Frost v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co.

17 S.W.2d 121, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 581
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 2, 1929
DocketNo. 1835.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 S.W.2d 121 (Frost v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co.) 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
Frost v. Texas Gulf Sulphur Co., 17 S.W.2d 121, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 581 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

C. M. Frost was plaintiff, and Texas Gulf Sulphur Company was defendant. They will be referred to as such.

Plaintiff sued defendant to recover commissions in the sum of $2,000, alleged to be due him by defendant in a certain real estate deal. The allegations of his petition were full, sufficient, and appropriate. Defendant answered by general demurrer, general denial, certain special denials, and specially that it had purchased a different interest in the property in question than that which it authorized plaintiff to purchase for it, and upon different terms, wherefore it was not liable to plaintiff for commissions. The ease was tried to a jury. When the evidence was closed plaintiff *moved the court for an instructed verdict in his favor for the amount sued for, which was refused. Defendant also moved the court for an instructed verdict in its favor, which was refused. The court then instructed the jury to return a verdict for plaintiff for $600, which was done, and judgment entered accordingly. Both parties duly excepted to the court’s action and to the judgment, and the cáse is before us on the appeal of the plaintiff. Defendant filed cross-assignments of error.

The facts are practically without dispute. Defendant is engaged in sulphur mining. Mrs. Phoebe Frost Coulter of Fargo, N. D., wife'of John Lee Coulter, and Mrs. Margaret H. Howard of Vienna, Va., wife of A. Randolph Howard, owned 200 acres of land at or near what is known as “Boling Dome” in Fort Bend county, Tex., a prospective oil and sulphur field. Plaintiff, Frost, was in the business of buying, selling, and leasing real estate for a commission. Mrs. Coulter is a cousin of Frost. In the early part of October, 1927, plaintiff called the attention of A. G. Wolf, who was the agent and representative of defendant company, to the Coulter and Howard tract of land, and inquired whether the company cwould be interested in buying a portioij of tIle sulphur rights under this land, telling him who the owners were and that one of them, Mrs. Coulter, was a relative of his, and that prior to that time plaintiff and his brother, J. M. Frost, had handled the Coulters’ and Howards’ business in leasing said land, and that he (plaintiff) could make a trade for defendant if his company was interested. Wolf replied that at that time his company was not interested, but that if it should become so it would handle the deal through plaintiff. There were three oil leases on the land, negotiated by plaintiff’s brother, but they did not cover the sul-phur. Shortly after the first conversation, Wolf ’phoned plaintiff, and he went to Wolf’s office, and Wolf told him he wanted to buy half of the sulphur rights under the west 50 acres of the 200-acre tract, for which he would pay $3,000, and that he wanted a lease of the sulphur rights under the middle 66 acres of said tract, for which he would pay $2,000, and authorized Frost to go ahead and make the deal if he could, instructing Frost to buy half of the sulphur under the west 50 acres in the name of I-I. E. Dodge and to take the lease of 66 acres in the name of D. E. Thomas. Wolf tolfl Frost he would pay him 10 per cent, of the purchase price as a commission. After this agreement Frost prepared and forwarded to the owners of said land instruments for their execution, carrying out the contemplated purchase and lease, with drafts attached, with request that if they were willing to accept to sign the papers and send them for collection. The parties did not execute the conveyances, but Coulter wrote Frost relative to the matter. Frost informed Wolf of the letter and same was read to Wolf. Frost told Wolf that the Coulters and Howards wanted to sell the property, and urged, him to get the trade closed as early as possible, because delay would mean increased cost to buy, and suggested that if Wolf wanted the trade closed the best thing to do was to send him (Frost) to see the parties and close the deal. Frost wired Mrs. Howard at Vienna, Va., near the city of Washington, that he had a good chance to sell her Boling mineral rights, and to wire where he could see her. She replied that she would be glad'to have him visit her, or that she would meet him in Washington at any time and place he would designate, and that if necessary she could come to Texas. After getting this telegram, Frost had another conversation with'Wolf, in which Wolf said he had changed his plans for purchasing, and he then told Frost that he wanted to buy half of the sulphur under the west 50 acres, for which he would pay $3,000, and that he wanted a 12 months’ option on the other half at double that price, for which option he would pay $1,000, and the lease on the middle 66 acres, for which he would pay $2,000. *123 Frost then told Wolf that he (Frost) contemplated buying a one-fourth interest in the sulphur, and that he had sent a deed to the parties to he executed by them for thr'ee-fourths of the sulphur under the west '50 acres, intending to take one-fourth himself.. Wolf objected to this, and Frost agreed to and did refrain from making any effort to get any interest for himself, so that Wolf might buy one half of the sulphur and take an option on the other half. Frost then wired Mrs. Howard that he would arrive in Washington on Saturday morning and to meet him at the Mayflower Hotel, and Mr. 'and Mrs. Howard did meet him on his arrival. He then submitted his proposal for a sulphur lease on the middle 66 acres for $2,000, the purchase of one half of the sul-phur under the west 50 acres for $3,000, and a 12 months’ option at double that price on the other half of the sulphur under said 50 acres for $1,000. This offer was rejected, and the Howards informed Frost that one Farmer had closed a deal with defendant on 100 acres of land adjoining theirs for $110,-000; that Farmer had wired this information to the Coulters, at Fargo, and Coulter had wired them. Frost was not aware such deal had been consummated. Frost then wired Coulter that he had just learned of the Farmer deal and that he thought it best for Coulter to meet him in Houston. Mrs. Coulter replied to this telegram that her husband, John Lee Coulter, had already gone to Houston in response to Farmer’s telegram. Frost replied to this telegram that he would meet Coulter in Houston, and, also wired Wolf as to the various telegrams, Farmer to Coulter, Coulter to the Howards, and that Coulter would be in Houston Monday following at the Rice Hotel, and that the Howards would do whatever Coulter did. Frost also wired his brother, J. M. Frost, concerning the matter, and requested him to meet Coulter and take him to Wolf’s office, and also wired Wolf that he had wired his brother to meet Coulter and take him to Wolf’s office. Wolf wired Frost that as there was apparently no chance to close a deal where he was, he had better return to Houston, which he did, advising Wolf of the time he would arrive. Immediately upon reaching Houston Frost ’phoned Wolf. This was at night, and next morning he called at Wolf’s office.

When J. M. Frost, brother to plaintiff, C. M. Frost, received his brother’s telegram to meet Coulter upon his' arrival at Houston, he went to see Wolf and told him about his brother’s wire, and that he was taking his brother’s place in the matter, and that he would meet Coulter and close the deal if he could. J. M. Frost then asked Wolf what trade he would be willing to make with Coulter, that he understood that sulphur royalties had changed very materially, and did Wolf want him to make Coulter a proposition, and Wolf replied, “Let’s wait and see what Coulter says.” J. M. Frost met Coulter when he arrived in Houston.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.W.2d 121, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-v-texas-gulf-sulphur-co-texapp-1929.