Hunter, Evans & Co. v. Lanius

18 S.W. 201, 82 Tex. 677, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 678
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1892
DocketNo. 6991.
StatusPublished
Cited by71 cases

This text of 18 S.W. 201 (Hunter, Evans & Co. v. Lanius) 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
Hunter, Evans & Co. v. Lanius, 18 S.W. 201, 82 Tex. 677, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 678 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

TARLTON, Judge,

Section B.—This suit was instituted August 26, 1886, by Hunter, Evans & Co., against Phil. Lanius, Powell Cole, J. B. Morgan, and A. V. Winter. Appellants sought to recover the principal sum of $2315.06, alleged to be due on a promissory note for that sum executed by defendants to the order of plaintiffs, dated December 26, 1885, and payable August 1, 1886.

The defendant Powell Cole having died intestate, February 22,1886, the suit was at the October term of the court dismissed as to him. October 16, 1886, appellants properly presented to B. T. Hewett, one of the appellees, who had in the meantime been appointed administrator of Cole’s estate, the note in suit as a claim against the estate. Hewett rejected the claim, and on January 14, 1887, appellants instituted suit against him as administrator. The suit so brought was at the March term, 1887, consolidated with this action.

The defense mainly relied upon is that Lanius, as appellants knew, was the principal, and the remaining defendants were sureties on the note sued on; that the note was executed in lieu of and as a substitute for a certain note for $5000 previously executed, on May 16, 1885, to the order of plaintiffs by Phil. Lanius, with Cyrus Eakrnan and J. D. Orton as sureties; that the note for $5000 was mere accommodation paper and was without consideration, and that the note sued on, subject to like infirmities, was also wholly without consideration.

*680 Appellants, in reply to the plea of failure of consideration, allege that appellees are estopped from urging such plea because of the following facts: On September 1, 1885, being the owners of the $5000 note, appellants brought suit thereon against Lanius, Eakman, and Orton, suing out an attachment which they caused to be levied on certain lands of defendants. During the pendency of this suit Lanius came to the attorneys of plaintiffs, representing that he was the principal on the note for $5000; that on the note there was yet due the sum of $2315.06, but no more; that if plaintiffs would dismiss their suit on the $5000 note, he would execute a note, with other solvent obligors, for $2315.06, in favor of plaintiffs. Hunter, Evans & Co. accepted this proposition. Lanius accordingly executed, with his co-obligors, the note sued on in this case, and plaintiffs dismissed their attachment suit, paying all costs. October 3,1888, the jury rendered a verdict for the defendants, and from the judgment thereon entered plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

The appellee Hewett, administrator, in addition to the defense urged by his co-defendants, claims that suit was not brought against him within ninety days after the-rejection of the claim, and that appellants can not therefore maintain their action against him.

We shall first dispose of this contention. On the 16th of October, 1886, at 12 m., appellants presented the claim to. the administrator, when it was rejected by him. January 14, 1887, suit was filed against the administrator. The question is whether, in computing the number of days, the day of the presentation shall be included or excluded. In the former event the suit was brought on the ninety-first day; in the latter, it was brought on the ninetieth day, and was in time. Our statute provides that the owner of a rejected claim “may, within ninety days after such rejection, and not thereafter, bring a suit” against the administrator for its establishment. It has been held that the provisions of this statute with reference to the time within which the suit is to be instituted are analogous to those providing for new trials, appeals, and writs of error. If the claim when presented to the administrator be granted, it becomes a judgment against-the estate; if it be rejected, the further remedy by suit is in the nature of an appeal from the action of the administrator, to be prosecuted within ninety days after the rejection. Cotton v. Jones, 37 Texas, 34.

In the case of Burr v. Lewis, 6 Texas, 81, under a statute requiring that an appellant must, within twenty days after the term, give bond for the prosecution of an appeal, our Supreme Court stated the rule to be, “respecting the computation of time, that where it is to be computed from or. after a certain day from an act done, the day on which the act is done is to be excluded, unless it appear that a different computation was intended.” It does not appear to us, with reference to *681 this statute, that a different computation was intended. The time should be reckoned, excluding the day of the rejection of the claim.

As disclosed by the record, the first reference to a note for $5000 similar in description to the one charged by appellees to have been mere accommodation paper, is found in a letter from Hunter, Evans & Co. to Lanius, bearing date May 9,1885, as follows: “We have concluded that you would probably need some money to make advances on small bunches of cattle in small amounts to control that class of shippers. We inclose you note for $5000—90 days—payable here. If you will make same with two securities, O. K.—we can use it; place the money to your credit, and you can draw it out in sums to suit your convenience in controlling small shippers. Hse it to the best possible advantage for the most business,” etc. * * *

On May 13,1885, Lanius, who testified that it took about three days for a letter to come from Chicago to Henrietta, wrote" to appellants as follows:

“Henrietta, Texas, May 13, 1885.
“Messrs. Hunter, Hvcins & Go., Chicago:
“Dear Sirs—I am in receipt of yours, and I will sign the note and have two good men to sign it with me and send it back to you in a day or so.” * * *

Lanius on the trial testified, that he did not like the tone of the letter of May 9; that it indicated, as he thought, an intention by appellants to hold him responsible on the note; that he thereupon at" once wrote appellants that he would not sign the note, and that a short time thereafter, between the 10th and 15th of May, he received from appellants, inclosing the $5000 note, a letter of the following purport: “We herewith inclose you a note for $5000. Please sign it and have two good men to sign it with you, and return it to us, so we can indorse it and put it up in the bank and get money on it for you to advance to small shippers. We want the note to raise money on, and you will hot be responsible on it.” That on receipt of this letter he with his sureties signed the $5000 note and returned it to appellants. Lanius further testified, that this letter was lost; that he gave it to one Eakman, who never returned it to him; that with the help of Eakman he had searched through his own and Eakman’s desk and through his and Eakman’s papers, and in all places where the letter could likely be found. With reference to the search made, Lanius was corroborated by Eakman.

Objection was interposed to the introduction of this testimony, on the grounds that the absence of the letter was not sufficiently accounted for; that its existence had not been sufficiently proved; that the testimony was not admissible to impeach the consideration of the note sued on, and that it was sought thereby to establish a prior agreement at *682 variance with a written contract.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.W. 201, 82 Tex. 677, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-evans-co-v-lanius-tex-1892.