Holt v. Manley

146 S.W.2d 773
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1940
DocketNo. 5226.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 773 (Holt v. Manley) 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
Holt v. Manley, 146 S.W.2d 773 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

FOLLEY, Justice.

On January 12, 1938, the appellant, D. E. Holt, and the appellees, T. K. Manley and wife, Edna E. Manley, entered into a written executory contract for the sale of three tracts of land in Dallam County, Texas. The appellant was the owner and the appellees the purchasers. The first tract is Section No. 25 in Block 2, Brooks and Burleson Survey, containing 640 acres of land and located about 11 miles west of Dalhart, Texas. The second tract contains about 850 acres and is composed of Section No. 8 in said Block 2, containing 640 acres, and 210.6 acres out of Section No. 7, Block A-7, A. C. Floyd original grantee. The second tract is located about 2 miles north of the first tract. The third tract is about 17 miles north and 9 miles west of the second tract and consists of the west one-half of Section 71, Block I, M. E. Hays original grantee, containing 320 acres of land. The total acreage in the three tracts is about 1,810 acres.

The contract price of the land was $12.50 per acre or a total consideration of $22,-625. There were separate loans against the three tracts aggregating an outstanding indebtedness of $12,512.20. As a part of the consideration for the land, this indebtedness was assumed by the appellees. For the balance of the consideration in the sum of $10,112.80 the appellees agreed to pay the appellant ten annual installments each in the sum of $1,011.28 with interest from date at 5% per annum, both principal and interest payable annually at Wheeler, Texas. The contract contained an accelerated maturity clause which shall later be discussed. It also provided that upon receipt of five of the installments of principal and interest the appellant would execute a deed conveying the land to the appellees. It was further provided that the first two tracts of land were rented to tenants; that the appellees should receive the rents thereon for 1938; that the appellees should have the immediate possession of the third tract; and that they should drill and completely equip an irrigation well on the latter tract on or before June 1, 1938.

The appellees admittedly did not perform any of the provisions of the contract. After their failure to pay the first matured installment of principal and interest, the appellant filed this suit,.which we construe to be an action for specific performance. The appellant alleged the terms of the contract; that the appellees had failed to drill the irrigation well as agreed; that they had failed to pay the first annual installment of $1,011.28 and the -annual interest due; that because of such failure the appellant had declared the entire purchase money debt matured and payable; that appellant had performed all of his obligations under the contract to date; that he was ready and able and willing to perform all the provisions of the contract and tendered a full and complete performance thereof upon the payment of the amount due him under the contract; and that by reason of the failure of the appellees to perform their obligations they owed the appellant the entire principal and interest agreed upon and for which the appellant sought judgment.

The appellees filed a general demurrer and a general denial and for special' answer alleged that the appellant through his agent, A. T. Parton, had represented to the appellee T. K. Manley that all of the “land was what is known as ‘shallow water land’, that is water in sufficient quantities could be produced from under said land for the purpose of irrigating said land and from a depth of less than one hundred feet and in inexhaustible amounts; that is, amounts inexhaustible in the ordinary wells pumped by engines in the process of irrigation of said land”; that said agent further represented that each and every foot of said land was subject to irrigation and that a sufficient supply of water for irrigation was available at a depth of less than 100 feet beneath the surface of the ground; that such representations were untrue and made with the intent to- induce the appellees to enter into the contract; that while the deal was pending the ap-pellee T. K. Manley and the appellant’s agent Parton went to Dallam County to the location of the land; that Manley made inquiry of the tenant on the land as to how deep the well located thereon actually was and the tenant was unable to *775 inform him of the fact; that the agent Parton again assured Manley that the land was what was known as shallow water land and subject to irrigation and stated he was in a great rush to return to his home and that there was no need to make further investigation; that Manley was thereby lulled into a sense of security and made no further investigations; that relying upon such representations he and his wife executed the contract; that only the west one-half of Section 71 possessed an adequate supply of shallow water for irrigation ; that upon the remainder of the land water could be encountered only at a depth of from 300 to 500 feet and not in sufficient quantities or at a shallow enough depth adequate for irrigation; that the parties had mutually abandoned and rescinded the contract; that appellant had never at any time delivered the possession of such land to the appellees but still retained the possession thereof; and that the appellant was not therefore entitled to recover against the appellees.

In a trial before a jury findings of fact were made as follows: (1) That the agent Parton represented as a fact that all of the land was shallow water land; (2) that Manley relied thereon; (3) that the representation was a material inducement to Manley to sign the contract; (4) that the representation was false; (5) that the appellant and appellees did mutually abandon the contract; (6) that the desire of Manley to secure the title to the minerals under the land was not the paramount issue inducing the purchase of the land; (7) that the statements of Parton concerning the sufficiency of shallow water for irrigation were not statements 'of an opinion; (8) that Manley did not recognize such statements as an opinion of Parton; and (9) that Manley did not know more about the condition of irrigable water under the lands than did Parton. Upon this verdict the trial court rendered judgment that the appellant take nothing.

Before passing to the question of fraud, we deem it expedient to first dispose of the issue as to .mutual abandonment and rescission of the written contract. Suffice it to say that if a mutual abandonment or rescission exists, there could be no recovery by appellant irrespective of the alleged fraud. The appellant attacks the finding of the jury on the question of abandonment because of the insufficiency of the evidence and because the alleged abandonment or rescission, having been unsupported by any written memorandum, was within the statute of frauds. Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 3995. Both of thesp contentions must be sustained. The only evidence in support of the issue came from T. K. Manley. It was merely to the effect that Plolt had never surrendered possession of the land to him, that he had not collected any rent therefrom and that he had told Holt he was going to turn the land back. Holt testified that since the date of the contract he, too, had collected none of the rents or revenues from the land and that he had left the same tenants on the land because Manley had requested him to do so. The only reasonable inference to be drawn from Holt’s testimony is that he considered the possession of the land to be in Manley through the tenants left there at his request.

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146 S.W.2d 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holt-v-manley-texapp-1940.