Cockrell v. Ellison

137 S.W. 150, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 137 S.W. 150 (Cockrell v. Ellison) 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
Cockrell v. Ellison, 137 S.W. 150, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1118 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

The plaintiff in error instituted this suit against B. W. Ellison and J. W. Bogar & Co., alleging, in substance, the execution by B. W. Ellison of three certain promissory notes, one for $25, one for $125, and one for $100, each of which was secured by a separate chattel mortgage on certain personal property. The plaintiff sought judgment upon the notes and to foreclose mortgages, and further alleged that the defendant, Ellison, was a tenant and had raised a crop upon premises specified during the year 1908, and he prayed for recovery-for the rents and a foreclosure of the landlord’s lien. The plaintiff further alleged that two bales of the cotton raised by the defendant, Ellison, and upon which the plaintiff had a lien had been sold to and converted by J. W. Bogar-te Co. and judgment was sought against this company for the value of the cotton so converted amounting to $93.50. The defendant Bogar & Co. answered by a general denial, and specially pleaded that the plaintiff had no landlord’s lien on said bales of cotton and set up a mortgage in its favor alleged to be prior in point of time to that of the landlord’s lien, if any he held. The defendant, Ellison, also answered by a general denial, *151 and specially pleaded under oath that the mortgage which plaintiff sought to foreclose' as security for the $100 note was a forgery, in that through fraud he was induced by plaintiff’s agent to sign a mortgage containing property on which he did not agree to give a lien, and which plaintiff’s' agent at the time represented was not contained in the mortgage; that the $25 and $125 notes were procured by fraud, in that they were given for a lease upon 100 acres of land that plaintiff’s said agent falsely and fraudulently represented to be free from Johnson grass. This defendant further pleaded in reeonvention that in February, 1908, the plaintiff, acting by his said agent, had entered into a contract, by the terms of which the defendant, Ellison, was to have the possession of a certain other 100 acres of land and all of the crops raised thereon for clearing and putting the same in cultivation; that among other things, by the terms of the contract the plaintiff was to fence the land, but that he failed to do so in time to enable the defendant to plant in peanuts as intended certain other portions thereof that he had prepared for the purpose, and he sought to recover $450 by reason of this failure. He further sought to recover several hundred dollars as damages because of the diminished yield in crop, costs of labor, etc., upon the 100 acres of land for which said $25 and $125 notes had been given, designated in the answer and throughout the trial as the “Pinkston lease.” The trial before the court and jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of both defendants denying recovery upon the notes and upon the cause of action asserted against J. W. Bogar & Co., and awarding to defendant, Ellison, on his cross-plea $266.25 as damages against the plaintiff.

[1] Error is assigned to the action of the court in permitting the defendant, Ellison, to open and conclude in the introduction of the testimony and argument of counsel, and we think the assignment must be sustained. This advantage was sought by an admission on the part of the defendant, Ellison, “that the plaintiff has a good cause of action as set forth in plaintiff’s petition, except so far as it may be defeated in whole or in part by the facts of the answer constituting a good defense which may he established on the trial,” but defendant Bogar & Co. made no such admission, and rule 31 (67 S. W. xxiii), prescribed for the government of our trial courts, expressly provides that the admission must be made by “all of the defendants, if there should be more than one.” While the pleadings of the two defendants were not the same in all particulars, the interest of both in defeating the plaintiff of all recovery was identical, and the violation of the rule was not cured by the action of the court in permitting the plaintiff to open and conclude as to the defendant Bogar & Co. The rule was evidently intended to preclude a confusion that such a practice would naturally tend to produce. Moreover, the admission required by the rule implies an admission of every fact necessary to establish the cause of action as set forth in the plaintiff’s pleading, and the defendant can prevail only upon pleading and proving such facts as will entitle him to the judgment notwithstanding the truthfulness of the plaintiff’s pleadings. It is accordingly doubtful if in any event the rule can be properly applied in view of the defendant Ellison’s plea of forgery which was insisted upon throughout the trial and which in legal effect amounted to a denial of the execution of one of the principal instruments upon which the plaintiff relied. See Ferguson-McKinney Dry Goods Co. v. City Nat. Bank, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 238, 71 S. W. 604; Steed v. Petty, 65 Tex. 490; Sanders v. Bridges, 67 Tex. 93, 2 S. W. 663.

[2] Error is also assigned to the tenth paragraph of the court’s charge, which is as follows : “The measure of damages for fraudulently inducing the execution of a contract is the actual outlay of the injured party contributable to such fraudulent conduct. If you believe from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant, B. W. Ellison, was fraudulently induced by plaintiff’s agent, W. V. Triplett, to undertake to work the Pinkston 100 acres, and by ‘fraudulently induced’ is mearit that th'e plaintiff’s agent, W. V. Triplett, represented said land to be practically free from Johnson grass, if he did so represent, and that such representation was false at the time, if it was false, and that the defendant, Ellison, acted upon the faith of such representations, and; induced thereby, undertook to cultivate same for the year 1908, and took upon himself the obligation of the $25 and $125 notes, if you find he did so act, then yon will determine whether or not the defendant was damaged by such representations, and, in determining the defendant’s damages, you are instructed that the measure of defendant’s damages would be the actual outlay made by the defendant legitimately- attributable to such fraudulent contract, and in determining such outlay, if any, you will consider the reasonable value, if any, of the labor expended on said lease, if any, the amount he contracted to pay for said lease, if any, and also the value of the crops raised by defendant, if any, and, after ascertaining said different items you will deduct from the amount of the outlay of de^ fendant, if any, the amount of all benefits he has received, if any, by reason of having entered into said contract, and the difference would be the measure of such damages.” We think the charge quoted is erroneous and misleading in view of the circumstances of this case. Defendant, Ellison, not only testified, but it was also alleged, in substance, in his special plea, that the $25 and $125 notes were but substitutes for promissory notes in like sums originally executed and delivered to one Pinkston, who it seems had theretofore secured a lease from the plaintiff in this *152 suit for the year 1908 for the 100 acres of land alleged herein, to have been poisoned with Johnson grass. Appellee testified that the lease was purchased by him from Pink-ston, and the evidence suggests that the notes were given in part payment for the plowing and preparation of the land already done by Pinkston at the time of defendant Ellison’s purchase.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W. 150, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cockrell-v-ellison-texapp-1911.