Cockburn v. Mercantile Petroleum, Inc.

296 S.W.2d 316, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 306, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2373
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 13, 1956
Docket15142
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 296 S.W.2d 316 (Cockburn v. Mercantile Petroleum, Inc.) 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
Cockburn v. Mercantile Petroleum, Inc., 296 S.W.2d 316, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 306, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2373 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

CRAMER, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment awarding appellee Mercantile Petroleum, Inc., $225,000 damages against appellant Cockburn under art. 4004, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. The action was filed by Mercantile Petroleum, Inc., John R. Less, Empire Trust Company, and Hubert D. Johnson, Trustee, as plaintiffs, against H. C. Cockburn as defendant. Cockburn’s plead of privilege was overruled, and this Court, in Cockburn v. Less, affirmed that judgment, 257 S.W.2d 470. See also Cockburn v. Dixon, 152 Tex. 572, 261 S.W.2d 689.

On the trial on the merits, here.appealed from, the jury found, on special issues, the following facts: (1-A) That on December 19, 1951 to December 28, 1951, and prior to the closing of the sale, Lee B. Stone, hereinafter called Stone, represented to John R. Less, hereinafter called Less, that the five gas wells in question were then all producing gas wells; (1 — B) that at said time Less was acting as agent for Mercantile; (1-C) at the time of making said representation, it was made by Stone to Less as a material inducement to Mercantile to purchase the primary gas payment from Cock-burn, which purchase Mercantile did make; (1-D) that said representation was made by Stone as a statement of fact; (1-E) was false; (1 — F) Less believed said representation to be true; (1 — G) Mercantile relied upon said representation in purchasing the primary gas payment; (1-H) said representation proximately caused Mercantile to pay Cockburn more money for the primary gas payment than it would otherwise have paid him; (1 — I) that at the time said representation was made, Stone knew it to be false; (1 — J) Stone acted within the scope of his authority as agent of Cockburn in making said representation; (1 — K) at the time Cockburn knew that the five gas wells were not all producing gas wells; (1 — L) that Cockburn authorized Stone to make such representation; (2) that during the entire month of December 1951, the Blauvelt well was not a producing gas well; (3) during the entire month of December 1951, the Prasifka No. 2 well was not a producing gas well; (4) during the entire month of December 1951, the Wharton Bank & Trust Company No. 2 well was a producing gas well; (6) Less, prior to the sale of the properties in question, made or caused to be made an independent investigation of the properties and of the representation of fact alleged to have been made by Cockburn; (7) Cockburn did interfere or hinder Less in making the investigation; (8) Less, prior *321 to the sale involved, told Stone that he, Less, knew of the condition of the properties, knew work was necessary to he done on them and that if Cockburn would reduce the asking price, he, Less, would take the properties “as is” and do the remedial work required to be done; (9) there were no facts and circumstances in the possession of Less or his agents at or prior to the sale in question, which were sufficient to put Less or his agents upon their guard or cast suspicion on the truth of the false representations; (10) Less, after he acquired the leases, did not fail to operate such leases as a reasonably prudent operator would have operated them under the same or similar circumstances; (12) that $225,000 was the reasonable market value in Wharton County, Texas, of the primary gas payment in question on the date that Mercantile paid for such gas payment; (13) assuming that from December 1951 through the end of December 1951 there were five producing gas wells on the properties offered for sale by Cockburn, and on the basis of said assumption, $400,000 would be the reasonable market value in Wharton County, Texas, of the primary gas payment purchased by Mercantile; (14) Mercantile is entitled to recover exemplary damages against Cockburn; (15) of $50,000.

On such verdict the trial court entered judgment that Mercantile recover from Cockburn $175,000 actual, and $50,000 exemplary damages, interest, etc., and taxed the costs one-half against Cockburn and one-half against Less. After his motion for new trial was overruled, Cockburn duly perfected this appeal, here briefing fifty-four points of error.

Points (1-4) and (30-31) assert in substance that the judgment of the trial court in so far as it awards Mercantile recovery of damages, should be reversed for the reason that: (1) Mercantile is bound by the independent investigation of the properties involved and of the representations of fact alleged to have been made by Cock-burn in connection with said properties, which investigation the jury found was made prior to the sale; (2) Mercantile is bound by the agreement of Less to take the properties “as is”; (3) Cockburn’s defenses of (a) waiver, (b) accord and satisfaction, (c) release, and (d) estoppel, and each of them, were established by undisputed evidence and by the jury’s verdict; (4) trial court erred in overruling Cockburn’s motion for judgment n. o. v., in that the answers of the jury to issues 7 and 9 should have been disregarded because there is no evidence to support either of such issues. The judgment, in so far as it awards Mercantile recovery of damages should be reversed for the reason that the answer (30) to issue No. 7, and (31) .issue No. 9, are contrary to the great weight of the evidence and contrary to the preponderance of the evidence, and the evidence is insufficient to support said answers.

These points are countered: (1) That (a) the jury having found Cockburn successfully hindered and interfered with the attempt of Less to make an independent investigation, and such finding being supported by ample evidence, not even the promoter would be bound by his attempt, much less Mercantile, subsequently formed in 1951; and (b) no issue having been requested or submitted by Cockburn to connect the attempted investigation by Less in any way with Mercantile, any contention that the corporation is bound by its promoter’s pre-incorporation actions has therefore been waived and presumed to have been found in favor of and in support of the judgment; (2) the evidence was insufficient to support the submission of an “as is” agreement; but in any event an “as is” agreement is vitiated by the jury’s finding of fraud in the inducement since an “as is” agreement only eliminates by agreement any -implied warranty over and above the express representations, warranties and descriptions made in connection with the sale; (3) Cockburn submitted no issue to the jury on waiver, accord and satisfaction, release, or estoppel, or any one of them; and has thereby waived each and all such alleged defenses, not one of which is conclusively established by the un *322 disputed evidence, nor by the verdict which was that Cockburn intentionally misrepresented that all five wells were producing wells, and that Less believed such representation to be true. (4) There was abundant evidence to support the findings that Cockburn interfered with and hindered the attempted independent investigation by Less; that Less should not have been on his guard or suspicious of the truth of the false representation, found in issue 9, and that Less believed the false representation to be true.

The evidence here went as far, if not further, on the issue of fraud, than the evidence on the hearing of the plea of privilege, which evidence is summarized in our opinion on the venue appeal reported in 257 S.W.2d 470

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Bluebook (online)
296 S.W.2d 316, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 306, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cockburn-v-mercantile-petroleum-inc-texapp-1956.