Hester v. Shuster

234 S.W. 713, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1052
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 1921
DocketNo. 6598.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 234 S.W. 713 (Hester v. Shuster) 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
Hester v. Shuster, 234 S.W. 713, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1052 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

This suit was instituted by appellee against appellants to' recover tha sum of $3,000, with interest, thereon, a part of the purchase price paid for a'tract of ■160 acres of land lying in Frio and Medina counties; for the cancellation of a note held by G. W. Hester; cancellation of outstanding vendor’s lien note against the land, and cancellation of the deed to appellee, or, in the alternative, for damages in the sum of $5,000. This case was tried before the court with a jury, and resulted in a judgment on •their verdict in favor ,of appellee for amount sued for. as prayed. -

This is a fact case. The alleged fraud is predicated upon misrepresentation^ as to* the real value of the land, inducing appellee to purchase for the sum of $8,100, or more than $50 per acre, whereas it was not worth more than $35 per acre. A great portion was covered with Bermuda grass, and crossed with1 ditches' and of but little value for farming p-ürposos. This condition was carefully withheld from appellee. The petition is very full on the allegations, of fraud, upon which appellee relied, it was alleged there was no incumbrance on ■ said land in the shape if an oil .-lease, when there was; that appel-lee told -appellants he would not give $5 per acre if there was an oil lease on it.-> Appellants filed sufficient responsive denials and pleadings to raise all the issues. There is no necessity here to give the details .of. the proof. The testimony is pro and con, and is sufficient to support the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the court, unless there was some error in procedure committed by the court or in the submission of the case.

The court only submitted to the jury two questions, to which the jury answered Yes to each, and they are as follows:

Question No. 1:
“Prior to the execution of the deed by R. B. Teel to the plaintiff, Andy Shuster, of date May 26, 1919, did the defendants, or either of them, state' to the plaintiff that there was no oil lease on the land in controversy, or make any statement to him that caused him to believe that there was no oil lease on the said land at and prior to the time said deed was executed. Answer Yes or No, as you may find the facts to be from the evidence.”
Question No. 2:
“If you should answer question No. 1 No, then you need not answer the following question, but if you answer the same Yes, then in answer to this question state whether the plaintiff was in any way induced by said statements to contract for and purchase the land in controversy in this case. Answer Yes or No. You are instructed -that should you answer question No. 1 in the affirmative, that is, that the defendants, or either of them, had stated to the plaintiff that there was no oil lease on the land, but you further find from the evidence that the plaintiff did not rely upon said statement, but relied entirely upon the fact that the records of Frio county, Texas, failed to show any oil lease on said land in making the purchase of the same, then, in case you should so find, your answer to question No. 2 should be in the negative.”

Upon the return of those answers the court found and made as a part of the judgment the following additional facts, to wit:

“It is therefore the opinion and judgment of 'the court from said verdict and the following undisputed facts (among others) in the case, which the court finds as true, to wit:
“That the plaintiff, Andy Shuster, paid to defendants, on May 26-, 19-19, the sum of $3,006 in cash.
“That on April 25, 1919, G. F. Adams, the then owner of said land in controversy, executed an oil and gas lease thereon, to the trustees of the Southwestern Oil & Gas Company, which lease was a valid and subsisting lease on May 13 and May 26, 1919-.
“That immediately after plaintiff discovered the existence of said oil lease, which was on or about June 10; 1919, he repudiated the transaction, and demanded from defendants his money and note, and offered to surrender his deed and the land to defendants, which defendants refused to , do.
“■That plaintiff never took possession of said land, nor collected .rents -thereon, or in any way ratified the. trade, after discovering the *715 existence of an outstanding oil lease thereon.
“That the plaintiff is therefore entitled to the rescission and cancellation of the deed from defendants, R. B. Teel and wife, Rose Teel, to Andy Shuster, dated May 26, A. D. 1919, conveying the land in controversy in this suit, and described more fully in plaintiff’s first amended original petition, together with the vendor’s lien note then executed to G. W. Hester, and that plaintiff is entitled to recover the sum of $3,000, with 0 per cent, interest thereon from May 26, A. D. 1919, until paid.”

The first error assigned by appellants is to the effect the verdict is contrary to the evidence, because, the suit being one for cancellation of a deed, it must be established by clear, convincing, and satisfactory evidence that he relied on alleged representations as to the existence of an oil lease on the land which induced him to purchase and accept the trade. This assignment is in fact nothing more than a challenge that the testimony does not support the judgment. It raises no question of law to be disposed of. Whether the testimony • preponderated in favor of the verdict or not, there was sufficient evidence to support it. The jury found that appellants stated there was no oil lease on the land in controversy, and caused him to believe that there was no oil lease on said land at and prior to the time said deed was executed. The proof showed that there was such an oil lease on the land, and appellants knew at the time of the execution and delivery of the deed such statement and representation was not true, and there was testimony that'appellee stated if there was such a lease outstanding he would not give $5 per acre for the land.

Appellant contends in a proposition under this assignment, though in no wise germane to it, that representations preceding and forming no part of a contract are not a basis for action of rescission and for damages, and makes the contention that the contract entered into does not stipulate as a requisite that there was no oil lease on the land. Why should the sale contract state a matter that had been represented as having no existence? It had already been discussed, and appellant had been informed that he would not pay more than $5 for land upon which there was an oil lease.

It was a fact, the existence of which appellant was well informed and of which the appellee had no knowledge whatever. Ap-pellee had a right not to purchase land with oil leases on it, and no court will make him perform such a contract, whether or not the terms were embraced within the terms of a subsequent agreement, because it was a part of the material consideration. Since the understanding was that he would' not under such circumstances purchase, it would be inequitable for any court to compel him to take land with an oil lease on it, when he was under the impression there was none on it.

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W. 713, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hester-v-shuster-texapp-1921.