Coker v. Hughes

307 S.W.2d 354, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2179
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1957
Docket6705
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 307 S.W.2d 354 (Coker v. Hughes) 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
Coker v. Hughes, 307 S.W.2d 354, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2179 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

*355 CHAPMAN, Justice.

This suit was instituted by R. A. Coker, appellant herein, against George C. Hughes, appellee, upon a lease contract to recover rentals, which he asserts had accrued from January 1, 1955, through July, 1956, and without prejudice to appellant’s right to recover for the other five months of 1956. The lease contract provided a beginning date of January 1, 1955 and a terminal date of December 31, 1957, on the basis of $300 per month. At the time of the execution of the contract Hughes paid the first month’s rent of $300 and the last year’s rent of $3,600.

Appellee occupied the building during the year 1954 and paid the monthly rental as it accrued each month of that year, but advised appellant before the first of the year he was going to move out of the property at the end of 1954 and that if he (Coker) wanted to make other arrangements for another tenant to go ahead and do so. He moved from the building about the first of the year, refused to pay rents thereafter and appellant instituted this suit.

The trial was to a jury and upon certain issues being answered favorable to appel-lee the court rendered judgment in favor of him and denying appellant any recovery. From this judgment appellant Coker has perfected his appeal to this court.

It was the contention of the appellee in the court below, as it is here, that the agreement between the parties hereto was that the $3,600 paid in advance for the last year’s rental was to be retained by appellant as his sole remedy in the event of default by appellee under the lease contract. He further contends the following provision of the contract bound the appellant to such remedy exclusively:

“In the event of default on the part of the tenant in payment of any rental when due, the Landlord shall have the option of declaring the contract terminated and entering upon the premises and dispossessing the tenant, and the last year’s rental shall be retained'by • the Landlord as liquidated damages ■ by reason of default of tenant.”

Appellee further pleaded that if the court determined the provision of the contract just quoted did not bind the landlord Coker to accept the last year’s rental as liquidated damages, as an only remedy against appellee Hughes, “then the said provision was ambiguous; that the defendant and plaintiff agreed, prior to the execution and at the time of the execution of said lease contract, that the defendant, in the event he desired to vacate said premises prior to the expiration of the original 4-year term thereof, could do so and that he would incur no liability to the plaintiff other than that the plaintiff would be entitled to retain the last year’s rental of $3,600.00 as liquidated damages for default of the defendant.” Appel-lee further pleaded that he refused to enter into the contract save and except that no other recourse would be had against him other than the retention of the $3,600 in the event of his failure to occupy the premises and pay the monthly rental for the term of the lease; that the court should construe the contract in accordance with “the intention of the parties” and should find he was not liable to Coker for any amount other than the last year’s rental; that if the court held that the express language of the contract above quoted did not bind the Landlord to the $3,600 .as his only remedy then that such failure was due to the fault of the scrivener who drew the lease contract and failure to include such express provision was due to a mutual mistake on the part of the parties to the lease, does not express the intention of the parties and does not conform to the agreement actually made.

Appellant urged numerous special exceptions to appellee’s allegations; alleged that the agreement of Hughes to enter into a 4-year contract to lease the property was a part of the transaction and absolutely bound Hughes to pay the rent for the' full 4-year term; that the contract of purchase and sale, as well as the lease contract thereafter executed by the parties was plain and *356 unambiguous and bound Hughes to pay the agreed rental for the full 4-year period. Appellant also protected his record fully and completely by objections to testimony; objections to the court’s charge; motion for peremptory instruction; motion for judgment on the verdict; motion for judgment non obstante veredicto; motion to set aside certain findings of the jury; and motion for a new trial.

From issues submitted to the jury they anwered there was not any mutual understanding and agreement between the parties at the time of the execution of the sales contract that in the event the defendant failed to occupy the building in question and pay the rental therefor during the entire 4-year term Coker would retain the last year’s rental as liquidated damages for such default and would have no other remedy; there was a mutual understanding and agreement at the time of the execution of the lease contract that in the event Hughes failed to occupy the building in question and pay the rental during the entire 4-year term Coker would retain the last year’s rental as liquidated damages for such default and would have no other remedy against Hughes; that the failure of the lease contract to provide that Coker would retain the last year’s rental as liquidated damages and would have no other remedy against Hughes was a mutual mistake on the part of Coker and Hughes at the time of the execution of the contract; that Coker elected to terminate the lease contract and retain the last year’s rental as liquidated damages; that Coker accepted surrender and possession of the building in controversy with the intent that the lease contract executed by the parties should be terminated and Hughes released from further liability thereon; and that Coker, after resuming control of the premises, used reasonable diligence to re-let the premises.

Obviously, with so many controlling issues answered by the jury favorable to ap-pellee, the court below properly rendered judgment for Hughes if the court was correct in admitting parole evidence to prove appellee’s theory of the case, if the issues were properly framed and if there was sufficient admissible testimony of probative value to justify the issues submitted and the answers thereto. Let us then proceed to the questions of whether the lease contract in controversy was of such ambiguous nature concerning the remedies of appellant in the event of default by appellee as to admit parole evidence of the intention of the parties; whether there was a mutual understanding between the parties that in case of default by Hughes, he would be limited in penalty to the $3,600 paid as last year’s rental; whether the failure of the contract to provide that appellant’s only remedy in case of default by appellee was a mutual mistake; and whether the evidence admitted was of sufficient probative value to support the findings of the jury favorable to appellee.

In Ellisor v. Kennedy, 128 S.W.2d 842, 844 (writ refused), the Court of Civil Appeals at Galveston said:

“The ultimate purpose of the courts should be to arrive at the real intention of the parties to a contract, and to give the contract force accordingly. It is an important rule of construction that a written contract, plain and reflecting no shadow of doubt as to its meaning, shall be the sole evidence of the intention of the contracting parties.

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Bluebook (online)
307 S.W.2d 354, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coker-v-hughes-texapp-1957.