Eardley Bros. v. Burt

182 S.W. 721, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 26, 1916
DocketNo. 5597.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 182 S.W. 721 (Eardley Bros. v. Burt) 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
Eardley Bros. v. Burt, 182 S.W. 721, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 64 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

MOURSUND, J.

A. Eardley and John Eardley, composing the firm of Eardley Bros., sued M. H. Burt and F. S. Burt for the valué of services rendered in cleaning out a well and drilling a well on 80 acres of land in Dimmit county, being the west half of the S. W. quarter of section 29, alleging that said land was owned by F. S. Burt and was named “Wonderland Farms” by defendants, and that M. H. Burt represented himself to be trustee and manager of said “Wonderland Farms.” The suit was upon two written contracts, which will be copied in stating the testimony. Plaintiffs sought to establish and foreclose a mechanic’s lien on said land.

Defendants denied all the material allegations, and alleged that F. S. Burt never joined in the contracts for the work done, that he had no interest therein, and was in no way liable thereon; that M. H. Burt bought the land from O. T. Gregory, who was holding it with the balance of the section for defendant F. S. Burt under an unrecorded deed from the Artesian Land & Irrigation ■Company, which deed was later recorded, and said Gregory later made a deed to F. S. Burt, who, on November 23, 1912, executed and delivered a deed to the 80 acres to M. H. Burt in consideration of a vendor’s lien note dated November 23,1912, for $4,000, of which amount $1,600 was for borrowed money.

Plaintiffs’ first supplemental petition charges that the deed of November 23, 1912, was executed long after the work was completed and was and is, as to them, fictitious and fraudulent; also that if it be true that F. S. Burt had no interest in “Wonderland Farms,” that he had full notice and agreed that M. H. Burt might take possession in name of “Wonderland Farms” and improve the same, and that he had taken possession and was improving the same, and F. S. Burt should be estopped from denying plaintiffs their lien thereon.

Defendants replied, to the effect that F. S. Burt had no interest in “Wonderland Farms,” except his vendor’s lien thereon; that he did not know what improvements had been placed thereon, and did not authorize, acquiesce in, or ratify any improvements that were placed thereon.

The court instructed the jury that plaintiffs were not entitled to recover against F. S. Burt, and that his lien to the extent of $30 per acre was prior to that of plaintiffs. The jury returned a verdict against M. H. Burt for $1,393.50, with foreclosure of mechanic’s lien on 50 acres of land, subject to F. S. Burt’s lien of $30 per acre. Judgment was entered upon such verdict. Plaintiffs appealed, and by appropriate assignments of error complain of the court’s action in instructing the jury that plaintiffs could not recover against F. S. Burt, and in effect that his lien to the extent of the purchase money had priority over that of plaintiffs if they found that plaintiffs were entitled to recover.

In May, 1911, the Artesian Land & Irrigation Company, a corporation of which Asher Richardson was president and M. H. Burt was secretary and treasurer, and which owned about 20,000 acres of land in Dimmit county, entered into a contract with O. T. Gregory, whereby he undertook to sell such land. Defendant F. S. Burt owned stock in the corporation. On June 10, 1911, he surrendered a portion of his stock in exchange for section 29. The deed was taken in Gregory’s name, for convenience in selling, and he conveyed it to F. S. Burt by deed dated November 16, 1911, which was not recorded until April 22, 1912. F. S. Burt conveyed to M. H. Burt the 80 acres out of survey 29, described in plaintiffs’ petition, by deed dated and acknowledged November 23, 1912, but not filed for record until September 1, 1914. The consideration recited in the deed is $4,-000, evidenced by a promissory note, to secure which a vendor’s lien was retained in *723 the deed. Plaintiffs’ mechanics’ lien was filed December 14, 1912.

The contracts sued upon read as follows:

“Asherton, Texas, May 27, 1912.
“Agreement entered into this day and date above written between M. H. Burt and Eardley Bros, of Carrizo Springs in which the said Eard-ley Bros, agree to move rig on section 29 on 80 acres now cleared and work on well now there at rate of $15 per day until an agreement is reached as to what is necessary. The said M. H. Burt agrees to give said Eardley Bros, the job of drilling new well if one is necessary and such other wells as he may have drilled on this section. [Signed] M. H. Burt.”
“San Antonio, Texas, June 17, 1912.
“Contract Agreement.
“This agreement entered into this day and date above written by and between M. H. Burt, of San Antonio, Texas, party of the first part, and Eardley Brothers of Carrizo Springs, Texas, parties of the second part, witnesseth:
“Party of the first part in the capacity of trustee and manager of Wonderlands Farms does hereby employ party of the second part to drill a well for artesian water on the west one-half of the southwest one-quarter of section 29 in the Asher Richardson survey, Dimmit county, Texas. Said well to be drilled to and through both stratas of the water bearing sands known to exist in this section. Party of the first part to furnish all casing necessary to case said well but party of the second part to furnish everything else and drill the well as far as possible as a 8%-inch hole and finish same as a 6%-inch. Well to 700 feet or more if necessary.
“Por and in consideration of the faithful performance of said work by the parties of the second part the party of the first part hereby agrees to pay said second party the sum of one dollar ($1.00) per foot for such 'actual depth as the well may measure when completed and accepted by said first party.
“Witness our hand and signatures this day and date above written.
“[Signed] M. H. Burt.
“John Eardley.”

John Eardley testified:

“I looked to F. S. Burt because F. S. Burt was interested in that land and M. H. Burt was working under F. S. Burt. As to whether I knew that at that time, I would say I know it by M. H. Burt’s own talk to me. I think he told me that not a great while before this contract was signed up. He told me that he and his brother was interested in that land, this M. H. Burt was just working for this F. S. Burt. I got that information through M. H. Burt. I could not recall now what Mr. M. H. Burt said to me that caused me to believe that. I might have recalled it if this matter had come up shortly after this work was done, I believe I could have recalled everything, but it had been two years and more since it came up.”

He also testified that when he got down to 550 feet he found it advisable, on account of the well caving in, to reduce the hole to 53/ie inches; hut as the contract called for 6% inches at the bottom, he got Vaughan, the tenant in possession of the land, to ascertain whether it would be satisfactory to make such reduction in the size of the well; that Vaughan in about four days told him to go ahead, that it would be all right; that F. S. Burt had said so. Vaughan testified 'that he did not talk to F. S. Burt; that Eardley asked him to talk to M. H. Burt, and he talked to the latter over the telephone at San Antonio, and received the reply that M. H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
182 S.W. 721, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eardley-bros-v-burt-texapp-1916.