Hahl v. McPherson

176 S.W. 804, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 579
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 1915
DocketNo. 6760.
StatusPublished

This text of 176 S.W. 804 (Hahl v. McPherson) 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
Hahl v. McPherson, 176 S.W. 804, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 579 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

This suit was originally instituted by John J. McPherson against C. W. Hahl and F. A. Connable, parties composing the firm of C. W. Hahl Co., and the Houston National Bank, on the 16th day of March, 1909. The first trial of this cause was before the court without a jury, and judgment was then entered for appellee, McPherson. From this judgment, Hahl Co. appealed to this court. As Judge Reese, in an opinion reported in 133 S.W. 515, reversing the judgment of the trial court, has made a full and complete statement of the case as then presented by the pleadings and facts proven, we will therefore not restate the same further than as may be rendered necessary by an *Page 805 amendment of appellee's petition filed subsequent to the former appeal.

The court in the opinion referred to did not hold the clause of the contract of February, 1909, the meaning and scope of which was in issue, to be unambiguous, but emphasizes the fact that there were no allegations in the petition that the terms in the agreement, "in the full exercise and enjoyment of the contract and its terms," bore other than ordinary significance, or that they were understood by the parties in any other sense, or that by mutual mistake the contract failed to express the meaning and intention of the parties, and that if there was anything in the circumstances under which the contract was executed to indicate that the parties understood said contract to bind Hahl Co. to get such an instrument as would protect appellee against outstanding liens, It was not alleged in the petition, nor shown by the evidence, which showed only the existence and assertion, in a pending suit, of the vendor's lien and right to rescind and recover the land. It may be that the evidence on the last trial, and upon which appellee in his brief relies to support his interpretation of said contract of February 25, 1909, would put a different view upon the matter. The amended petition upon which the case was last tried contains the following allegations:

"That at the time this contract was executed neither plaintiff nor his attorneys knew with any accuracy the state of the title to these lands; they had never seen an abstract of the title, and the only information they had with reference thereto was from rumor and from statements made by defendants; that the defendant C. W. Hahl represented that on the day following the execution of the supplemental agreement, heretofore copied in this pleading, he was going to consummate a transaction that would enable him to place the lands in plaintiff's hands for sale free from any imperfection as to title, and that the title would be in good and satisfactory condition, and that the extension of the contract which he was to procure under this supplemental agreement would be sufficient to protect the plaintiff and his associates in the full exercise and enjoyment of the contract in all its terms. By this expression it was meant and understood that the defendants would procure an extension of the contract binding upon the owners of the superior title to the land whoever they might be, or would exhibit releases of any liens or incumbrances that might be menacing sale or foreclosure of the land and it was especially understood that the defendants were to procure the concurrence of certain clients of Messrs. Cocke Cocke, attorneys of San Antonio who held certain liens against the land, the names of these clients not being divulged to the plaintiff or his attorneys at the time of these negotiations; and, since neither plaintiff nor his counsel was familiar with the details of the title or the nature and extent of the imperfection that existed in it, if any, or the nature and extent of the liens that might be against the land subjecting it to sale, these things were not enumerated or set out at length in the contract, but under the assertions of the defendants that all of the objections to the title would he obviated in such way that the sales could go forward without interruption, and that plaintiff and his associates could make sales and deliveries of the land free from objections on account of the title, it was written in the contract of the 23d of February, 1909, that this extension agreement to be procured would be sufficient to fully extend the original contract and protect the said McPherson and Prudential Land Company in the full exercise and enjoyment of the contract and its full terms, which meant, and was so understood by the parties thereto to mean, that defendants were then entering into various negotiations and arrangements, the full nature of which were not disclosed to plaintiff or his counsel and the names of the parties with whom had were not disclosed to the plaintiff or his counsel, but that under these arrangements then going forward and in process of early completion, the title to the lands would not only be left in good condition and be made acceptable to plaintiff and his counsel and any purchaser that plaintiff might have for the lands, but the title to the land would be in fact made good and merchantable."

As we construe both the opinion of Judge Reese, supra, and an opinion written by Judge Higgins of the Eighth supreme judicial district, reversing the judgment of the lower court on the second appeal of this case, reported in the 151 S.W. 323, neither of them held the clause, "in the full exercise and the enjoyment of the original contract and its terms," was unambiguous, but upon the contrary, we think both of them clearly intimate that, under proper allegations supported by proper and sufficient proof, it was a question of fact whether or not such clause would have required Hahl Co. to obtain from the holders of the vendor's and other superior liens, agreements whereby appellee, McPherson, would have been fully protected in the exercise and enjoyment of the original contract and its terms, and under the paragraph of appellee's amended petition above quoted, we think it was admissible to show these facts; the language of said contract above quoted being ambiguous.

Upon the third and last trial, before a jury, from which this appeal is taken, the court gave the following instructions:

"The plaintiff in this case sued upon a written agreement dated the 23d day of February, 1909, by the terms of which the defendants bound themselves to procure the written extension of a former contract between the same parties. By the terms of this writing sued upon, it was agreed that the defendants would procure and deliver to the plaintiff an extension of the former contract in all things fully extending and ratifying the terms of said contract of September 10, 1908, for a period of 90 days from and after March 15, 1909, such extension to be binding upon said Hahl Co., C. W. Hahl, and F. A. Connable and the owners of said land and to be sufficient to fully extend said contract and protect McPherson and the Prudential Land Company in the full exercise and enjoyment of said contract and its terms. The plaintiff contends that by this writing it was agreed and understood that the defendants were to procure the concurrence in this extension of the owners of the superior title to the lands referred to, that is to say, the concurrence of certain persons holding vendor's liens against this land; that it was necessary to the enjoyment of their contract that such concurrence be procured. The defendants deny that they undertook to procure the consent or concurrence in this extension of any persons other than C. W. Hahl, F. A. Connable, and W. J. Candlish which they tendered to *Page 806 plaintiff, and deny that they undertook to procure the concurrence of the owners of the superior title.

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Related

Hahl v. McPherson
133 S.W. 515 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1910)
McPherson v. C. W. Hahl Co.
151 S.W. 323 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1912)
St. Louis Southwestern Railway Co. v. Alexander
172 S.W. 709 (Texas Supreme Court, 1915)
Arambula v. Sullivan
16 S.W. 436 (Texas Supreme Court, 1891)
Holman v. Houston Oil Co. of Texas
152 S.W. 885 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1912)
Kingston v. Pickins
46 Tex. 99 (Texas Supreme Court, 1876)
Brown v. Chambers
63 Tex. 131 (Texas Supreme Court, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.W. 804, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hahl-v-mcpherson-texapp-1915.