Hudson v. Slate

117 S.W. 469, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 453, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 641
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 469 (Hudson v. Slate) 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
Hudson v. Slate, 117 S.W. 469, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 453, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 641 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

HODGES, Associate Justice.

In January, 1907, the appellants were the owners • of 389 acres of land, situated in Coleman County and near the farm owned and occupied by the appellee, Slate, Sometime during that month negotiations were entered into between the parties for the purchase of this tract of land by Slate. These resulted in what each of the parties thought was an agreement on the part of Slate to purchase. The record shows that at the time these negotia-' tians were pending there were then outstanding against the land several thousand dollars of purchase-money notes held by other parties. It is also shown that Slate was the owner of two valuable animals, which were to be taken as the consideration he was to pay for the land. A dispute arose between the appellee and appellants as to what consideration Slate had agreed to pay. Slate contended that he was to have the land free from any encumbrance for his two animals, which he valued at $3,100; and .the appellants contended that in addition to the two animals Slate was to assume the outstanding indebtedness against the land, and the further sum of $360 for which their personal notes had been given as a cash payment on the land. A few days after the preliminary negotiations took place between Slate and Hudson, one of the appellants, Slate sent the stock by his two sons to Coleman City, with instructions to deliver them to the appellants and *455 get a deed to the land. The property was delivered in accordance with these instructions to the parties and was put in a wagon yard. Slate’s sons, together with one of the appellants, went to the office of a notary to have the deed prepared. The testimony is conflicting as to what occurred during the preparation of the deed, and as to whether or not the deed after being written was explained to the sons of the appellee. The notary testified that he prepared the deed in accordance with the instructions given him by one of the appellants, expressing a consideration of $2,000 paid, and the assumption by Slate of the outstanding indebtedness against the land, which amounted to over $5,000; that upon the completion of the deed it was discovered that no mention was made of a $360 personal note held by Henderson & Beakly against the appellants; that it was finally agreed that Slate should give his personal note for that amount, and no mention should be made of it in the deed. He further testified that the deed was read over and fully explained to the sons of the appellee, John Slate and B. -C. Slate; that one of them proposed to sign his father’s name to the $360 note, but upon the objection being made that it would be better for the father himself to sign it, this was not done. John Slate and his brother testified that the deed was not read over to them and that they knew nothing of its contents until after it was completed and delivered to them late in the evening; that after it was delivered to them they retired from the notary’s office and read it over; that the next morning early they called their father over the telephone, and John Slate read to him the deed; that Slate stated in response to that message that was not the trade he made, and for them to return the deed and bring the stock back home. It appears to be uncontradicted that after this conversation over the telephone with J. W. Slate his sons immediately sought the appellants and found one of them, Knox, to whom they communicated their father’s dissatisfaction with the deed and his demand for a return of the stock. Knox referred them to Hudson, and upon going to Hudson’s house they found him too sick to talk about the transaction, but' later in the day they returned and stated to Hudson their father’s dissatisfaction and his statements that the deed did not recite the trade that they had entered into, and demanded the return of the stock. This was refused. Other conversations took place between the parties, Slate insisting that the trade was not as understood, and that he was to have the land free from any encumbrance for the stock, and demanding a return of his property, and the appellants insisting that the deed correctly recited the agreement and the consideration to be paid for the land, and refusing to return the stock. Subsequently suit was instituted by Slate for the recovery of the stock or their value; and from a-verdict rendered in his favor this appeal is prosecuted.

The first assignment of error complains of the testimony of J. W. Slate to the effect that he was an uneducated man and not able to read and write. Slate had alleged these facts in his petition as a reason why he had not been on the alert sufficiently to ascertain for himself that there were no 'liens upon the land at the time he entered into the trade. The assignment is overruled.

Assignments numbers two, three and four are based upon objections *456 to testimony giving the answer made by J. W. Slate to his son over the telephone when informed of the contents of the deed. J. W. Slate testified that when the deed was read to him over the telephone he “told his son that he had made no such trade with the defendants as that stated in the deed, and directed him to take the deed back to the defendants and get his property.” The same facts were testified to by John Slate. The objections made were that this was hearsay, and “was permitting the plaintiff to support his testimony on the stand by hearsay statements to third parties.” In his amended original petition the appellee had alleged the very facts here testified to. The appellants had also put in issue the fact that the appellee had returned or offered to return to them the deed in question within a reasonable time after its contents were known to Slate. Slate was unable, so he says, to make the trip to Coleman City, and had entrusted the delivery of the stock and the reception of the deed to the land to his two sons. These were acting as his representatives, but without any instructions as to the contingency which had arisen. What Slate did when first informed of the contents of the deed was a material question in the case in view of the pleadings of the parties. Under the circumstances surrounding him at the time, his declarations and instructions to his agent concerning the property involved, his repudiatian of the deed and directions for its return to the appellants, were verbal acts, and as such were admissible in evidence. 1 Greenleaf, section 108; 3 Wigmore on Evid., section 1770; 11 Ency. of Evid., 378. His directions to his agent at the time were not upon a parity with similar statements which he might have made to a third party having no necessary connection with the transaction. He intended for his statements to be communicated to the appellants, and the records show that this was promptly done. Whatever may be said with reference to the admissibility of that portion of his statements to this son over the telephone, in which he said that he “had made no such trade with the defendants as that stated in the deed,” there can be hardly any question that his directions for his son to return the deed to appellants and get his property were admissible. The objections of the appellants being to the whole of the declarations, if any portion was properly admitted, there was no error in overruling the objections as made. However, we think that whatever of error there might be in the admission of this testimony, it was cured by the same evidence being permitted to go to the jury unobjected to at a different time. While Hudson, one of the appellants, was on the stand, he testified that B. C. Slate, a son of the appellee, came to him and said: “‘Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 469, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 453, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-v-slate-texapp-1909.