Jones v. Eastham

224 S.W. 223, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 859
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1920
DocketNo. 7873.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 223 (Jones v. Eastham) 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
Jones v. Eastham, 224 S.W. 223, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 859 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

GRAVES, j.

By written contract of date September 4, 1918, Luther Eastham, Jr., agreed to sell and J. B. Jones, Sr., to buy at the fixed lump sum of $15,000 cash, all the pine and hard wood timber on 14 small tracts of land, each in a different survey, but all lying in Walker county, Tex., and aggregating 5,269 acres. Two thousand dollars earnest money was paid by Jones to Eastham, with provision for payment of the balance of $13,000 as soon , as title to the lands was ap-. proved by Jones’ attorneys, upon complete abstracts to date to be furnished by Eastham. The abstracts were so furnished and approved, and Jones then tendered full performance upon his part, including payment of the remaining $13,000 of the purchase price, but Eastham refused to carry out the contract of sale and brought this suit to rescind, alleging that he had been induced to make it through the fraud of Jones and of his son, J. B. Jones, Jr., both of whom he made parties defendant, under charges that they had entered into a fraudulent conspiracy having as its successful objective the procuring from him of the contract he so sought relief against.

Both defendants entered emphatic denials of every averment or suggestion of fraud made, Jones, Jr., further disclaiming any interest in or connection with the contract, while Jones, Sr., declared upon it as his individual undertaking, full performance of which, including payment of the $15,000 purchase money, he tendered, praying that specific performance in his favor against East-ham be decreed.

Over the protest of the defendants, in the form of motions and objections interposed at successive stages of the trial, the court submitted the cause to a jury upon special issues of fact, and on the return of answers entered judgment in Eastham’s favor for rescission of the contract, declaring the same to be null and void. By subsequent order the motion of J. B. Jones, Jr., to set aside the judgment for costs against him was granted.

J. B. Jones, Sr., appeals, contending through a number of assignments that under the undisputed testimony no actionable fraud *224 was shown, no legal ground for the nonen-forcement of the contract was presented, and that specific performance thereof in his favor should have been ordered. As already-stated, by appropriate procedure he had at the several turning points of the trial below pressed the same view there.

The jury’s findings upon the issues submitted to them need not be detailed, if upon the developed facts of the whole case the trial court should have seen to it, in response to one or another of several proper requests in due order made for such action, that cancellation be denied and enforcement of the contract directed.

Furthermore, there are no substantial differences in this court between the litigants as to the principles of law involved, their viewpoints diverging solely upon the applicability of well settled and mutually recognized rules to the evidence in its entirety.

The material facts, then, alone afford the solution of this ultimate issue so raised by the appeal. As gleaned by this court from a voluminous record, but .yet lifted well above the plane of controversy because found to be undisputed, they are these:

The parties were related, the appellant and his son being, respectively, the brother-in-law and the nephew of the appellee, and at the time of the differences here involved both of them owed him money. Jones, Jr., had previously held two separate written options on this timber, of date January 3, 1917, and January 7, 1918, respectively, under the first of which the appellee had agreed to sell it to him at ?20,000, and under the second one at §22,000 in consequence of the addition of further acreage, but he had been unable to dispose of the property, and both options had expired -some time before the execution of the contract with Jones, Sr., of September 4, 1918, out of which this cause arose. While the father aided his son in efforts to sell the timber during the life of these options, there is no evidence that he had any beneficial interest in or any other connection with them, nor, in turn, that the son had any such interest in the father’s own later contract covering the same property, nor any further connection therewith than-is hereinafter stated:

Some time after the two option contracts with J. B. Jones, Jr., had lapsed, and without any previous conversation or understanding of any sort between appellant and the appellee touching the matter of a deal between them for the sale of the timber, appellant, who had gone there from Huntsville that day and was then in Houston, on August 22, 1918, pursuant to a prior talk over the matter of himself selling the timber with his son, J. B. Jones, Jr., who had then requested his father, in event he succeeded, to wire him, sent back to his son at Huntsville this telegram:

“Houston, Texas, 90SA August.
“J. B. Jones, Jr., Huntsville, Texas. Big lumber deal off. They say timber badly burnt and nothing on ground and tracts badly scattered. Only way they will buy is on credit pay as they cut. Have found new party and can use Eastham timber with mine at Fifteen Thousand cash. Reasonable check for forfeit on First National Bank Houston. Balance cash soon as abstracts are approved by attorneys. This is last chance I know of if Luther wants to put his in at Fifteen Thousand have him wire me here quick. Be home to-day. J. B. Jones. 1193 A.”

On receiving this message in Huntsville between 3:30 and 4 p. m. the day of its date, J. B. Jones, Jr., showed it to Mr. Eastham, and the latter slightly later the same afternoon sent to Jones, Sr., at Houston this answering telegram:

“Huntsville, Texas, 1143 A. August, 1918.
“J. B. Jones, Sr. Bender Hotel, Houston. Have party to put money up in First National Bank to credit of Luther Eastham, Jr. Will accept fifteen thousand cash.
“Luther Eastham, Jr.’’

After a quick delivery of that reply to appellant, a long-distance telephone conversation ensued between them, in which an understanding was reached that $2,000 should be put up in the First National Bank of Houston as a forfeit, and that appellant should wire appellee when that had been done. He did so at 5:16 the same afternoon, and the appellee received the advice in Huntsville on the same day; it further reciting that receipts for the money had been left for him at the Bender Hotel in Houston.

As indicated, all these, transactions occurred on August 22, 1918, and afterwards, on August 30, the contract of sale appellant had prepared and furnished him covering the timber referred to in the telegrams and telephone conversation was first executed and mailed by the appellee to appellant at Houston, the latter having in the meantime returned there for some purpose. On September 4, after thus receiving it at Houston, appellant took this contract back to Huntsville, and, to quote the appellee’s own version of the matter, this further occurrence took place:

“Mr. Jones came up there and said that it would have to be changed. That was on the 4th of September. He would not accept the contract I signed on August 30th. He had the last page changed on the 4th of September. I signed it that way.”

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 223, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-eastham-texapp-1920.