Dallas Homestead & Loan Ass'n v. Thomas

81 S.W. 1041, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 268, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 81 S.W. 1041 (Dallas Homestead & Loan Ass'n v. Thomas) 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
Dallas Homestead & Loan Ass'n v. Thomas, 81 S.W. 1041, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 268, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 213 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

EIDSON, Associate Justice.

The following statement of tho nature and result of the suit contained in appellant’s brief appearing to be substantially correct is adopted:

“This is a suit on a building contractor’s bond for the contractor’s failure to complete a house as he was obliged to do by his contract. The owners of the house, S. G. McKinney and his wife, contracted with appellee J. F. Thomas for him to build for them a house in Oak Cliff. To secure the faithful performance of his contract he executed the bond, with his coappellees Wilhite, Lacouture, Shanks and Hancock as sureties. The appellant Dallas Homestead and Loan Association furnished the money to Mr. McKinney to build said house and took a deed of trust and assignment of the mechanic’s lien contract as security to it for making the loan; the contract was dated July 5, 1900; the petition alleges that appellant sues as assignee of McKinney, and that before the house was completed, said Thomas, on or about September 35, 1900, abandoned the building, and McKinney and others for him (McKinney) completed said house according to the plans and specifications of said contract at a reasonable cost, which exceeded the contract price in the sum of $350; that in consideration of appellant having paid out and advanced money for building the house, McKinney and wife on April 3, 1903, assigned to appellant its cause of action on said bond, *269 and' this suit is by appellant as assignee of McKinney and wife for money in excess of the contract price actually paid out and advanced by appellant for the completion of the house after Thomas abandoned it.
“Defendants demurred, specially and generally to the petition, which demurrers were overruled by the court, plaintiff having filed an amended petition setting out an itemized statement of all moneys spent.
“Defendants answered by general denial; defendants Wilhite, Lacouture, Shanks and Hancock answered specially that they admit that they are sureties on said $500 bond; that they had never been notified that said Thomas had breached his contract until a few weeks before the filing of this suit; that had they been notified thereof, defendant Wilhite, in the months of March and April, 1902, had in his possession $734.50 of money belonging to the said Thomas, out of which he would have protected himself and his cosureties; that the defendant Lacouture was a building contractor and would himself have completed the building according to contract, and protected himself and his cosureties had he-been notified of said default of said Thomas in September or October, 1900; that said Thomas, without his sureties’ consent, assigned his building contract to plaintiff immediately upon the execution of the building contract on July 10, 1900.
“In supplemental petition appellant demurred to said answers, which demurrers were by the court overruled, and appellant plead general denial, and further that any assignment Thomas made to appellant was only for the purpose of securing it for the money loaned to build the house with, and that it was not intended to release said Thomas in any manner from any of the obligations of his contract; that the reason suit was not sooner instituted ivas because there was litigation covering some material bought for said house by said Thomas, and it could not be determined how much excess over the contract price the building had cost until such litigation was' terminated. There was no dispute but that appellant was entitled to $190, if it was entitled to anything, that amount being proven to have been paid out in excess of the contract price -to complete the building.
“Upon the trial of the case before a jury a verdict was returned in favor of the defendants, and judgment- entered thereon.”

The appellant’s first assignment of error complains of the action of the court in admitting in evidence over its objection the testimony of appellee Wilhite, tending to show that he in March and April, 1902, had in his possession certain money belonging to appellee Thomas, which he paid said Thomas, and out of which he, the said Wilhite, could and would have protected himself and his cosureties, had he known that the said Thomas had in any manner breached his building contract.

In its second assignment of error, appellant complains of the action of the court in admitting in evidence over its objection the testimony of appellee Lacouture, to the effect that he, the said Lacouture, in September and October, 1900, was a building contractor, and had he known that appellee Thomas had in any manner breached his said building *270 contract, he, the said Lacouture, would have had the house completed in accordance with the contract, and have protected himself and his co-sureties on their bond from all liability thereon.

In its third assignment of error appellant complains of the action of the court in admitting in evidence over its objection the testimony of S. G-. McKinney, E. H. Silven, John Catto, J. A. Wilhite, H. L. Hancock, Frank B. Shanks, 0. Lacouture, J. F. Thomas and William Osmand, to the effect that neither appellant nor S. G. McKinney nor Kellie G-. McKinney, nor anyone for them or either of them, prior to May, 1902, a short time before the date this suit was filed, ever notified either of the said appellees Wilhite, Hancock, Shanks or Lacouture that said Thomas had in any manner whatever failed to complete said building according to contract; and that neither S. G. McKinney nor Kellie G. McKinney nor appellant, nor anyone for them or for either of them, prior to the filing of this suit, notified either of said appellees Wilhite, Hancock or Lacouture that the said Thomas had in any manner whatever thrown up, abandoned or breached said contract; and that prior to said June 17, 1902, neither S. G. McKinney, nor Kellie G. McKinney nor anyone for them or either of them had instituted any suit against said Thomas, or against any of the other appellees herein.

The said appellees Wilhite, Lacouture, Shanks and Hancock, being sureties upon the bond of appellee Thomas, upon which bond this suit is based, and there being no stipulation in said bond providing for notice to be given to the sureties, in the event the principal did not comply with the conditions of said bond, were not entitled to any notice thereof. It was their duty under their obligation in said bond to see that their principal complied with the conditions therein contained; and if at any time it would have been to their interest for suit to be brought against him, the said principal, or if such suit would in any manner have protected them from liability as sureties, they could have required such suit to be brought by giving notice in writing to the obligee in said bond.

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W. 1041, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 268, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-homestead-loan-assn-v-thomas-texapp-1904.