out to look Mr. Arbuthnot up and I did not get to see him until the next day.”

On cross-examination she testified:

“I told Mr. Arbuthnot that I subsequently did trade. Mr. Brann really did dose the deal with me. That is the man right there.”

Appellant urges that the court erred in not giving the jury a peremptory instruction, and rendering judgment for him on the note sued on. That Elliott’s defense was in effect a plea of want of consideration, and that under article 1906, § 10, Rev. Statutes, said answer was required po be verified. This article and section reads as follows:

“An answer setting up any of the following matters, unless the truth of the pleadings appear of record, shall be verified by affidavit; ⅝ * ⅞= 10.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
274 S.W. 660, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brann-v-arbuthnot-texapp-1925.