Champlin Petroleum Co. v. Pruitt

539 S.W.2d 356, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2964
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1976
Docket17746
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 539 S.W.2d 356 (Champlin Petroleum Co. v. Pruitt) 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
Champlin Petroleum Co. v. Pruitt, 539 S.W.2d 356, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2964 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

BREWSTER, Justice.

This is an appeal by defendants, Champ-lin Petroleum Company, Robert L. Buttrill, and Employers Casualty Company from a declaratory judgment declaring an instrument dated December 28, 1970, signed by Travis W. Pruitt and Johnson Linen Service and styled “Release in Full of All Claims” to be inoperative and of no force and effect as to the rights of the plaintiff, Travis W. Pruitt, and that it would in no way prevent a recovery by plaintiff from the defendants, Employers Casualty Company, Champlin Petroleum Company and Robert Buttrill.

The plaintiff, Pruitt, had started the action by suing the above named defendants and also Natatorium Laundry d/b/a Johnson Linen Service, and Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. Pruitt alleged in part the following: “On or about November 19, 1970, Travis Pruitt, Plaintiff, was driving a delivery truck for his employer, Johnson Linen Service (a dba of Natatorium Laundry Company). Mr. Pruitt was involved in a collision with an automobile owned by Champlin Petroleum Company and driven by R. L. Buttrill who was then in the course and scope of his employment with Champlin Petroleum Company. Employers’ Casualty Company carries the automobile liability policy on the automobile owned by Champ-lin Petroleum Company and operated by R. L. Buttrill. Liberty Mutual Insurance Company is the workmen’s compensation insurance carrier for Johnson Linen Service.”

Pruitt alleged that he sustained serious bodily injury in the wreck and further alleged that “His rights to recover workmen’s compensation benefits and/or his rights to recover against R. L. Buttrill and/or Champlin Petroleum Company hinge on the *358 validity of invalidity of the purported release dated December 28, 1970 . The liability of Champlin Petroleum Company and/or its employee, R. L. Buttrill, and/or Employers’ Casualty Company, the automobile liability insurance carrier for Champlin Petroleum Company, hinge upon the validity or invalidity of said release. The liability of the workmen’s compensation insurance carrier, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company’s right to recover under its right of subrogation against Employers’ Casualty Company, depends upon the validity or invalidity of said release.”

In the action plaintiff first sought judgment setting the release aside and decreeing that it was invalid and ineffective to bar him from suing the other defendants named therein. If he was successful he then sought in that case a recovery of damages in tort against Champlin Petroleum Company and Buttrill arising from injuries he received in the wreck and/or workmen’s compensation benefits from defendant, Liberty Mutual Insurance Company. Plaintiff further alleged that if the release was valid he had a fraud action for damages against his former employer, the defendant Johnson Linen Service.

In view of the fact that the rights of the parties hinged on the outcome of the declaratory judgment action relating to the validity of the release the trial court ordered a separate trial of plaintiff’s case seeking to rescind the release that he had executed in favor of Buttrill, Champlin Petroleum Company and Employers Casualty Company. Pursuant to that order that part of the case went to trial before a jury and the trial resulted in a hung jury. When the hung jury occurred both plaintiff and defendants moved for judgment. The motion for judgment filed by Pruitt was granted, and the motion for judgment filed by appellants was overruled. This resulted in the court rendering the judgment declaring the release to be inoperative and to have no force and effect on the rights of the plaintiff, Pruitt. The three appellants have appealed from that decree. This part of the action was severed from the rest of the case.

The appellants in their brief make the following statement: “The length . of appellants’ brief belies the basic simplicity of the primary issue before the Court, to wit: the existence of an adequate consideration to support the release . . . .”

The appellee states the question involved on this appeal this way in his brief: “. both parties seem to be in agreement that the only issue to be resolved is a question of law, to-wit: Is the contract (release) supported by valid consideration and therefore binding upon Travis W. Pruitt, Appellee?”

The trial court had it analyzed the same way because the only two issues he submitted to the jury purported to inquire as to whether there was a consideration for Pruitt executing the release.

The judgment appealed from does not state the ground of Pruitt’s motion for judgment on which his motion for judgment was granted and upon which the judgment being appealed from was based.

In appellee’s petition he had alleged that the release was invalid on the following grounds: (1) Pruitt had signed the release and draft through a mistake; (2) he had received no consideration for signing the release and/or draft; (3) there was a failure of consideration for his signing the release and/or draft; and (4) there was no delivery of the release to Employers Casualty Company with the intention that it become an operative contract against Pruitt.

The appellants’ second point of error is that the trial court erred in rendering judgment for Pruitt because the release executed by him on December 28, 1970, in favor of defendants was, as a matter of law, supported by a valid consideration and is a bar to the cause of action asserted against the defendants by Pruitt.

We sustain this point of error and reverse and render the judgment.

The following facts were undisputed: Travis Pruitt was an employee of Natatori-um Laundry, d/b/a Johnson Linen Service; he was a route man, driving one of his employer’s trucks to cover his route; while engaged in his employer’s business his em *359 ployer’s truck that he was driving was in collision with an automobile belonging to Champlin Petroleum Company that was being driven by R. L. Buttrill, an employee of Champlin’s; the wreck occurred on November 19, 1970, in Fort Worth; Employers Casualty Company carried the liability insurance on the automobile belonging to Champlin Petroleum Company; the truck was damaged in the wreck and Travis Pruitt’s left leg was injured; Pruitt’s leg hurt after the wreck and at his boss’ insistence he went, after the wreck, to the Coffey Clinic where his leg was x-rayed; the nurse at the Clinic told him to return the next day, but he did not return then because his boss indicated that they could not spare him; at first he thought that his injuries were minor and Pruitt testified that it was not until three or four weeks after the wreck that he realized he had more than a minor injury; Pruitt continued to work after the wreck past the time that he endorsed the two drafts involved on January 15,1971; following the wreck Employers Casualty Company’s employees viewed the laundry truck and had an estimate made on the damages it sustained in the wreck; those damages were estimated at $1,849.76; one of their adjustors negotiated a settlement of the claim with the president of Johnson Linen Service; a release was prepared and mailed to Johnson Linen Service; Employers Casualty Company advised that Johnson Linen Service and Travis Pruitt should both execute the release and return it to Employers Casualty Company, which Company would then send drafts to pay for the release; the release was dated December 28, 1970; it read as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
539 S.W.2d 356, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champlin-petroleum-co-v-pruitt-texapp-1976.