De Walt v. Universal Film Exchanges, Inc.

132 S.W.2d 421
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 12, 1939
DocketNo. 10836.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 132 S.W.2d 421 (De Walt v. Universal Film Exchanges, 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
De Walt v. Universal Film Exchanges, Inc., 132 S.W.2d 421 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

MONTEITH, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal by writ of error in an action brought by defendant in error, Universal Film Exchanges, Inc., against plaintiff in error, Mrs. O. P. DeWalt, to recover damages for the breach of certain alleged written agreements by plaintiff in *422 error to exhibit certain pictures belonging to defendant in error.

Defendant in error alleged that plaintiff in error operated the Lincoln Theatre •in Houston, Texas; that by certain written contracts executed by plaintiff in error on certain specified dates and designated by numbers, she agreed to exhibit and pay for certain pictures belonging to defendant in error whenever such pictures were available; that such pictures were made available to plaintiff in error by defendant in error but that she breached each of her said alleged contracts to exhibit such pictures, and that defendant in error, on account of such breach, had sustained certain damages set out in its pleadings for the breach of each of said alleged contracts.

Plaintiff in error answered by general demurrer and general denial, and specially denied that she had ever entered into' said contracts with defendant in e"rror, but that she had agreed with defendant in error, through its authorized representative, to exhibit certain pictures owned by defendant in error when and if she could arrange for the exhibition of such pictures, if said pictures were found to be suitable for her business, and that she agreed to pay the rental price specified when and if such pictures were exhibited by 'her. She alleged further that said instruments weré signed by her as applications for the right to exhibit said pictures and as memo-randa to enable defendant in error to keep a record of the pictures that were to be made available to her, and that she was induced to sign them through false and fraudulent representations made to her at the time of signing said applications by the authorized representative of defendant in error, and that she had relied on said representations.

By cross-action, plaintiff in error sought damages for the breach of an oral agreement alleged to have been made by the representative of defendant in error to substitute other pictures for those found not to be suitable to her business.

By supplemental petition defendant in error denied that it had entered into said oral agreement. It pled the two year statute of limitations thereto and lack of authority on the part of B. C. Gibson, its agent, to enter into said alleged oral agreements.

The case was tried before a jury, who, in answer to special issues submitted, found that, at the time plaintiff in error received from defendant in error copies of said instruments, approved by the home office of defendant in error, “she accepted such approved copies as setting out the agreement between herself and defendant in error for the purpose of the pictures specified in each óf such instruments”, and that at the time plaintiff in error signed “the application for contracts in question”, B. C. Gibson told plaintiff in error that such instruments were only for bookkeeping purposes for the benefit of defendant in error; that plaintiff in error believed said representations and relied on the truth thereof, iihd that, but for such reliance, she would not have signed the instruments in question.

The verdict of the jury was returned in-. to court on April 23, 1937. On May 4, 1937, plaintiff in error filed a motion for judgment in her favor based on the jury’s findings, which motion was by the court refused. On June 23, 1937, sixty days after the verdict of the jury was .returned into court, defendant in error filed a trial amendment in which it alleged, in substance, that if at the time plaintiff in error signed the written instruments, designated as contracts Nos. 1469, 1877, 1878, 1470, 379, and 1468, she did not realize that they were contracts and understood that they were merely to be used as mem-oranda, that within sixty days after said applications were delivered to plaintiff in error she accepted approved copies of each of said instruments and that she received them under such circumstances as to constitute a binding contract between herself and defendant in error, and that the plaintiff in error thereby ratified such instruments as being contracts binding upon her, and that she acted upon them, and that because of her said conduct she was estopped to deny that they were binding contracts upon her. Said trial amendment recited that it was filed with leave of the court. There is nothing in the record to show that such leave was not granted.

On the same date, plaintiff in error filed a motion praying that the court refuse leave to defendant in error to file such trial amendment, alleging in substance that it was sought to be filed after the evidence was introduced, after the court’s charge was delivered to the jury, and after arguments of counsel were heard by the jury, and after the jury had returned its verdict into open -court, and after plaintiff in error’s motion for judgment had been filed; *423 that it raised the issue of ratification not theretofore raised by any original plea, as well as issues of contracts on different dates from that shown in the original pleadings and estoppel at a time when plaintiff in error had no opportunity to meet said new material issues; and that the evidence required to meet said new issues would require a different type of proof from the proof required on the original petition.

On June 23, 1937, judgment was entered by the court in favor of defendant in error against plaintiff in error in the sum of $2,105.73, the amount sued for.

The controlling issues in this appeal are, first, whether the issues submitted to the jury and the judgment rendered 'thereon by the trial court are supported by the original pleadings of defendant in error; and, second, whether, if they are not supported by the original pleadings there was an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial court in allowing defendant in error to file a trial amendment sixty days after the completion of the trial of the case and the return of the verdict into court alleging new material issues, not theretofore pled, conforming to the special issues which had been submitted to the jury, without permitting plaintiff in error to file new pleadings, to introduce additional evidence to meet said issues or to withdraw her announcement.

Defendant in error based its cause of action on certain instruments, similar in all material respects.

Its original petition recited that on the date designated plaintiff and defendant entered into said written contracts, a copy of each of which is attached to 'said pleading and marked as an exhibit and made a part thereof as though fully written out therein; that under the terms of said contracts plaintiff granted to defendant a license under the respective copyrights of the motion pictures referred to in said contracts to exhibit the pictures specified in said contract ; that defendant agreed to exhibit and pay for said pictures as available in the order of release; that plaintiff notified defendant of the availability of said pictures and called upon her to exhibit and pay for same and that defendant had failed and refused to exhibit or pay for said pictures, to plaintiff’s damage.

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132 S.W.2d 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-walt-v-universal-film-exchanges-inc-texapp-1939.