Eastland County v. Davisson

290 S.W. 196
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 1926
DocketNo. 234. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 290 S.W. 196 (Eastland County v. Davisson) 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
Eastland County v. Davisson, 290 S.W. 196 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinions

RID GELD, J.

We take the following as the nature and result of the suit from the briefs of the parties.

In June, 1919, Fleming-Stitzer Road-Building Company, a copartnership, made á contract with appellant county to construct some roads. The contract was evidenced by two instruments, in writing, found at pages 15 to 34 of the transcript and on page 137 to 154 of the statement of facts. These instruments referred to contain certain engineering specifications as to the roads. 'Subsequent to the making of the contract, ap-pellee Davisson became the sole owner of the Fleming-Stitzer Road-Building Company.

The contract obligated the contractor to purchase and pay for in cash, at par, plus accrued interest, the bonds issued by appellant and theretofore voted for the purpose of building the roads. It was contemplated that the bonds so purchased would not be held by the contractor, but resold to regular bond brokers in the open market. By the contract appellant was obligated to deliver the bonds to such buyers on the order of the contractor. The contractor sold the bonds and a majority of them were sold at a discount. A regular set of books was opened between the contractor and appellant, and entries made therein reflecting the amount of credits and charges between the parties. Where any bonds .were sold by the contractor before he had performed a corresponding' amount of work, the proceeds of such were, under the agreement, deposited in the county depository bank and thereafter paid out as the work was done. Every sale of such bonds by the contractor was at a discount-. He was accordingly charged on the books of the county with this discount; it representing the difference between what he had agreed to pay the county for the bonds and what he actually sold them for. To offset these charges for discount on bonds, the contractor was from time to time credited with the bills he would turn in each month covering the work done by him, which bills were called estimates. The parties proceeded in this'manner until about the 2d day of August, 1921, at which time the county depository bank, The Security State Bank. & Trust Company, failed. By this failure, a large amount of the proceeds from the sale of the bonds theretofore sold, in the manner detailed above, became impounded, the exact amount being $426,113.45. Subsequent to said failure, litigation was instituted for the recovery of said funds, and this litigation is still pending. Other bond money was likewise impounded by the failure of the First National Bank of Ranger, Tex., in an amount approximately $20,000,' which, by litigation, has since been recovered.

There was some delay in the prosecution of the road work caused by the bank failures, and some litigation against the contractor by some private citizens of the county, but the work progressed at intervals up to the latter part of January or the first part *198 of February, 1922, at which time, with the consent of the county, the contractor assigned his interest in the contract to Smith Bros., another road-building company. Smith Bros., assignees of Davisson, proceeded with the road work under the terms of the original contract up until the 29th day of December, 1922, at which time it was reported to the commissioners’ court that the contract had been performed as to all roads except a portion of the Bankhead highway, and a request for - settlement for such work was made. Thereupon the commissioners’ court passed and entered on its minutes an order accepting said roads as completed, which order is found in the record. Immediately-following the entry of this order, the then county judge and three individual members of the commissioners’ court were succeeded in- office by other officials who had been duly elected to succeed the previous court. Shortly after the new judge and commissioners qualified, an audit of the county books was made.

This suit was originally instituted by appellant against appellee, on the 17th day, of December, 1923. The original pleadings have since be'en amended from time to time up to the filing of plaintiff’s second amended original- petition. In this pleading plaintiff alleged substantially all the facts above set-forth, and alleged further that, as shown by the books of Eastland county, the Fleming-Stitzer Road-Building Company, after allowing credit for all work done, still indebted to said county 'in the sum of $64,160, covering the discount on bonds delivered, for which, under the contract, it and its sureties, the Southern Surety Company, were obligated to pay.

The plaintiff also alleged matters in reference to an injunction suit growing out of the main case, but same is not material here as the matter is now undisposed of in the Supreme Court.

The appellee Davisson alleged that in January, 1922, he had a final, full, and complete settlement with Eastland county, wherein all matters in controversy in' this suit involving the bond discount were settled and adjusted by and between appellant and defendant, and, as evidence of such settlement, pleaded order No. 3 of the commissioners’ court of said county, and pleaded same as a complete bar and as res judicata to this suit. Appellee Davisson further pleaded said order No. 37 of the commissioners’ court as a bar to the suit, and that by a certain other order, known as order No. 38, by reason of appellee having sold and conveyed with the consent of the county his contract for the construction of roads to Smith Bros., and that, by the entering of said order, appellant was not entitled to recover.

• The appellee Gregg alleged that he retired from the partnership of G. A. Davisson, and by reason of facts alleged he was released and that appellant was estopped from any recovery, and he further adopted the answers of his codefendant Davisson, and, by way of cross-action against appellee Davisson, sought recovery for' such amount as appellant might recover against him.

The appellee Southern Surety Company pleaded that it was a surety on the bond of the Fleming-Stitzer Road-Building Company, and after general demurrer and general denial pleaded the assignment of the contract and alleged that its liability was transferred to Smith Bros., with the consent of appellant, and pleaded order No. 3 of the commissioners’ court as releasing and discharging it from liability on the bond. The cause was tried before a jury upon special issues, and, from the answers of the jury to the special issues submitted, judgment was rendered denying appellant any recovery against appel-lee. The appellant’s motion for a new trial being overruled, notice of appeal was given and same duly prosecuted to this court.

There are 71 assignments of error, but we believe there are a few controlling legal questions which dispose of the appeal and make it unnecessary to discuss all the assignments. This is recognized by the fact that a number of the assignments are grouped under the same proposition of law by the appellant. As we view it and as really treated by appellant, the first three propositions asserted are the main propositions of law involved. The first proposition of error advanced is as follows:

“Parol testimony was not admissible to contradict, vary, or add to the written orders of the commissioners’ court, which orders were judgments of a court of record.”

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Related

Hall v. Rawls
171 S.W.2d 324 (Texas Supreme Court, 1943)
Hill County v. Colonial Trust Co.
18 S.W.2d 787 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1929)
Eastland County v. Davisson
298 S.W. 268 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1927)

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Bluebook (online)
290 S.W. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastland-county-v-davisson-texapp-1926.