F. B. Collins Inv. Co. v. Mills

254 S.W. 999, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 551
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 8, 1923
DocketNo. 8385.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 999 (F. B. Collins Inv. Co. v. Mills) 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
F. B. Collins Inv. Co. v. Mills, 254 S.W. 999, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 551 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

GBAVES, J.

The F. B. Collins Investment Company, a foreign corporation, obtained a permit to do business in Texas authorizing it, among other things not material here:

“To loan money on real estate in the state of Texas, and in any other state in the United States, and to take mortgages on real estate for the security of all its loans in the corporate name of. the company; ^to negotiate, sell and assign said mortgage securities or any other securities held by this company,” etc.

Mills and wife sued it in the district court of Houston county for $2,994.50 as damages for an .alleged breach of contract to lend them $6,000 on 440 acres of land, averring that tbfe written application for the loan was made on one of the corporation’s forms, and that with its knowledge their purpose in borrowing the money was to use it in paying off outstanding purchase-money notes they owed Phillips and Denny thereon and in improving the property; that they complied in all respects with the corporation’s requirements and their own agreements as to the conditions precedent to the consummation of the transaction, but that it, for some reason unknown to them then, refused to make the loan, thereby breaching its contract and forcing them — through their consequent inability, despite diligent effort upon their part, to pay the purchase-money notes — to reconvey the land to Phillips and Denny and so to lose the $1,000 cash they had paid thereon in buying it, as well as improvements to the value of $1,950 they had put on the property, which two amounts, added to some small expense items, made their damage aggregate $2,994.50.

In answer, the corporation -interposed a general demurrer, nine special exceptions, a general denial of all allegations of the petition, except such as were specially admitted to be true, and then specially denied that it ever agreed to make Mills any loan as charged, but alleged that it had only undertaken to use its best efforts to get one for him and that on or about December 18, 1919, he had appointed it as his agent to procure the $6,000 loan for him, and that in good faith it had endeavored ,to carry out that contract, allowing him to execute, the instruments and *1000 do the various other things he set up in furtherance of that effort, but that on account of unusual financial depression prevailing at the time and through no fault of its own it had failed, whereupon it had executed releases of the incumbrances on the land he had so executed.

By supplemental petition Mills and wife, after itemizing the improvements they had put on it and pleading that they had, between May 4, 1920, and September 10, 1921, unsuccessfully exhausted every means within their power to save the 440 acres by effecting a loan, then pleaded further as follows:

“That if it should appear that plaintiffs signed an application for said loan, and in such application it was stipulated and provided that the defendant was among other things appointed the agent of plaintiffs to secure said loan for plaintiffs, then plaintiffs would aver and show that such stipulation and provision was inserted in said application by defendant for the purpose of enabling defendant' to make an additional charge against plaintiffs and evade the law of the state’of Texas against usury, and to make it appear that defendant was the agent of plaintiffs, when in truth and in fact defendant did not, and never intended to, act in the capacity of agent of plaintiffs, but to lend the plaintiffs the $6,000 on its own responsibility, and for the purpose of lending money in Texas on real estate the defendant had complied with the laws of Texas relating thereto.”

In its supplemental answer the corporation directed a special exception to this averment just quoted, on the ground that it was immaterial, irrelevant, and sought to vary the terms of a written contract. It further denied the truth of the matter so charged, and added that Mills and wife had failed to furnish the kind of title they had agreed to concerning the land; hence the corporation was in any event- neither obligatéd to make or negotiate a loan for them.

The court overruled all the demurrers and exceptions filed by the defendant, and, after hearing the cause on the evidence, without a jury, rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs Mills and wife against the defendant corporation for $1,000, with interest thereafter at 6 per cent, per annum and costs of suit, from which decree the corporation appeals.

In the view we take of the cause as presented here, it becomes unnecessary to discuss seriatim or in detail appellant’s various assignments of error, but only that group of them upon which its eighth and ninth propositions are based,, as follows:

“Eighth- Proposition. — Oral evidence is not admissible to contradict or vary the terms of a written contract.
“Ninth Proposition. — When the uneontradiet-ed evidence in a case shows that the only contract between plaintiff and defendant was a written contract, it is error to admit oral evidence to vary or contradict such written contract.”

By the undisputed evidence the only contract between the parties was the written application of Mills for the loan, made out on one of the corporation’s forms, dated December 18, 1919, the material substance of which was this:

“Application for First Mortgage Farm Loan.
“I, the undersigned, James T. Mills, of Crockett, postofiice route No. -, county of Houston, state of Texas, do hereby appoint the F. B. Collins Investment Company, of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, my agent to procure for me a loan of six thousand and no/100 dollars, ($6,000.00) for the term of 7 years, with interest at 6 per cent, per annum, to be paid annually, secured by first mortgage or trust deed upon the following described real estate in the county of Houston, state of Texas, to wit: 440 acres out of the E. Gossett survey. * * * It is agreed that this loan may be written with two mortgages, one of which may be a commission mortgage. It is further agreed that if all statements herein are not true, or if applicant fails to accept the loan if granted, that applicant will pay all expenses incurred and an amount equal to one-half the commission charged for making said loan. Privilege to pay $200 or any multiple thereof, or the whole amount, at the maturity of any interest payment on and after January 1, 1923, by giving 60 days’ notice. * * *
“I do hereby state, under oath, that I am in peaceful possession of the premises above described; that my title thereto has never to my knowledge been questioned or disputed; that there are no judgments unsatisfied, unpaid taxes, or suits pending against me in any court of record of this state or the United States; that there are no unrecorded deeds or mortgages, and that I am neither principal nor surety on any bond which is by law a lien upon said premises, except such as are shown by the abstract submitted, and which I hereby authorize you to pay and discharge. * * * I have answered the above questions, and make these statements for the purpose of securing said loan, and solemnly declare the same to be true in every particular, and I have suppressed no information relative to the property offered as security which would adversely affect its value. I do hereby appoint the F. B.

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Related

Blindman v. Industrial Loan & Thrift Corp.
266 N.W. 455 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1936)
F. B. Collins Inv. Co. v. Sallas
260 S.W. 261 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 999, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-b-collins-inv-co-v-mills-texapp-1923.