Bukowski v. Williams

198 S.W. 343, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 918
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 1917
DocketNo. 185.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 198 S.W. 343 (Bukowski v. Williams) 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
Bukowski v. Williams, 198 S.W. 343, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 918 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

We take from appellant’s brief the following statement, showing the nature and result of this Suit, which is shown by the record to be substantially correct:

This suit was filed by the appellee, E. W. Williams, against the appellant, John Bu-kowski, for the recovery of damages alleged to have been sustained in consequence of an alleged malicious prosecution, appellee’s petition alleging that on December 11, 1915, he was arrested upon a complaint made by the appellant before W. S. Perriman, justice of the peace, precinct No. 1, Liberty county, Tex., charging appellee with the theft of a mule, and that when appellant caused such arrest of appellee, appellant well knew that appellee was not guilty of the theft of .said mule, but that appellant acted without probable cause to believe that appellee had stolen said mule, and willfully, maliciously, and falsely made said affidavit for the arrest and detention of plaintiff. Appellee further alleged that the criminal charge against him was false, slanderous, oppressive, and defamatory, and was willfully, wantonly, and maliciously initiated for the purpose of annoyance, and for the further purpose of frightening and coercing appellee into the surrender of said personal property to< appellant, and not for the purpose of vindicating public justice. The property referred to in this allegation was specifically mentioned in appellee’s petition. It was further alleged by appellee that appellant forced and compelled and coerced him to surrender, deliver, and transfer to appellant, said personal property, which was alleged' to be of the value of $400. Appellee prayed for actual damages, in the sum of $25,000, and for exemplary damages in the sum of $25,000.

The ease was tried with a jury, and was submitted upon a general chafge by the court, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee for $2,500 as actual damages and $1,000 as exemplary damages, and judgment was entered in his favor accordingly.

Appellant, in due time, filed his motion for new trial, which was by the court overruled, and the court’s action in so ruling was properly excepted to, and the cause is now before us on apiieal for review.

Appellant and appellee, on the 12th day of February, 1915, entered into a written contract of lease, by the terms of which appellant let and leased to appellee, for the period of one year, a farm in Liberty county, Tex., for a cash rental of $3.50 per acre, and by the terms of this contract this rent became due and payable on the 1st of December following. Appellant was not a resident of Liberty county, but resided at New Waverly, in Walker county, Tex., and on the 9th of December of that year, acting upon the suggestion made to him by letter from one of the officers of the Liberty County State Bank, left New Waverly on the evening of that day, and reached the town of Liberty the following morning for the purpose of collecting the rent due by appellee under said contract. After* reaching Liberty, appellant went out to his farm, four miles distant from the town of Liberty, where he found appellee, and made known to appellee that his purpose in *345 being there was to collect the rent due from appellee, and he was informed by appellee that appellee was unable to pay him the rent in cash, for the reason, as stated by ap-pellee at the time, that the storm of that year had wrought such destruction of his crop that he did not have the money with which to pay the rent in cash. After some discussion of the matter between appellant and appellee at that time, appellant told' appellee that he appreciated the situation, and that in view of the misfortune of appellee, on account of the storm, he (appellant) would agree to accept $150 cash as settlement in full of the rent due from appellee. There were some suggestions made by appellee at the time in the way of a proposal to turn over to appellant certain personal property owned by appellee, and consisting of two mules, a wagon, and some corn that had been grown on the farm that year, but it seems that the parties reached no understanding at that time, and on the next day they went into the town of liberty, appellee thinking that he might he able to make some arrangement by which he could raise the money and settle with appellant for the rent, but after an effort in that direction, appellee was unable to borrow money in the town of Liberty with which to pay appellant, who up to that time was insisting upon the rent being paid in cash. Up to this point there was practically no dispute in the evidence.

It was the contention of appellee below, as shown by the evidence in the record before us, that after ascertaining that he could not raise the money in the town of Liberty with which to pay appellant, and after his offer to turn over to appellant enough of the personal property then owned by him, including the mule in question, had been refused and rejected by appellant, and after seeing, according to appellee, that he would be compelled to raise the actual cash with which to pay appellant, he (appellee), late in the evening of December 11, 1915, left the town of Liberty, with the intention of going to the town of Sour Lake, in Hardin county, Tex., for the purpose of meeting his son, who was then at Sour Lake, and borrowing from his son such money as he needed to pay appellant. Appellee, when he left the town of Liberty that afternoon, rode the mule, which it was charged in the complaint filed, in the criminal case belonged to appellant, and that same night, before appellee reached Sour Lake, he was overtaken by the constable of precinct No. 1 of Liberty county, who was driving an automobile, and who was accompanied by appellant, and was arrested by the constable, who was armed with a warrant for that purpose, based upon the complaint filed by appellant, as hereinbefore stated. Appellee was carried back by the constable to the town of Liberty, and there made bond to appear before the justice of the peace on the following Monday for examining trial.

It was the claim of appellant on the trial below that, after appellee had ascertained in the town of Liberty on the morning of the 11th of December, 1915, that he could not procure the-money with which to pay appellant, he and appellee then reached an agreement and understanding by which appellee agreed to turn over to appellant the mule, the ownership of which was claimed by appellant in the criminal complaint, along with other personal property, in satisfaction and payment of appellant’s debt against appel-lee, and that appellee did, in fact, turn over to appellant said mule, and pointed hird| out to appellant while he was hitched to the rack in the town of Liberty on that day, and that such agreement and understanding was a full and complete contract, by which appellant agreed with appellee to accept said personal property, including said mule, as a full and final discharge of appellant’s debt against appellee, and from these respective contentions, as stated, it will be seen that appellant’s claiml of ownership to this mule is based alone and wholly upon the claimed agreement or contract between him and ap-pellee, as above stated, by which appellee turned over said mule and other property in settlement and discharge of his indebtedness to appellant.

‘We think this will suffice to show clearly the character of the controversy between the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 343, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bukowski-v-williams-texapp-1917.