Gulf, T. & W. Ry. Co. v. Stark
This text of 151 S.W. 641 (Gulf, T. & W. Ry. Co. v. Stark) 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.
Opinion
The appellee, Sil Stark, sued the appellant in the county court of Jack county to recover the sum of $950 which he claimed was due from the appellant to one T. ~W. Fletcher, and which Fletcher had assigned to the appellee. The items of the account as set out in the petition consisted, of charges for work and labor performed for the appellant ■ by Fletcher in building dams and reservoirs and in moving dirt in some way connected with, the construction of its railroad. Appellant answered by. a general denial, and specially, pleaded payment of sums amounting to as much as that sued for. It also pleaded settlement on September 1, 1909, and the payment of $311.26 in full of services, rendered thereafter. It denied the correctness of several of the items detailed in plaintiff’s petition, and the prices charged for the services there specified. It was further pleaded that a number of claims had been paid by appellant at the instance and request of Fletcher prior to the date of the assignment of this account. Among th'e claims which appellant specially pleaded as having been paid at the instance and request of Fletcher was one for $142.30 to A. J. Birdsong on an order from Fletcher. To this answer the appellee filed a supplemental petition, denying' payment and settlement, and alleging other matters not necessary to here state in detail. Appellant filed a supplemental answer, in which, among other things, it was alleged that prior to September 1, 1909, the Griggsby Construction Company had contracted to erect a grade along its line of railway; that in settlement with the construction company for a portion of this work it had by mistake overpaid that company in the sum of $425.04; that this was due to an error in an estimate of the amount of work which had been done by ■Fletcher, who was then working for the Griggsby Construction Company. It further alleged that thereafter,, when the mistake was discovered, it was understood by all parties that Fletcher had been paid $425.04 more than he was entitled to, and that Fletcher agreed with appellant’s chief engineer that, *642 in order to enable Fletcher to repay the same to the Griggsby Construction Company, the appellant would give him work to do in the construction of a dam and reservoir at Jermyn, and such other work as the company should need, until the $425.04 had been repaid as agreed on; that Fletcher, with the full knowledge of all that was done, and with the honest intention of repaying to the Griggsby Construction Company and to this defendant company what they had overpaid him, agreed to do the work on that reservoir and such other work as appellant might employ him to perform, and to allow appellant credit thereon for the $425.04. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict for the appellee for $585.61. A number of assigned errors are presented, but we will only discuss those which we think are subject to some of the objections urged.
In the fifth paragraph of the main charge the court gave the jury the following instruction: “There is one item of payment by defendant company over which there is a question as to precedence or priority; and that is the $142.30 payment to A. J. Birdsong. Now, if you find that at the time the A. J. Birdsong account was presented to the company for payment that said defendant at said time accepted said order or claim, and that this was prior to the notice of the plaintiff’s assignment, then plaintiff could not recover for same; on the other hand, if you find that the defendant had notice of the assignment by T. W. Fletcher to plaintiff before said defendant accepted or agreed to pay said account of A. J. Birdsong, then you will find for plaintiff on said item-.” The evidence shows that two days prior to the assignment by Fletcher to ap-pellee of his claim against the appellant Fletcher had given to Birdsong the following order:
Oct 2S.
To Bal. a’c. $142.30.
Pay A. J. Birdsong the above account. To Gulf, Texas and Western R.y. Go., Jaeks-boro, Texas.
his
O. K. T. W. X Fletcher.
The court in another portion of his charge selected particular items of the account in dispute and charged with reference to them in such a manner as to give them undue prominence. Upon another trial that should be avoided.
Because of the errors discussed, the judgment of the court is reversed and the cause remanded.
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151 S.W. 641, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-t-w-ry-co-v-stark-texapp-1912.