Harper v. Lott Town & Improvement Co.

228 S.W. 188, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 692
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1921
DocketNo. 193-3247
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 188 (Harper v. Lott Town & Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harper v. Lott Town & Improvement Co., 228 S.W. 188, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 692 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

POWELL, J.

This is an action in debt and for foreclosure of vendor’s lien, instituted in the district court of Hidalgo county, Tex., by the Lott Town & Improvement Company, a corporation, against Corilla J. Harper and her sister, Ruth. The action was for the balance due upon a note for $7,642.60, executed by the Harper sisters on April 8, 1910, including interest and attorney’s fees, and which note had been given to said Lott Town & Improvement Company in part payment for the purchase of 250.16 acres of land situated in said county. Plaintiffs in error admitted the execution of the note for the amount as alleged, together .with the lien as pleaded by defendant in error, but filed a cross-action against the latter and several other individuals and corporations, praying therein for the issuance of citation to each one so impleaded. However, no citations were ever issued, and none of the impleaded parties appeared; hence the suit by plaintiffs in error upon their cross-action is limited to the defendant in error.

The cross-action for damages filed as aforesaid is quite lengthy, covering some 15 typewritten pages. The contents of this pleading are set out in considerable detail in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals. No useful purpose could be served by quoting at length from said pleading here. Suffice it to say that it was in the nature of an action for damages, growing out of an alleged breach of a contract made and entered into by defendant in error contemporaneously [189]*189with the sale of the land in question, under which it is claimed the latter guaranteed sufficient irrigation for said land in the future. The damages were alleged at §00,000.

The case was tried before a jury, and submitted upon special issues. In conformity with the answers of the jury thereto, the trial court awarded judgment in favor of defendant in error for $2,S73.07, which sum the judgment states is the difference between the amount due on the note, including attorney’s fees, and the amount of damages sustained ■by plaintiffs in error because of the breach of their contract with defendant in error.

The Lott Town & Improvement Company perfected its appeal from the judgment of the lower court. The Court of Civil Appeals held that the pleading setting up said cross-action was subject to general demurrer; that it was an action for damages caused by deceit and fraud of defendant in error; that a peremptory instruction should have been ■given, as requested by defendant in error, instructing the jury to return a verdict in the latter’s favor for the amount of the note sued upon, together with interest and attorney’s fees, less credits shown thereon, and reversed, reformed, and rendered judgment accordingly. The court’s opinion will be found in 204 S. W. 452. It is complete, and gives reasons at length for its judgment.

[1,2] After a very careful analysis of the pleading setting up the cross-action, we think the Court of Civil Appeals erred in its construction of the nature thereof; that said pleading was not an action based upon fraud, but rather one grounded on a breach of contract. We are further of the opinion that, as such, it was good on general demurrer. It is not necessary to refer to the various holdings of the Court of Civil Appeals. In the main, its holdings are correct, had the cause been one to recover damages resulting from fraud. As it was not such a case, the rules of law announced by said court do not control in the proper disposition of this appeal.

The controlling question of law herein is determined by the undisputed facts in evidence. Therefore a review of the facts is first in order. There is in the record a great deal of irrelevant and immaterial testimony, and the cross-action pleaded much which might have entitled plaintiffs in error to damages against defendant in error had the evidence offered sustained said allegations. But this is not the case. On the contrary, it is only necessary to notice a few of the outstanding and undisputed facts in the record. For instance, the following:

In February, 1910, Corilla J. Harper came to Texas on a homeseekers’ excursion, and landed in Hidalgo county. She went upon the land which is the subject-matter of this litigation. She was accompanied there by agents of the Lott Town & Improvement Company. She testified she was a land expert herself, having been reared by a father who was a landman; that she did not know muck about water and irrigation; that she questioned her companions on this inspection trip about the irrigation, and they told her it was a new proposition, but that the water would be adequate. She also said she had been warned against irrigation companies, and wanted to be sure about their solvency. She seemed to realize the importance of being careful in contracting about irrigation. She then returned to her home in Illinois, and named one A. A. Kelly, an attorney in Hidalgo county, as her agent to continue negotiations for the purchase of this land.

On March 19, 1910, we have the next step. A contract in writing was entered into on that day by and between Lott Town & Improvement Company on the one hand and Corilla J. and Ruth Harper on the other. .This contract was clear, definite, and complete, setting out all the terms of the sale and purchase of said land. Among the provisions of said contract, we find the following paragraph controlling irrigation, to wit:

“This contract is made upon condition that the La Donna Canal Company, duly organized and incorporated for the purpose of constructing and operating an irrigation system, shall execute and deliver its usual and ordinary water contract simultaneously with execution and delivery of said warranty deed to second party therein, who hereby agree to enter into and accept the same.”

Said contract was' signed for Corilla and Ruth Harper by A. A. Kelly, their duly authorized agent and attorney. Corilla Harper testified that she would have signed it herself, had she been present when it was executed, and she also stated that her agent was duly authorized to act in this matter.

In pursuance of said last-mentioned contract, the Lott Town & Improvement Company on April 8, 1910, executed and delivered to Corilla J. and Ruth Harper a general warranty deed, conveying to them some 250 acres of land for a total consideration of §22,927.80, one-third of which was paid in cash, and the remaining two-thirds evidenced by two notes, each for §7,642.60, maturing on or before'June 1, 1911 and 1912, respectively. Said deed and notes retain a vendor’s lien to secure their payment, and were in the usual form. It contained no obligation on the part of the grantor to irrigate said land, aná was accepted by the grantees, who signed and delivered to the grantor the notes above described.

Contemporaneously, and on the said 8th day of April, 1910, as provided for in the contract of March, 1910, the Lott Town & Improvement Company procured for plaintiffs in error a water contract from the La Donna Canal Company, another corporation. 8aid contract was executed by the latter, and is [190]*190a full and complete irrigation contract, clear and definite in its terms. It shows beyond question that the La Donna Canal Company was to irrigate the land purchased by plaintiffs in error, and contains no provision obligating the Lott Town & Improvement Company to guarantee to the plaintiffs in error performance of said contract.

Corilla J. Harper visited the land often, and moved on it in 1912.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 188, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-lott-town-improvement-co-texcommnapp-1921.