City of Ranger v. Hagaman

4 S.W.2d 597, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 266
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 9, 1928
DocketNo. 417.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 597 (City of Ranger v. Hagaman) 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
City of Ranger v. Hagaman, 4 S.W.2d 597, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 266 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, J.

M. H. Hagaman sued the city of Ranger for the sum of $5,758.68, the amount claimed to be due under the terms of certain contracts for water sold by him to said city. The right of plaintiff to recover said sum was unquestioned, unless the defendant had the right to offset it by a claim of damages, in a like sum or more, for breach of a warranty of title to a certain item in a list of property conveyed by Hagaman to the city, described by reference to a report of Elrod Engineering Company, as follows:

“Equity in T. & P. R. R. Co. 8" C. I. line between pumping plant and T. & P. standpipe is. difference between an 8" and 6” line.
“Difference in cost between laying an 8" and 6" line is $0.53 per ft.
“13,260' at $0.53, $7,027.80.
“Present value 96 per cent., $6,746.69.”

*598 The real nature of the item designated -an “equity” is sufficiently shown by evidence to be as follows: By contract dated April 2, 1919, between the Director General of Railroads, and who will hereinafter be designated as T. & P., and M. H. Hagaman, the latter was given an option to take over the operation of a certain pumping plant and to use a certain pipe line, exclusively owned by the T. & P., in supplying water to others besides the railroad. By the same contract the T. & P., at its sole cost, became obligated to install the pipe line from Hagaman’s reservoir to the railroad tanks in Ranger, shown by the evidence to be about 13,260 feet. The size of the pipe was not specified. The term of the contract was ten years from its date, with provision for the Director General retiring at the termination of the government control of railroads, the remainder of the term to be regarded as a new contract between Haga-man and any party taking over the operation of the railroad. The contract gave the T. & P. the unqualified, right-, at the termination of the contract, to remove the pipe line. The T. & P. laid about half of the pipe line with 8-inch pipe, and “strung” 6-inch pipe for the other half. Before laying the 6-inch, Haga-man made a deal with the railroad company to take the 6-inch pipe and for the railroad to finish laying the pipe line with all 8-inch casing; Hagaman paying the difference in the cost of laying same over the cost of laying 6-inch easing as intended. It was this difference in cost that was designated by the Elrod Engineering Company as an “equity,” and was appraised (excluding depreciation) at $6,746.69. The evidence justifies us in concluding that Hagaman never at any time claimed or represented that he had any interest (in the sense -of title or ownership) in the pipe line. By way of defining what was meant by the item called “equity,” the report in which the term was used said:

“This equity represents the difference in estimated replacement costs between the line as built and a six-inch line which the railroad company proposed to build. Evidence of this equity is to be had in a contract existing between the T. & P. Railway Company and the Ranger Waterworks. We are assuming that title will become legally vested in the city of Ranger in the event of the purchase of the properties herein appraised.”

The contract thus referred to is that of date April 2, 1919, mentioned above.

The “Report of Proposed Improvements to the Properties of the Ranger Waterworks,” dated November 20, 1923, to which reference was made for description of the properties conveyed by Hagaman to the city of Ranger, was only binding upon Hagaman as to the matters of description. We regard the statement in the report that “we are assuming that title will become legally vested in the city of Ranger in the event of the purchase of the properties herein appraised” as constituting no part of such description. The description in the report of the item called an “equity” does not show that it consisted of any title to, or ownership of, the pipe line or any interest therein. The contract referred to for further description clearly shows that such “equity” did not, and could not, include any title to, or ownership of, an interest in the physical property. The city of Ranger, we think, was charged with knowledge that the item described as an “equity” did not include, any interest in the pipe line as such, and this regardless of whether the representatives of the city were ever told by any one what the item was intended to include.

As we fiew the matter, it is wholly immaterial whether the word “equity” is properly descriptive of the subject-matter of tbe conveyance. Citation of authority is not needed to support tbe proposition that, when contracting parties stipulate what meaning shall be given to a word employed in expressing their agreement, such meaning must prevail, even o-ver the ordinary and usual meaning. The description in the engineer’s report and in the contract it referred to for further description makes it certain that the word was not used in any such sense as that contended for by the city. This is as far as the inquiry need go. If it meant anything other than an interest in the pipe line, it is not important what that was, so far as this suit is concerned. In such case there can be no liability for a breach of warranty of title simply upon a showing that Hagaman had no title to, or ownership of, any interest in the pipe line.

We would be hard put to name with a simple'word the subject-matter of tbe item in question. It was not an easement, for an easement pertains only to land. It was not a license, for that is personal, and usually revokable. It was added value that was given to an existing right to use the pipe line of the railroad company for a term of ten years to supply water to the city of Ranger or others besides the railroad company, by making the whole of the line an 8-inch line instead of about half of it an eight-inch line and the remainder a 6-inch line. This added value of the use of the pipe line is what was appraised at $6,746.69 at the time the city took over the waterworks’ properties, and was first called an “equity” by the engineering firm that was employed by the city to make the appraisement.

If it is not certain from the words themselves that the word was used in this sense, Still no violence is done to any principle of law by the introduction of parol evidence to show the real subject-matter of the item thus designated as an “equity.” Unless a conveyance itself identifies the subject-matter conveyed, parol evidence is admissible to make the identification. This does no violence to the well-known rule that parol evidence, except under certain circumstances, is *599 not admissible to contradict or vary the terms of a written instrument. The conveyance of something called an equity in a pipe line certainly does not identify the subject-matter. "When for description reference is made to a contract that shows that the owner of the so-called equity has no right, title, or interest in the pipe line, and claims none, but does have an option to make a use of same that may be valuable, the term can only be construed to apply to such right of user.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 597, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-ranger-v-hagaman-texapp-1928.