Ft. Stockton Irrigated Lands Co. v. Graef

138 S.W. 186, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 816
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 10, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 138 S.W. 186 (Ft. Stockton Irrigated Lands Co. v. Graef) 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
Ft. Stockton Irrigated Lands Co. v. Graef, 138 S.W. 186, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 816 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

JAMES, C. J.

Appellee Graef’s amended petition alleged, in substance, a contract by which appellant leased to him from February 1, 1910, to January 1, 1911, sections 6, 8, 9, and 15, of block 1, and tracts 35, 36, 37, 44, 45, 46, 51, 52, and 53, of section 9, block 1, obligating plaintiff to cultivate every acre of said lands in some merchantable crop during the year ending January 1, 1911, to cultivate all the acreage of said lands not then planted in alfalfa in cotton, milo maize, corn, and oats, etc., to deliver appellant one-fourth of the cotton raised on that part of the lands which was cultivated- in 1909 and one-fifth of the cotton raised elsewhere on the land, and one-fifth of all other crops raised on the land, etc. Other obligations were entered into by appellee with regard to the manner of cultivating and to the manner of delivery to appellant of its portion of the crops. As rental of the alfalfa he was to pay $6 per ton, and Johnson grass $4 per ton. Appellant reserved two tracts of land for pasture purposes “lying near the old Rooney ranch house and to the right of the road from Ft. Stockton to ranch house.” The petition pleaded that a part of the agreement and the consideration thereof was that defendant was to furnish him sufficient water to irrigate 500 acres of land, inclusive of the 200 acres then planted in alfalfa, which agreement was by mutual mistake not expressed in the contract; that the land delivered and pointed out and leased to him was 500 acres, which was a part of the Rooney farm being 200 acres in alfalfa and 300 acres not planted in alfalfa and lying on irrigation ditches Nos. 1 and 2, belonging to defendant, and that the amount of land described in the contract was a mistake, and should have been 500 acres, including the 200 acres of alfalfa, and that said amount of land was put *187 in by mutual mistake, and, if not so, then by tbe fraud of appellant, and without the knowledge of appellee, and that only said 500 acres were delivered to him as constituting the land leased. The petition alleged that appellant failed and refused to furnish him sufficient water to irrigate said alfalfa and other crops, and by reason of such failure he failed to raise 205 tons of alfalfa that he would otherwise have raised, and on said 205 tons he lost $11.50 per ton; that there were also 30 acres of alfalfa on which appellant failed and refused to furnish him any water, on account of which he was damaged to the amount of 120 tons at $11.50 per ton; that plaintiff would have raised other crops upon said land such as cotton, milo maize, and garden truck, which, after deducting the expense of growing, gathering, and marketing, and paying defendant the rental, would have amounted to the sum of $1,000. Defendant pleaded general denial, and by a plea in reconvention alleging that plaintiff had violated the contract and damaged appellee in the sum of $10,000 by failing to cultivate 2,000 acres of the lands leased to him; that the contract set out in the petition was the true and correct contract between the parties; that plaintiff did not care for and cultivate the alfalfa as he had agreed to' do, but neglected same, on account of which the alfalfa died on about 30 acres, which otherwise would have produced 00 tons of hay, and thereby produced $360 in rents, and, on account of such failure, the said 30 acres were permanently damaged in the sum of $1,200, and appellant asked judgment against appellee for $11,500, and that the contract be annulled. There was a verdict for $1,150 in favor of appellee upon which verdict judgment was rendered for that sum, and that appellant take nothing by his cross-action.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in failing to submit to the jury the question whether or not the written contract was the true and correct contract as regards the agreement of plaintiff to cultivate the lands as therein described.

The second assignment is that the court did not submit the question whether or not the written contract was in words and effect the contract as agreed, upon between the parties, or whether there were left out of it material portions thereof, by fraud or mutual mistake, they believing at the time that it covered their entire agreement as it related to all matters connected with and mentioned by it except the one question of water which was to be furnished by defendant to plaintiff for irrigation purposes.

The third assignment is: “The verdict rendered in this ease by the jury does not dispose of the issues in this case and is insufficient, and is an insufficient finding upon which to base a judgment in this case, in this: That the jury did not find in their verdict whether or not the plaintiff had breached his written contract sued on and introduced as evidence.”

[1] The fourth assignment is: “The verdict of the jury and judgment of the court is contrary to law and unsupported by the evidence, in this: The contract shows that the plaintiff was to plant and cultivate during the season of 1910 more than 2,500 acres of land, as described in plaintiff’s petition, and in the contract entered into by plaintiff and defendant, and introduced in evidence, and the undisputed evidence, is that as to more than 2,000 acres of said land plaintiff made no attempt whatever to cultivate said land, and thereby breached his contract.”

It is true the court did not submit such issue in its entirety. The charge submitted whether or not defendant failed to furnish plaintiff sufficient water for the reasonably proper irrigating of the alfalfa, and the crop of Kaffir and Indian corn on the land delivered to plaintiff under and by virtue of the contract, with instruction that if defendant failed to furnish same, and the yield of plaintiff’s crops was less than it would have been had defendant not so failed, to return a verdict for plaintiff for the amount of the loss to him of the difference in the crop actually raised and the crop that would have been raised, but for such failure “based on the measure of damages hereinafter given you,” etc.

The trial court, it seems to us, must have assumed that the contract of lease as to the amount of land it affected did not embody the real agreement of the parties, and proceeded and submitted the case upon the theory that defendants’ plea in reconvention in its full extent based on plaintiff’s not cultivating all the land he undertook to cultivate was not substantiated. We find, however, that to a certain extent the court submitted the plea in reconvention or cross-action. The record does not disclose the court’s reason for submitting it in this restricted manner. It may have been because the testimony introduced by defendant on the subject negatived the idea that it was the intention of the contracting parties to include all the land described in the contract as leased, and that the admitted exceptions and reservations that were made at the time, but not expressed in the contract, were so considerable as to conclusively show that by mutual mistake of the parties the contract did not express the real agreement as to the quantity of land leased, and that the reservations as testified to by defendant’s manager left the matter so indefinite as to leave the quantity of land upon which the cross-action was based too uncertain to enable the jury to act intelligently thereon. But, whatever the court’s reason was, we think the matter was rendered immaterial and the nonsubmission complained of a mere abstraction by what was submitted and by what the jury found.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.W. 186, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ft-stockton-irrigated-lands-co-v-graef-texapp-1911.