Jarvis v. Matson

113 S.W. 326, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 326 (Jarvis v. Matson) 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
Jarvis v. Matson, 113 S.W. 326, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 170 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

TALBOT, Associate Justice.

— This is the second appeal in this case; see 94 S. W., 1079. The suit was filed on the 33d day of August, 1905, by appellant against-J. V. Matson, J. M. Carroll, Lee Erisby, T. C. Morgan, W. B. Bounds, Myrtle H. Davis, W. A. Putnam, J. M.. Peden, J. B. Jones, Jr., M. P. Harwood and J. E. Clonch. It is alleged, in substance, that the plaintiff and the defendants, on the 31st day of October, 1903, executed a written contract or bond payable to one B. H. Baker, in which said parties obligated and bound themselves to procure for the Trinity & Brazos Valley Bailway Company the right of way for a certain distance in Hill County, Texas, and as rapidly as the same was required, for the construction of said road; that plaintiff and defendants were constituted a right-of-way committee to procure said right of way, and that it was contemplated that the necessary funds with which to secure said right of way would be raised by subscriptions and donations from the citizens of said Hill County; that said committee was unable to collect sufficient money by contributions and subscriptions to purchase the right of way as rapidly as was required for the construction of said road, and it became necessary, in order to perform their obligations to B. H. Baker, as the representative of said railway company, to secure an advancement or loan of money; that the necessary loan pr advancement, which amounted to $4,000, was ob- *172 tamed from plaintiff in two separate amounts, namely, $2,500 on the 17th day of July, 1903, and $1,500 on the 26th day of August, 1903; that it was the custom of said committee to execute notes through such members of the committee as were accessible to sign them, for money advanced to it for the purposes stated, and that sundry such notes were so executed. Plaintiff further alleged that about August 17, 1905, all of the money that could be collected by contributions and other sources had been received; that on said date a complete statement of the account on the part of said committee, with paid funds so received and paid out by it, was made, and it was ascertained that plaintiff had been repaid of said $4,000 the sum of $1,375.45, leaving due him by said signers of said contract and bond referred to the sum of $2,629.55; that by the terms of said contract and bond the defendants became and are jointly and severally bound to plaintiff to make contributions to him for their several proportional parts of said sum of $2,629.55, except defendant Putnam, who, by limitation of his liability in said bond and contract, is only liable for the sum of one hundred dollars, for all of which plaintiff sues.

The defendants, Matson, Carroll, Morgan and Clonch answered, pleading to the jurisdiction of the court, the statute of limitations of two years, a general denial, and in substance that the $4,000 claimed by the plaintiff to have been advanced by him for the use of said right-of-way committee, was not so advanced, but was a loan made by him at the request of the defendant Bounds and others, and was made upon the faith of said Bounds and -others to refund the same with interest at the rate of ten percent per annum. The other defendants did not answer, but made default.

A jury was empaneled, and the court, after hearing the evidence, instructed a verdict in favor of all of the defendants except Bounds and Putnam. As to these two defendants, the court instructed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff against Bounds for $252, and Putnam for $100. One of the parties who signed the contract and bond made the basis of the suit, died insolvent, and his legal representatives were not sued. There was testimony tending to show that the defendants Mrs. Davis, Frisby, Peden and Jones paid part of the amount claimed pending the suit, and we presume the verdict was directed in their favor, although they had not answered, upon the theory that plaintiff had not sued on the notes, and that they had paid their respective proportional parts of the said $2,629.55. It does not expressly appear upon what ground the verdict was instructed in favor of the defendants Matson, Carroll, Morgan and Clonch, but we presume the trial court was of the opinion that the $4,000, claimed to have been advanced by the plaintiff to the committee, was money loaned to those parties who signed the notes taken at the time the money was paid over, and that said last-named defend- • ants were not liable for the repayment of any part thereof, and further, as to Clonch, that he was not liable, because he was neither a party to the contract and bond nor to the notes taken for the said $4,000.

Appellant’s assignments of error, from- the first to the fourth inclusive, complain of the trial court’s action in excluding certain testimony offered by him. The bills of exception presented in support of these several assignments show that, by proper questions propounded by *173 appellant’s counsel, they sought to show by appellant that (1) his purpose in taking the two notes was to hold same as evidence of the transaction and as collateral security for the payment of the money by the signers of the bond and contract for right of way; (2) that it was not the intention or purpose of appellant, in taking said notes, to look to the parties who signed them for repayment of the money until he had failed to be reimbursed by the signers of the right-of-way bond and contract; (3) that the money received by the appellant as payment on the $4,000 was derived from contributions made by citizens to pay for the right of way, and from money paid by some of the parties who had signed the notes, after it was found that a sufficient amount could not be collected from the contributions with which to pay the entire amount of $4,000 that he let the committee have; (4) that the $4,000 evidenced by the said two notes was not loaned by appellant to the parties signing said notes for the purpose of discharging their joint obligations as members of the right-of-way committee, but was advanced and paid to discharge the joint obligations of the whole committee. The objections urged to the admissibility of the testimony were, that it was immaterial, and that the notes speak for themselves.

We are of the opinion that all of this testimony was pertinent to the issues made by the pleadings, was admissible, and that the court committed reversible error in excluding it. If the $4,000 was advanced by appellant to discharge the joint obligation of the members of the right-of-way committee, assumed by them in the execution of the contract to Baker, and he took notes of only a part of the committee therefor, as alleged, the money so advanced having been in fact used, as seems to appear from the undisputed evidence, to discharge such obligations, paroi evidence was admissible to show the real character of the transaction resulting in the taking of said notes. In a supplemental petition the appellant alleged that it became necessary in the progress of the undertaking to secure the right of way to use a considerable amount of cash, more than was available from the sources open to them, and that the committee saw fit to and did borrow the money needed in such business and transaction from the appellant J arvis, from time to time, as it was needed, and that it was the custom of the committee to reimburse appellant from donations, assessments and contributions when they had sufficient money on hand.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 326, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarvis-v-matson-texapp-1908.