Bright v. Briscoe

202 S.W. 183, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 256
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1918
DocketNo. 5953.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 183 (Bright v. Briscoe) 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
Bright v. Briscoe, 202 S.W. 183, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 256 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

SWEARINGEN, J.

This suit was instituted by John T. Briscoe, the appellee, against the appellant, J. H. Bright, administrator of the estate of J. M. Bright, deceased, for specific performance of an oral contract, alleged to have been made by appellee and J. M. Bright 11 months before the latter’s death. The specific relief prayed for was the cancellation of four notes executed by appellee and owned by J. M. Bright during his life. The dates and amounts of the notes were:

May 28, 1913, for .$800
October 1, 1913, for. 600
April 6, 1914, for . 4700
May 27, 1914, for . 650

Appellant, by cross-action, sued for judgment for the amount of the notes, and to foreclose vendor’s liens securing two of the notes, and for judgment against J. -W. Fullerton and George Briscoe, who were made parties to the suit. Judgment was rendered in favor of appellee, canceling his liability on the four notes executed by him in favor of George Briscoe, and in favor of appellant on the cross-action alleged against J. W. Fullerton. Fullerton neither appealed nor cross-assigned error. Appellant gave notice of appeal.

Appellee alleged that he was an attorney at law practicing in Medina county, Tex.; that in 1907 he began practicing law, and the same year began representing J. M. Bright as his attorney upon the representation from J. M. Bright that a goodly portion of the latter’s estate would be devised to the former; that for this promised bequest ap-pellee continued to perform services of various kinds for Mr. J. M. Bright until May 28, 1914; the character of the services alleged to have been tendered prior to May 28, 1914, was that of a lawyer, a stenographer, an agent, adviser, collector.

The cause of action alleged was:

“On May 28, 1914, * * * the said J. M. Bright orally agreed and contracted * * * with this plaintiff that, in consideration of the plaintiff having rendered legal services to him in the past, and in consideration of all legal services to be rendered by the plaintiff to him in the future and during the life of the said J. M, Bright, that he, the said J. M. Bright, would pay the plaintiff for same by canceling all notes and indebtedness owing by the plaintiff to said J. M. Bright at the time of the death of the said J. M. Bright.”

The petition alleged in full the notes representing the indebtedness of Briscoe ta Bright at the time Mr. Bright died.

Appellant answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, general denial, special denials, and pleaded a cross-action seeking-judgment for the amount of the notes and foreclosure of vendor’s liens securing some of the notes.

J. W. Fullerton and George T. Briscoe answered the cross-action filed by appellee by general demurrer and general denial.

In considering the several assignments questioning the sufficiency of the evidence ta sustain the verdict and the judgment, we will state the facts proven.

The 1st, 4th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 13th, 14th, *185 15th, and 16th assignments present various •errors of the trial court resulting in the .judgment herein, a review of which requires •an analysis of the record evidence. J. M. Bright trusted and had great confidence in •John T. Briscoe, and frequently saw him from 1907 until March 8, 1915, at which time J. M. Bright died. Mr. Bright was 86 years old at the time of his death. From about March, 1913, at least, Mr. Bright was very feeble, like a child, had to be dressed and undressed and put to bed. Mr. Briscoe was a lawyer. Mr. Bright owned an estate of the value of about 830,000. After March, 1913, Mr. Briscoe, for his own use, borrowed money from Mr. Bright several times, and executed his negotiable notes for the amounts borrowed. In April, 1914, Mr. Briscoe purchased land from Mr. Bright, and executed his note for the purchase money. The payment of a portion of this note was during April, 1914, assumed by J. W. Fullerton.

[1,2] This is a suit in equity for specific performance, and the contract herein sought to be enforced is oral, and is asserted after the death of Mr. Bright. Death and the law eliminated the testimony of the only two parties to the alleged contract. Only one witness claimed to have heard the conversation that is alleged to have expressed the contract. That witness was Mrs. A. L. Ray, the housekeeper and nurse for Mr. J. M. Bright. When asked by counsel for Mr. Briscoe if she heard a conversation between Mr. Briscoe and Mr. J. M. Bright in reference to a contract between them for Mr. Briscoe to continue doing his business, in 1914, on May 28th, she gave the following testimony:

“Mr. Briscoe came up there to pay some interest on his notes, and he said, ‘John, I hate to take this from you, but I have to live; but if you will just continue to pay interest as long as I live, why at my death the notes will be canceled, you will owe me nothing;’ and Mr. Bris-coe said, ‘All right, I will do the work for you,’ which he did as long as he lived.”

If the above rather unresponsive answer' of the witness expressed the real contract between Mr. Briscoe and Mr. Bright, no recovery could be had in this suit by Mr. Bris-coe, because the contract thus proven is not the one pleaded, and because such a contract would be nudum pactum and void. Mr. Briscoe had already obligated himself by his notes to pay interest. Jones v. Risley, 91 Tex. 7; 1 Elliott on Contracts, § 215. It will be noticed that this answer is a Mrs. Mala.prop version of the following excerpt from Mr. Briscoe’s amended petition: “ J. M. Bright told” Mr. Briscoe “to look after his interests as long as he lived.” Nevertheless, counsel for Mr. Briscoe again asked the witness “whether he said anything in that conversation about Mr. Briscoe continuing to attend to his business as long as he lived;” to which second question witness answered:

“Mr. Bright said, ‘If you will continue to attend to my business as you have done as long as I live, at my death you will owe me nothing and the notes will be canceled at my death;’ and Mr. Briscoe said, ‘All right, Mr. Bright, I will do the work for you as I have done.’ ”

If the last-quoted answer states the contract, Briscoe cannot recover in this suit, because the contract proven is materially different from the contract pleaded, in this: By the contract proven, the consideration for Mr. Bright’s promise to have the notes canceled at his death is the promise by Mr. Briscoe to continue to attend to Mr. Bright’s business during the life of Mr. Bright. This contract is wholly executory on the part of both Mr. Bright and Mr. Briscoe. By the contract pleaded, the consideration was in part all the legal services that had been performed by Mr. Briscoe, for and at the request of Mr. Bright, from 1907 to May 28, 1914, seven years’ service; the balance of the consideration pleaded was the promise by Mr. Briscoe to render legal services for Mr. Bright during the balance of his life, eight months and eleven days. The fact that Mr. Bright did continue to live for eight months and eleven days after May 28, 1914, the date of the contract conversation, was an exception to the universal experiences of mankind, for it was more than probable that this feeble and helpless man, over 85 years old, would not last so long.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 183, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bright-v-briscoe-texapp-1918.