Hines Clark & Curtis Herring v. Cummings

19 S.W. 798, 84 Tex. 610, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 994
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1892
DocketNo. 7317.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 798 (Hines Clark & Curtis Herring v. Cummings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hines Clark & Curtis Herring v. Cummings, 19 S.W. 798, 84 Tex. 610, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 994 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

TARLTOH, Judge, Section B.

— February 16,1889, the appellee, A. H. Cummings, brought this suit in the District Court of Bexar County, *611 against Joe Murray as principal, and Hines Clark and Curtis Herring as sureties, in a contract for the delivery of cattle. Plaintiff sought to recover damages for the breach of the contract.

According to the terms of this contract, dated November 26, 1887, Joe Murray as principal, with appellants as sureties, bound himself, to sell and deliver to Cummings, the appellee, 300 head of steer cattle, one year old in June, 1887, at the price of $5.50 per head, to be delivered on or before January 1, 1888, at the ranch of appellee, near Moore’s Station, known as the Lampkin ranch. The consideration passing to Murray was the sum of $800 cash paid at the date of the contract, and the further sum of $850 to be paid on delivery of the cattle, to be accepted by Cummings at or near San Antonio.

After setting out this contract, the plaintiff in his petition further alleged, that in January, 1888, the defendant Murray falsely and fraudulently represented to him that he had purchased the cattle and had them ready for delivery, but that he needed an additional sum of $400 with which to pay for them, which sum plaintiff, believing the representations, thereupon advanced to Murray; that in the months of June and July, 1888, the defendant delivered to plaintiff upon the contract 112 head of cattle, of the value of $616; that in the months of June, July, and August, Holly Murray, the son of Joe Murray, drove to plaintiff’s ranch 63 head of cattle of an inferior grade, which he offered to plaintiff on the contract; that plaintiff refused to accept these inferior cattle on the contract, but that he did accept them on the $400 advanced in January, 1888, at the price of $4.25 per head, aggregating the sum of $267, and leaving a balance of $132.25 due on the advance of $400.

Plaintiff prayed judgment against defendants Murray,- Clark, and Herring for the sum of $184 overpaid at the date of the contract to defendant Murray, for which no cattle had been delivered, and for $132.25 overpaid in January, 1888, for which no cattle had been delivered, aggregating the sum of $316.25. He also claimed damages in the sum of $846, on account of the advanced price of the 188 head not delivered.

The defendant Murray made default. The defendants Clark and Herring pleaded the general denial — a special denial of damage on account of advance in price; and they further pleaded their suretyship and abrogation of the contract by the principals Cummings and Murray without their knowledge or consent.

The judgment of the court from which the sureties prosecute this appeal is manifest from the following conclusions of fact and law, which it is deemed proper to insert:

Findings of fact: “1. The execution of the contract upon which this suit is brought is not disputed.

“2. The defendants Curtis Herring and Hines Clark are only liable under the contract as sureties.

*612 “3. That $800 was advanced by plaintiff at the date of the execution of the contract and its receipt was acknowledged therein, and defendants Herring and Clark had full notice of this advance.

“4. That after the execution of the contract, and before any cattle were delivered or offered for delivery upon this contract, and after the date of their delivery under the contract, plaintiff advanced to Jos. R. Murray the further sum of $400, without the knowledge or consent of either the defendants Herring or Clark.

“5. That 112 head of cattle of the grade and class described were delivered by the defendant Murray to plaintiff upon thé contract in June and July following.

“6. That Holly Murray, son of Jos. R. Murray, drove for said defendant Murray, at three different times, 63 head of cattle in all, of inferior grade and quality, to be delivered upon the contract at plaintiff’s ranch, in Frio County, Texas, and offered them to plaintiff upon the contract, and that plaintiff refused to accept them upon the contract, but that, being urged by Holly Murray, plaintiff agreed to purchase said 63 head of cattle from Holly Murray, the owner of them, for the sum of $4.25 per head, amounting to $267.75, and credit their value at that price upon the $400 advanced theretofore by plaintiff, as a second advance upon the contract.

“7. That only 112 head of cattle were delivered by defendant Murray upon said contract, and 188 head of cattle remained undelivered upon said contract; that the contract price of the 112 head delivered amounted to $616; that the difference in the market and contract price for the 188 head not delivered, was, on January 1, 1888, the sum of $188.”

Conclusions of law: “1. That defendants Herring and Clark are not liable for the advance of $400 made in January, 1888, but defendant Murray is liable therefor.

“2. That all the defendants are liable for the difference between $616, value of 112 head of cattle delivered, and the $800 advanced, to-wit, $184, and 8 per cent interest thereon from January, 1888, to date; and all defendants are liable for the difference between the contract price and market value on the 1st day of January, 1888, of the 188 head of cattle which were not delivered upon said contract as agreed, at $1 per head, aggregating $188.

“3. That plaintiff have judgment against all the defendants for $403.87, and against the defendant Joseph R. Murray for $153.37 more, and 8 per cent interest from date.

“4. That defendants Curtis Herring and Hines Clark have judgment over against defendant Joseph R. Murray for the $403.87, and interest.”

The record contains several assignments of error.; but in our opinion a consideration of the fifth assignment alone will suffice for a disposition of this appeal. - .....

*613 In that assignment, appellants insist on the proposition that they were discharged as sureties by an agreement made in January, 1888, between Cummings and Murray, whereby the contract sued on was changed. Both Cummings, the plaintiff, and Murray, the defendant, testified on the subject suggested.

Cummings testified as follows: “In ¡November, 1887,1 made the contract sued upon. I paid Murray $800 in advance on the day the contract was signed and delivered. After this, I did not see Murray again until some time in January, 1888, and then he told me that he had nearly all the cattle to be delivered to me under the contract purchased, but needed more money with which to pay for them, and I gave him $400 more upon the contract, without the knowledge of either Herring or Clark, and told him he must be sure to have the cattle of the proper age and grade. He told me he would send them up in the spring.”

The statement of the defendant Murray was as follows: “In January, 1888, I made with Cummings a modification or change in the contract as follows: I was to deliver the yearlings referred to [meaning, as shown by other portions of his testimony, yearlings one year old in 1888] at $4.25, and the three-year-olds at $8.”

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 798, 84 Tex. 610, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hines-clark-curtis-herring-v-cummings-tex-1892.