Ferguson v. Getzendaner

83 S.W. 374, 98 Tex. 310, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 257
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1904
DocketNo. 1368.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 83 S.W. 374 (Ferguson v. Getzendaner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferguson v. Getzendaner, 83 S.W. 374, 98 Tex. 310, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 257 (Tex. 1904).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

The following questions have been certified to us by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial District for our determination.

“(1) In the year 1901 the citizens of the city of Waxahachie, Ellis County, Texas, and vicinity, in efforts to secure the location at said city of an educational institution known as Trinity University, then located at Tehuacana, Texas, had through a citizens’ committee prior to the 1st day of April, 1901, secured an option on certain land near said city which had been subdivided and mapped into lots and blocks, and it was being proposed to sell said lots conditioned upon the location of said university upon said tract of land, the net proceeds of such sales going into a fund to be used in bidding for the location of said university at said city of Waxahachie.
“(2) The option above mentioned was a contract or contracts in writing between the owners of said land and said citizens’ committee to convey to W. H. Getzendaner, trustee, said land for $100 per acre in the event Trinity University should be located upon the same, and said committee paid no money for such option.
“(3) Among ‘the subdivisions of land mapped and platted as above mentioned was lot 8 in block 13, said tract being known as University addition to Waxahachie.
“(4) On the 1st day of April, 1901, a subcommittee of said citizens’ committee solicited defendant W. B. Ferguson to purchase a lot in said University addition, and on that date the defendant made, executed and delivered to said subcommittee, known as a soliciting committee, his written obligation substantially in words and figures as follows:
“ ‘Waxahachie, Texas, April 1, 1901.—Whereas a citizens’ committee, with W. H. Getzendaner as chairman, has secured an option on certain land and mapped the same as University addition to the city of Waxahachie, Texas, and now proposes to sell said lots on condition "that *313 Trinity University is located on said land, the net proceeds to go into the funds to bid for said University. Now, therefore, in aid of such fund the undersigned does hereby purchase lot No. 8 in block No. 13, ¡in said University addition conditioned as aforesaid and acknowledge .myself bound to pay W. H. Getzendaner, trustee, or his successors in trust, the sum of $500 within ten days after the date of final securing ■such location, or the undersigned has option of paying as much as one-third of such sum cash within ten days after such location and executing for the balance vendor’s lien notes in equal amounts due in four, eight and twelve months, drawing 8 per cent per annum interest from date «of such location. Notes and deeds to be in usual form. If said university is not located on said land this instrument is null and void. 'This obligation is payable at the Citizens National Bank at Waxahachie, Texas, where the same is placed in escrow. (Signed) W. B. Ferguson.’
"(5) The above obligation was forthwith placed with the Citizens -National Bank of Waxahachie.
"(6) Five days after the delivery of the above obligation and before any agreement had been made between said citizens committee and said Trinity University, and before it was known what bid or sum of money would be required to induce said university to locate on said tract of land, and before said citizens’ committee had submitted any proposition to said university, but after the matter of removal of said university from Tehuacana and its location at some other point was being considered by those in authority over said university, and after a committee had been appointed to determine what inducements to this -end could be obtained, and to report to the authorities in control of such university, the defendant, W. B. Ferguson, went to the members «of said soliciting committee to whom he had delivered his said obligation and asked to withdraw his contract, notifying them that he would not ¡be bound thereby.
"(7) Said committee so applied to "the general citizens’ committee ■and informed such committee of the request and demand of defendant, but such general citizens’ committee declined to release defendant from bis said obligation or to deliver up said obligation to him, of which he was notified by said soliciting committee, and all of this was before any •■agreement or proposition as above mentioned.
"(8) About the 20th of June, 1901, said citizens’ committee for the first time submitted a proposition for the location of said university on ■said tract of land to the authorities in charge of said Trinity University, which proposition was finally accepted on the - day of September, 1901.
"(9) On the 3d day of October, 1901, the parties with whom said •■citizens’ committee had an option upon said lands aforesaid conveyed -said land to W. H. Getzendaner, trustee, the consideration of such conveyances being $100 per acre for the land conveyed, and before such ¿conveyances said committee had made with numerous other parties con *314 tracts and agreements for the sale of practically all the lots into which-said land had been subdivided, except the land reserved for college-campus, such agreements of sale being substantially of like import as-that with said Ferguson except in numbers of lots and in prices, and; the prices agreed upon in such obligations were largely in excess of the cost of such land to such committee.
“(10) In the transactions herein above mentioned the said citizens*committee utilized the obligations received by it to pay for said land and to make good its bid for the location of said university, and such committee neither received nor claimed any profit to itself in said transaction.
“(11) The final location of said Trinity University upon the land above mentioned was secured more than ten days prior to the 24th day of October, 1901, and on said date last mentioned plaintiff demanded off defendant compliance by him with the terms of his said obhgation and offered to convey to him title to the lot mentioned therein, but defendant refused to accept said lot or to pay for the same either in cash or note, insisting that he was under neither legal nor moral obligation in.; the matter.
“(12) On the 3d day of March, 1903, the plaintiff sold the lot mentioned in defendant’s obligation at public outcry for cash to another-party for the sum of $80 as stated in plaintiff’s petition and after notice to the defendant as stated in plaintiff’s petition.
“This suit was then instituted in the County Court of Ellis County,, founded upon the obligation of appellant, above set out, in which appellee prayed judgment for the balance due on said obligation after-crediting thereon the proceeds of the sale of said lot. The case was-tried by the court without a jury and conclusions of law and fact filed.. Among other things the court found that the sale of the land made by appellee on the 3d day of March, 1903, was not made within a reasonable time after appellant had defaulted, and that said lot at the time-of said sale, and all times after the said university was secured, was worth the sum of $250.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.W. 374, 98 Tex. 310, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-getzendaner-tex-1904.