Hoskins v. Dougherty

69 S.W. 103, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 318, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 301
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 103 (Hoskins v. Dougherty) 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
Hoskins v. Dougherty, 69 S.W. 103, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 318, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 301 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Justice.

This was an action for specific performance of a contract to convey land as well as for the recovery of damages stipulated for its breach, brought by J. S. Dougherty against W. W. Hoskins and others. The contention of the plaintiff was that he was entitled both to recover of the defendants the amount of damages stipulated in the contract for their failure to comply with its terms within sixty days and to have specific performance thereof by the conveyance of the land. From a judgment of the court below in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $10,000, the amount of damages stipulated in the contract to be paid by the defendants in case of its breach by them, and refusing the prayer of the plaintiff for specific performance, both parties have appealed. On October 23, 1900, W. W. Hoskins for himself and as agent for his codefendants entered into a written contract with the plaintiff, J. S. Dougherty, which is set out in full on pages 60 to 67 of the record. By said contract the defendants obligated themselves to *320 convey or cause to be conveyed to the plaintiff, or anyone he should designate, by general warranty deed, title to about 40,000 acres of land known as the Hoskins pasture or Montevideo ranch, situated in Brazoria County, for the consideration of $3 per acre, provided that the plaintiff deposited, or caused to be deposited, in the banking house of T. W. House, of Houston, Texas, the sum of $10,000 on or before the 1st day of January, 1901, and caused said bank to notify the defendants of said deposit not later than said date. The time in which the said deposit should be made and notice given was subsequently extended to the 8th day of April, -1901. Upon receiving notice from said bank that the said $10,000 had been deposited, the defendants agreed to execute and deliver at the bank a general warranty deed to the party or parties named in the instructions of the bank, vesting in them good title, free from all incumbrance to said lands, and to deliver at said bank with said deed complete and correct abstracts of the title to the lands, which abstracts were to be examined and passed upon by the attorneys for plaintiff within thirty days from the date of the receipt thereof by the bank, and if it were determined tho-t the deeds vested good title to the lands, then the plaintiff should pay or caused to be paid $3 per acre in cash for the land within ten days after the title was approved by said attorneys; and if the plaintiff failed or refused to pay the said sum of $3 per acre for the lands, then the $10,000 deposited as part payment of the purchase money should be paid over to the defendants by the said bank as liquidated damages.

It was further provided in the agreement that if the titles tó said lands were approved by the plaintiffs’ attorneys and the purchase money tendered in accordance with the provisions of the contract, and the defendants failed to perform or cause to be performed the things required of them under the contract for sixty days, then they agreed to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $10,000 as liquidated damages for such failure.

The plaintiff made an agreement with J. S. Hogg by which Hogg and others were to become the purchasers of the land and furnish the money to make payment therefor in accordance with the contract. According to this agreement Dougherty retained an interest of one-twelfth in the contract subject to a lien in favor of Hogg and his associates for the return of the purchase money to be advanced by them. And on April 8, 1901, the day to which the time for the deposit had been extended, Hogg requested T. W. House to put the money to Hogg’s credit in his bank subject to the contract. House agreed to do so and notified the parties by telegram, “J. S. Hogg deposited $10,000 in my bank, account of Dougherty contract.” Ho entry was made upon the books of the bank on that date and Hogg paid no money into the bank. Afterwards, on April 23d, the account of J. S. Hogg was credited with $10,000, but no entry was ever made on the books showing that the deposit was for the account of the Hoskins contract. This, however, was understood by House and the cashier of the bank, and the money was considered as held- subject to the contract and would not have been paid out on Hogg’s personal *321 check for any other purpose. At the time House agreed to give credit to Hogg for the deposit he had that much money on hand in the bank. The defendants knew nothing of the manner in which the money was deposited in the bank until after all their efforts to close the contract as hereinafter shown had ceased. On May 11, 1901, the plaintiff furnished T. W. House a list of the names of the persons to whom he desired that the land should be conveyed, and on the same day he and his associates, by J. S. Hogg as their attorney, notified the defendants that they had examined the abstracts of title which had been approved by their attorneys and that they accepted the title to all of the land, and tendered the defendants the balance of the purchase money in addition to the deposit in the bank of T. W. House and demanded a deed. The abstracts of title did not disclose an oil lease upon the land which the defendants had given to one Munhall, and on account of this lease they were unable to convey a good title, and in reply to the tender of the plaintiff and his associates so notified them and tendered them the sum of $10,000 liquidated damages as provided in the contract in discharge thereof.

When the defendants refused the tender of the purchase money and failed to make the conveyance on May 11th as above stated, the deposit was withdrawn and no longer maintained in the bank, and this suit was brought in the name of J. S. Dougherty alone for specific performance and the recovery of damages. On May 16, 1901, the defendants filed their original answer. Afterwards the defendants got a discharge of the lease, and on July 24, 1901, tendered the plaintiff and his associates a general warranty deed for the land by executing the same and handing it to T. W. House, subject to examination and inspection by the plaintiff and his associates or their attorneys, to be delivered to them unconditionally upon payment of the balance of the purchase money with 6 per cent interest from May 11, 1901. The defendants also notified the plaintiff and his associates that the deed had been made in accordance with their construction of the contract, but that if the contract had not been complied with in any respect correction would be made upon their attention being called to the fact. The deed tendered by the defendants designated the lands stipulated to be reserved in the contract in two tracts and in a long strip, which divided the land to be conveyed in an inconvenient and unreasonable manner. The defendants also notified the plaintiff and his associates of their “readiness to have a decree entered in accordance with the prayer of plaintiff’s petition and the terms of the contract,” in the suit then pending for specific performance if they should prefer that course to taking a deed which had been tendered. These offers of the defendants were ignored by the plaintiff and his associates, and afterwards on August 8, 1901, the defendants further notified them that if defendants were not advised by August 12, 1901, that they were prepared to close the sale, defendants would assume that they had abandoned the idea of buying the land and would act accord *322 ingly.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 103, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 318, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoskins-v-dougherty-texapp-1902.