Head v. City of Gainesville
This text of 254 S.W. 323 (Head v. City of Gainesville) 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.
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But if it should be conceded that a cause of action was stated against the construction company, we think the judgment so far as it was against appellants was nevertheless unauthorized, because it did not appear from the allegations in the petition that they were liable for the consequences to appellee of a breach by the construction company of its contract, nor did it appear from said allegations that they, or either of them, had defaulted in the performance of any obligation or duty they owed to appellee. What Head agreed to do and what the surety company by its bonds bound itself he would do was "to protect and indemnify" appellee against loss "in the event of any dispute, discrepancy or other contingency arising which might in any way affect the amount of work done or materials furnished" by the construction company, "so as to in any way affect" the warrants issued by appellee to the construction company and by it (the construction company) indorsed and delivered to him. That Head was a mere trustee of the parties for the purpose of holding possession of the warrants until he was directed by appellee's mayor to deliver them to the construction company is plain, we think. It was not alleged that he did not have the warrants in his possession, or was not holding them as agreed upon, or that he had in any way violated the trust. If he was holding them as agreed upon, certainly appellee had no right to maintain this suit against him. And, of course, if it could not maintain it against him, it could not maintain it against the surety company as his surety.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the court below for such proceedings as may be proper there.
If this court erred, as appellee insists it did, in holding that it appeared that Head was a mere trustee for the purpose of holding possession of the warrants, the conclusion reached that a cause of action was not stated against him nor against the surety company was nevertheless correct, we think because it did not appear from the allegations in the petition that a "dispute, discrepancy or other contingency" arose which in any way affected the warrants turned over to Head. If Head held the warrants, and it was not alleged he did not hold them, and if he had not "paid to or credited" any of same to the construction company "except in such amounts" as were shown "by estimates duly allowed and signed by the mayor," and it was not alleged that he had, he had not breached his undertaking, and a cause of action against either him or the surety company did not exist.
*Page 353The motion is overruled.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
254 S.W. 323, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/head-v-city-of-gainesville-texapp-1923.