Gunnels v. Atcheson

288 S.W.2d 878, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 1956
Docket6586
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 288 S.W.2d 878 (Gunnels v. Atcheson) 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
Gunnels v. Atcheson, 288 S.W.2d 878, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2168 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

From a summary judgment in behalf of appellees, denying appellant any recovery against them for the alleged balance of $3,387.59 due him for drilling and equipping an irrigation water well and for foreclosure of his mechanic’s and materialmen’s lien against the designated property, an appeal has been perfected. Appellant, J. W. ■Gunnels, sued appellees, Carl Atcheson and wife, Bettie Ruth Atcheson, Ernestine Atcheson, a widow, Thelma Atcheson, a feme sole, Vivian Atcheson, a feme sole, and Jack H. Mills, for the said balance of his alleged account and foreclosure of lien mentioned. All of the appellees except Jack H. Mills were the joint owners of the section of farm land on which the said water well was located in Moore County, Texas, and Jack H. Mills was the tenant on the said land under a-ten year written lease contract beginning early in 1953. The oral contract for drilling and equipping the said water well was entered into between appellant and appellee, Jack H. Mills, on or about May 1, 1953, after an agreement for such well had been made between Mills as a tenant and Carl Atcheson as the landlord representing all of the previously named joint owners of the land. The drilling contract, negotiations and transactions here involved were had, however, only between appellant and appellee, Jack H. Mills. The joint owners of the land will not be hereafter individually referred to other than Carl Atcheson as the landlord, who represented all of the owners.

Appellant pleaded in effect that as a result of negotiations between him and appel-lee Mills, on or about May 1, 1953, he prepared a detailed estimate of $13,029 as the proposed cost of a complete job of drilling and equipping the irrigation well for ap-pellees, to be submitted by him to the Government Lending Agency, seeking a loan for money to pay for the contemplated well and equipment and that the application made by Mills for such a loan was approved for $12,000; that the original agreement was to drill and case the well 450 feet deep but a later test hole revealed the necessity of drilling and casing the well 502 feet deep, which was agreed upon by the parties knowing that such would cost an additional sum; that the well was accordingly completed and equipped after which appellant submitted an itemized final account for all of the work, services, machinery and equipment in the sum of $15,887.59 to appellee Mills, who in turn submitted it to the Government Lending Agency and obtained from it a check for $12,000 made payable to appellant, which check appellee Mills delivered to appellant, who paid the well driller, B. F. Block, for his services and applied the remainder on the account due him; that the remainder of the total account due was $3,887.59 until appellee Mills and the landlord Carl Atcheson paid appellant an additional $500 to be applied *880 on the account, leaving a balance due of $3387.59, which sum was due on December 10, 1953, but never paid, even on demand, after which appellant fixed a lien against the said designated property and thereafter sued to collect the said balance of the account, reasonable attorney fees, costs, and to foreclose his lien.

Appellees answered by general and special denials and by a cross-action for general, special and exemplary damages, alleging in effect that appellant had agreed to drill and equip an irrigation water well under a total turn-key job contract that would produce 1,000 gallons per minute but that the well had not been properly drilled or gravel packed, and the casing not properly perforated, for which reason appellant had breached his contract as to his representations, guaranties and warranties. To the cross-action, appellant interposed a general denial.

The depositions of appellant and appellee Mills were taken and thereafter appellees, on April 29, 1955, filed an unverified motion for a summary judgment, alleging that appellant had already been paid more than was due him according to the provisions of his own pleadings and his own testimony given in his deposition, for which reasons they alleged he was not entitled to any recovery. It was agreed by stipulation of the parties that the testimony given by appellant and appellee Mills by deposition would be used by all parties at the hearing on ap-pellees’ motion for a summary judgment and such constituted all of the evidence introduced at the said hearing held on May 5, 1955. Upon considering the pleadings and the evidence, the trial court granted appellees’ motion for a summary judgment but did not enter its judgment until June 24, 1955. Prior to the entry of its summary judgment denying appellant any recovery, appellant, on June 23, 1955, filed a verified answer supported by his affidavit specifically denying the alleged grounds for appellees’ recovery as set out in their said motion for summary judgment and by his said affidavit showed a balance due appellant by appel-lees, in any event. According to the transcript before us, on June 24, 1955, immediately before the trial court’s summary judgment was filed for record, appellees filed a motion to strike appellant’s answer and affidavit in reply to their motion for a summary judgment on the alleged grounds that it was presented after the trial was had. Appellees’ said motion to strike appellant’s said answer and affidavit was granted, sustained and the same was ordered stricken by the trial court after the summary judgment had been entered and filed but on the same day. After the said summary judgment had been entered and filed, appellees, without disturbing their defenses pleaded, likewise filed a motion to dismiss their cross-action without prejudice and such motion was thereafter granted by the trial court and it was so ordered after the summary judgment had been entered but on the same day. Appellant thereafter filed his motion for a new.trial which was overruled by the trial court on August 12, 1955, from which an appeal has been perfected.

In his first and third points of error, appellant charges in effect that the trial court erred in sustaining appellees’ motion for a summary judgment and entering such judgment accordingly when the pleadings before the trial court raised material issues of fact to be determined upon the trial on the merits and because all of the evidence introduced shows that the appellant is entitled to recover $3,387.59 due him by appellees. For the reasons hereafter stated, we sustain appellant’s first and third points of error, as a result of which his other assignments are immaterial.

After appellant had paid the well driller, B. F. Block, in full for his services out of the $12,000 Government check, appellees have, in effect, challenged appellant’s authority to do so and have actually raised the question of who, if anybody, employed Block to drill the water well in question. It seems from the record that appellant probably thought appellee Mills had employed Block while appellee Mills, according to his testimony, thought appellant had employed Block under a subcontract. Mills testified that he contracted with appellant “for a turn-key irrigation job, which in- *881

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W.2d 878, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 2168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunnels-v-atcheson-texapp-1956.