Ingram v. Abbott

38 S.W. 626, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 583
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 38 S.W. 626 (Ingram v. Abbott) 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
Ingram v. Abbott, 38 S.W. 626, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 583 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

HUNTER, Associate Justice.

—This suit was filed on the 20th day of July, 1894, by W. L. Abbott and wife against J. C. Ingram and his wife Susan R. Ingram, to rescind a contract for the sale of lands and cancel certain deeds made in pursuance thereof, and to recover title and possession of the lands.

The grounds for rescission were alleged to be fraudulent representa *584 tians made by J. C. Ingram on or about the 29th day of March, 1893, in that he falsely and fraudulently represented to W. L. Abbott, who was the owner of the lands sued for, that six certain vendor’s lien notes, of $1166.66 each, made by J. G. Kenan to J. C. Ingram and secured by six certain sections of land in Garza County, Texas, were as “good as gold” and worth their face value; that he well knew Kenan, and that he was a man of great wealth, and was perfectly solvent, and able to pay said notes and would do so, and that he was well acquainted with the lands upon which the notes were liens, and that they were well worth from $2.«60 to $5 per acre; that he (Abbott) did not know Kenan, nor whether he was solvent or not, nor where he resided, and was wholly unacquainted with the lands or their value, they being situated in a distant county, about two hundred miles from him, off the railroads, and that he relied wholly on the statements of said Ingram, and believing them to be true, was induced thereby to convey the lands sued for to Susan R. Ingram, in consideration for said six notes and said Ingram’s note for $536; that said notes were transferred to him without recourse, and that Ingram is insolvent; that Ingram informed him of a mortgage on the six sections to the J. B. Watkins Mortgage Co. of Dallas of $2900, due in 1901, but stated that Ken an had assumed to pay said mortgage and interest, and was able to and would do so; that all of said statements were untrue, and were falsely, fraudulently and deceitfully made, for the purpose of inducing him to accept said notes and convey the lands sued for to Mrs. Ingram, and they did induce him so to do; that he did not learn of the falsity of said statements and representations until in the fall of 1893 or spring of 1894, and that he then offered to rescind the contract and return to Ingram all the notes, which proposition was refused.

The defendants answered by a general demurrer and special exceptions: That the representation alleged to have been made by Ingram in reference to the value of the land “was mere trading talk and a matter of opinion, upon which the plaintiffs had no right to rely; and because the alleged representation of the solvency of Kenan and goodness of the notes are not statements of present facts, but are matters of opinion, prediction and belief, upon which the plaintiffs had no right to rely, because the alleged representation that they were worth their face value and would be paid was also a matter of opinion as to the first clause, and the second was a matter of prediction, and the expression of a belief and not a statement of a present fact, upon neither of which were the"plaintiffs authorized to rely.”

The allegation that Ingram represented that Kenan had agreed to, was able to and would pay off the mortgage, principal and interest, was excepted to on substantially the same ground.

The issue of loches was also raised by special exception, as well as misjoinder of causes of action in that the petition contained two counts, the first in the form of an action of trespass to try title, the second *585 setting out all the facts and asking for a rescission of the contract, of the deeds,, and recovery of the lands.

The defendants (appellants) also filed a general denial, and specially plead that it was agreed that, in case Kenan failed to pay the mortgage debt to the Watkins company, defendants would pay $1000 of it, or deliver back the deed to a four and a half acre tract of land valued at $1000, which plaintiffs had conveyed to them in the trade; and that this agreement, which was embodied in the deed made to defendants, fixed and established the extent of defendants’ liability in the event of such default, and that after being notified of Kenan’s default in payment of the interest on the Watkins debt, he had returned the deed to the four and a half acres of land to the plaintiffs, the same having never been recorded, and offered to make a deed and deliver it to defendants for the said tract; that after plaintiffs knew of the supposed and averred fraudulent representations, they kept and retained possession of the personal property received in exchange for said lands, and yet have the same, and have elected to stand by the contract and required defendants to pay the guarantee of $1000, or the four and a half acres of land, which defendants did and offered to do, by returning the deed and offering to reconvey the said tract; and have elected to stand by the contract, in that said Abbott, after discovering the supposed and alleged fraudulent representations, used and offered to dispose of said notes as his own property and estate; that in December, 1893, Abbott accepted a deed from Kenan to the six sections of land so mortgaged, and upon which the six notes were a vendor’s lien, in full satisfaction of Kenan’s liability on the six notes, and kept and retained this deed until June, 1894, and also the notes, asserting ownership thereof and trying to sell the same.

■ The case was tried by the court, who filed the following conclusions of fact and of law:

“1 I find that in March, 1893, the plaintiff W. L. Abbott was the owner of the land described in the plaintiff’s petition, and lying and being situated in the counties of Llano and Parker, in the State of Texas, and that the defendant J. C. Ingram was the owner of six promissory notes for $1166.66 each, being the same notes set out and described in plaintiff’s petition, which said notes were given by one J. G. Kenan, and were payable to J. C. Ingram; that same were secured by a vendor’s lien on six sections of land in Garza County, Texas; that there was a prior lien on said six sections of land in favor of the J. B. Watkins Land Mortgage Company for $2900.
“2. I find that the lands so owned by the plaintiff were then and are now worth $6000, and the said six sections of land were then and are now worth $1.25 per acre.
“3. I find that J. G. Kenan, the maker of said notes, was then and is now and has ever since been wholly insolvent.
“4. I find that plaintiff then lived in Parker County, Texas, and defendant J. C. Ingram lived in Fort Worth, Texas, and said Kenan lived in Seymour, Texas, about 200 miles from residence of plaintiff; *586 that plaintiff W. L. Abbott was not acquainted with the said Kenan, nor with his financial condition, nor was he acquainted with said six sections of land, or the value of the same.
“5. I find that as the plaintiff was then an old man, he was desirous of exchanging his said property for something that would yield a regular income, and I find that said six notes so owned by the defendant Ingram bore interest at the rate of eight per cent per annum, payable annually.
“6. I find on or about the 27th of March, 1893, the plaintiff W. L. Abbott traded his said land in Llano and Parker Counties to the said J. C.

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.W. 626, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ingram-v-abbott-texapp-1897.