Houts v. Scharbauer

103 S.W. 679, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 164
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 103 S.W. 679 (Houts v. Scharbauer) 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
Houts v. Scharbauer, 103 S.W. 679, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 164 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

JAMBS, Chiee Justice.

W. A. Houts and his wife, J. E. Houts, sued John Scharbauer, John McElroy and S. M. Scott to recover $27,000 and interest from May 3, 1901, as a balance due on the purchase price of 640 acres of land. Plaintiffs found the suit upon three instruments attached as exhibits to the petition, and alleged that by virtue thereof defendants purchased the land for $60,000, one-half of which was paid, and $30,000 payable within a reasonable time with 6 percent interest. That one year after the execution of the deed was a reasonable time, and that defendants had failed to pay same except $3,000 which was credited. That an implied vendor’s lien existed for said balance and that plaintiffs had become the owners of said balance by purchase from the other parties who were interested in same.

The three exhibits disclose substantially as follows: The first exhibit, “A,” is a contract dated April 23, 1901, expressing the receipt from S. M. Scott and John McElroy, of $6,000 as earnest money to close the sale to said Scott and McElroy of said section, (except 40 acres thereof to be thereafter mutually agreed on) the total price being $60,000, and $24,000 to be paid when an abstract showing perfect title is presented together with a general warranty deed to a trustee to be thereafter agreed on, the conditions of the trust to be as follows: The trustee to convey to various parties designated by Scott and McElroy, upon receipt of $100 per acre to be paid to W. A. Houts until such a time as there has been made a further payment to said Houts of $30,000 with 6 percent interest on said $30,000 or any part of same that is unpaid, all expenses of deeds to be borne by Scott and McElroy. The possession of the property is reserved for the farming season of 1901, the rental to be paid to Scott and McElroy and to be 1-5 of the rice raised on the premises. This exhibit is signed by,

S. M. Scott, J. E. Houts, Trustee,

John McElroy. D. Zimmerman,

W. A. Houts, Agent,

by W. A. Houts, Agent.

Exhibit “B” is substantially as follows: An agreement executed by W. A. Houts and by S. M. Scott and John Scharbauer and John McElroy, confirming the preceding contract, and reciting the receipt of the $24,000, and proper abstract, and that all conditions up to date having been complied with, the said W. A. Houts, J. E. Houts and D, Zimmerman deliver a deed unto a trustee duly appointed, *608 the same being W. A. Houts, he to hold the title in his name for the use and benefit of the second parties, such deed covering the 640 acres, the additional 40 acres being thereby reserved unto the first parties to be selected from the Scott and McElroy subdivision of said section by mutual consent. Then follows a paragraph defining the duties of the said trustee substantially as provided in exhibit “A.” Also provides that W. A. Houts as trustee is to execute quitclaim deed to John McElroy, John Scharbauer and S. M. Scott, conveying all interest as trustee, the deed to be deposited in escrow in the First National Bank of Beaumont to be held until the parties of the first part have received the balance of the purchase money for the land.

Exhibit “C” is the deed, which was dated April 30, 1901, and finally acknowledged May 3, 1901, and executed by “D. Zimmerman, Ann M. Zimmerman, W. A. Houts, Southern Commission Co. by J. E. Houts, President.” The grantors named, D. Zimmerman and wife, Ann M. Zimmerman, of Silvain Springs, Ark., J. E. Houts, Trustee of Southern Commission Company, and the Southern Commission Company, a corporation organized under the laws of South Dakota acting herein by its president J. E. HoutS, and J. E. Houts who joins his wife J. E. Houts, he being of the county of Yankton, S. D. Consideration $60,000 “to us in hand paid by W. A. Houts, Trustee, for John Scharbauer, John McElroy and S. M. Scott and J. E. Houts” (the interest of J. E. Houts in the land conveyed is the right to demand and receive $100 per acre out of the proceeds of the first 300 acres sold, with 8 percent interest, and the interest of said Scott, McElroy and Scharbauer being the entire estate in the land after payment of said sum after 40 acres are deeded to W. A. Houts individually). It conveys the 640 acres, reserving the possession for the farming season of 1901.

Defendants Scharbauer and McElroy answered denying any indebtedness to plaintiffs, and, in substance, claimed that the balance sued for was never any obligation upon them and never was so intended; that it was agreed between the parties and so expressed in the contracts, and if not so expressed it was intended by the parties that defendants were to have two years within which to sell off the land at $100 an acre to pay the balance, and if they failed within that time to do so from the sales, all their rights and interests in the lands should cease and the same be held by W. A. Houts in trust for himself and others, without further acts or conveyances, and alleged mutual mistake in the preparation of the contracts, in their failure to express these terms. These defendants pleaded also in reconvention and averred that in the negotiations leading up to the purchase, their codefendant Scott was acting as agent for plaintiffs • under an agreement to pay him a commission of five percent for making the deal; that of this fact they had no knowledge. That Scott came to them as an investor and offered to go in with them as a purchaser, and relying upon him they acceded to his proposition and they entrusted the whole matter of said contract and purchase to him, and if they had known of his agency they would not have entered into the purchase. That upon the payment of the $30,000, of which Scott. paid *609 $10,000, that he was paid back $3,000 by Houts for his services. They alleged also that they promptly acted to rescind and repudiate the contracts upon discovery of the relationship of their codefendant to plaintiff; that they had an equity in the land to secure them the return of the purchase money paid by them, to wit, $20,000 and interest, and prayed that a trust in said land for the return of said money be declared, asking judgment against plaintiffs W. A. Houts and J. E. Houts and their codefendant S. M. Scott accordingly.

Scott substantially adopted the answer of said defendants, and asked judgment against plaintiffs for the purchase money $7,000 that had been paid by him, and interest.

Plaintiffs by supplemental petition denied the allegations of defendants; admitted the employment of Scott to sell the land for $100 per acre, and to pay him a commission, hut denied the concealment of such fact, and alleged that Scharbauer and McElroy knew, or were charged with knowledge of the fact.

The trial resulted in a verdict against plaintiffs and in favor of Scharbauer and McElroy "upon their plea in reconvention for the sum of $20,000 and 6 percent interest from May 3, 1901, and the foreclosure of their vendor’s lien upon the land described in the pleadings. We find against the defendant S. M. Scott on his plea in reconvention and against the defendants Scharbauer and McElroy as to their cross action against S. M. Scott.”

The court submitted the issues in the following manner: 1st.

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Bluebook (online)
103 S.W. 679, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houts-v-scharbauer-texapp-1907.