De Witt v. Kent County

148 S.W.2d 213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1940
DocketNo. 5206.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 213 (De Witt v. Kent County) 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 Witt v. Kent County, 148 S.W.2d 213 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

This suit was filed by appellant against appellees, Kent County, its county judge and commissioners, the county treasurer and tax collector, to recover upon two warrants issued by the commissioners’ court on October 14, 1929,'in the sum of $500 each, together with. 6% interest and 10% attorney’s fees as provided in the warrants. These warrants were Nos. 5 and 6 of a series of thirteen warrants issued in part payment for a- tractor and road grader purchased by the commissioners’ court from the Lone Star Road Machinery Company and the warrants were purchased by appellant about the month of March, 1932. Appellees pleaded breach of warranty and failure of consideration, alleging that the representatives of the machinery company, at the time of purchasing the machinery, represented and warranted to the commissioners’ court that it would economically and properly perform any and all work desired or required in building and maintaining the roads of the county, and that the tractor had wholly failed in these respects. In reply to these defensive pleas appellant pleaded that the appellees were estopped from asserting the defenses pleaded by them by virtue of an order passed and entered by the commissioners’ court to the effect that the bid of the Lone Star Road Machinery Company, being the lowest and best bid received, was accepted, the machinery purchased, and directing the issuance of the. warrants in payment therefor. The order further provided that the contract was ratified and approved and declared to be the contract of the commissioners’ court and of Kent County; that the machinery company had furnished the machinery in accordance with the terms of its contract and it had been inspected by the court and found in all respects satisfactory, well worth the price agreed upon, *215 and that the county had received full value and consideration for the price to be paid therefor. He further pleaded estoppel by virtue of recitals in the warrants to the effect that all acts, conditions and things required to be done precedent to, and in the issuance of, the warrants had been properly done, happened and performed in regular and due time, form and manner as required by law. Appellant further pleaded res adjudicata, based upon the order of the commissioners’ court; waiver by waiting more than four years before repudiating the contract, and the two and •four years statutes of limitation against the defenses pleaded by appellees.

The case was submitted to a jury-upon special issues and the jury found (1) that the representatives of the machinery company represented to the commissioners’ court that the tractor would economically and properly perform any and all work desired or required in building or maintaining the roads of the county. (2) That, in executing the contract for the purchase of the machinery, the commissioners’ court relied upon such representations. (3) That the tractor would not economically and properly perform the work desired or required in building and maintaining the roads. (4) That the county received no benefits in the purchase and use of the tractor, and (5) that the tractor, at the time and place of its delivery to the county, was of the value of $900. Special issue No. 4 was submitted to the jury but afterwards withdrawn and by agreement, submitted to the court who -found that the commissioners in the fall of 1929 first discovered and determined among themselves that the tractor was defective and would not properly do the work for which it had been purchased.

At the close of the testimony appellant presented and urged a motion for a peremptory instruction in his favor, which was overruled, and after the verdict was returned he presented and urged a motion for judgment in his favor non obstante vere-dicto, which was likewise overruled, and the court entered judgment in favor of ap-pellees to the effect that appellant take nothing by his suit and pay the costs of court.

Appellant duly excepted to the judgment, gave notice of appeal, and presents the case in this court upon a large number of assignments of error and propositions of law which we think may be reduced to four general contentions as follbws: First, that the court erred in overruling his motions for a peremptory instruction and for judgment non obstante veredicto. Secondly, that the matters in dispute had been adjudicated and settled by the order entered by the commissioners’ court when it purchased the machinery and, therefore, his plea of res adjudicata should have been sustained. Thirdly, that appellees had waived their right to defend his cause of action by waiting more than four years to repudiate the contract and, fourthly, that under its pleas of two and four years limitation, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. arts. 5526, 5527, ' appellees’ rights under their defensive pleas were barred and they were not entitled to urge the same.

The. record shows that the commissioners’ court agreed to pay a total consideration of $8,368 for the tractor and grader, the agreed price of the tractor being $6,193 and the price of the grader being $2,175. In payment for the machinery the county delivered to the road machinery company some old road machinery owned by it of the agreed value of $1,500 and issued thirteen warrants, the first being in the sum of $868, and the balance of the series in the sum of $500 each. Appellant purchased from the machinery company warrants Nos. 4, 5 and 6, and the county paid the first four warrants, including the interest, when they became due. On March 28, 1934, the county attorney of Kent Counr ty notified appellant that the commissioners’ court had ordered the county treasurer not to pay the other warrants of the series; that the tractor had failed to perform the work as represented and that he had been instructed to defend any suit that may be filed thereon.

Appellant’s first contention is that appel-lees were estopped to urge their defenses against his suit upon the warrants because he was an innocent purchaser thereof, paid value for the same, relying upon the order entered by the commissioners’ court and the recitals in the warrants, and was without any notice of the contentions of the county that the tractor was not as represented by the machinery company.

This is the second appeal in this case, the opinion on the former appeal. being reported in Tex.Civ.App., 109 S.W.2d 348. The first and second contentions presented in this appeal by appellant were disposed of by us upon the former appeal in which we held that neither the recitals in the order of the commissioners’ court to *216 the effect that the company had furnished the machinery, that it had been inspected by the members of the court and accepted by them as satisfactory and worth the price agreed upon, nor the recitations in the warrants to the effect that all acts, conditions and things required to be done precedent to, and in the issuance of, the warrants had been properly done, happened and performed in regular and due time, form and manner as required by law, constituted either res adjudicata or estoppel. In view of appellant’s insistence in this appeal upon these principles we will say further, however, that the law is well established in this State by a long line of decisions that warrants issued by a municipal corporation such as those here involved are not negotiable instruments in any respect except that title to them may be transferred by endorsement and delivery. City of Belton v. Harris Trust & Savings Bank, Tex.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-witt-v-kent-county-texapp-1940.