Jones v. Herring

16 S.W.2d 325, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 437
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1929
DocketNo. 7342.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 325 (Jones v. Herring) 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. Herring, 16 S.W.2d 325, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 437 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

Appellants J. G. Jones and wife, Rosa D. Jones, sued appellees M. M. Herring and wife, Mabel Herring, W. E. Bryarly, and Karl G. Schaufele, to rescind a contract of sale and exchange of real estate *326 between appellants and Herring and wife, and to cancel the deeds executed in consummation thereof, because of alleged fraud practiced by Herring and Bryarly in the negotiations leading to and inducing the contract. The alleged fraud was denied, and at the conclusion of the evidence the court instructed a verdict for appellees, and rendered judgment accordingly; hence this appeal.

The first ground of fraud alleged was that Herring did not convey in exchange for their property all the land he agreed to convey, but secretly withheld a portion in fraud of their rights. Appellants pleaded a verbal agreement with Herring to exchange their residence in Moser’s addition in Dallas for some “trackage” or business property in Foreman’s addition in Dallas, “on which Herring had an option.” Herring pleaded in htec verba a written option from Schaufele, of date May 26, 1925, alleging that same was signed by R. V. Cash, acting as his agent, and which described the property, sufficiently for the purposes of this appeal, as being “345 feet on Foreman Street.” Herring also pleaded in hsec verba a written contract of sale and exchange of properties between himself, acting by and through Cash as his agent, and appellants, which described the property to be conveyed to appellants, sufficiently for the purposes of this appeal, as being “300 feet on Foreman Streetand that the deeds from Jones and wife to Herring and from Herring and wife to Jones were executed and delivered in conformity with this contract.

By the option contract with Schaufele he was to convey a frontage of “345 feet on Foreman Street” to Herring. His deed to Herring conveyed a frontage on said street of 439.1 feet, or an additional 94.1 feet. By the contract between Jones and Herring, Herring was to convey a frontage of “300 feet on Foreman Street” to Jones. The deed from Herring to Jones conveyed a frontage of 394.01 feet on said Foreman Street or an additional 94.01 feet.

Schaufele testified: “Mr. Herring had an option on 345 feet frontage on Foreman Street. * * * X first signed the written contract with Mr. Herring for the 345 feet and after that contract was signed I discovered I had a few feet more. I told him he could have it.”

Herring testified that Cash acted as his agent in signing both the option contract with Schaufele and the sale and exchange contract with Jones and wife, and, further, that: “I explained to Mr. Jones about the amount of ground I had there. X told him 300 feet on Foreman Street.” Mrs. Jones said nothing about the option between Herring and Schau-fele, but testified that Herring pointed out the corners of the land without giving any number of feet.

Mr. Jones testified: “Mr. Herring said he had an option on the property and told me a description of the property, and we walked all over it, and said the property he was getting from Schaufele was all the property up to Mr. Schaufele’s line. Still Mr. Schaufele had some property in that peach orchard yet. Mr. Herring showed me the extent of the property and I made a trade for the property that he showed me that he had there that he was going to exchange. s ⅜ ⅜ He didn’t tell me how many feet fronting on Foreman Street I was going to get. The whole plat of the land is what he was showing me and he showed me the corners.”

While appellants say that they walked over the land and that Herring pointed out to them the comers and lines, still there is no evidence that the land so pointed out was not as a matter of fact conveyed to them by the deed from Herring, executed in consummation of the sale contract. The fact that Schaufele gave Herring additional land after having entered into the written contract to convey him only 345 feet on Foreman street does not affect the matter at issue, because it was given after both of the written contracts were executed, and the undisputed evidence shows that appellants knew before the deeds were executed that Schaufele had more land than was called for in either the option or sale contract, and with full knowledge of this fact they accepted a deed conveying to them a part of the additional land given by Schaufele to Herring.. We therefore conclude that the evidence shows without controversy that Herring conveyed more land to appellants than was included in the option contract and the written contract of sale, and more than he agreed to convey, and there was no issue for the jury as to whether Herring had conveyed all the land he agreed to convey.

In this connection appellant J. G. Jones filed a plea of non est factum in which he stated that he never at any time entered into the contract with Cash as alleged by Herring, and for that reason objected to the introduction of the contract in evidence, and also objected to the introduction in evidence of the option contract from Schaufele to Cash, because appellants were not parties to it, and they predicate two propositions upon this action of the court. Neither is sustained. Mrs. Jones admitted that she signed the contract for the sale and exchange of properties. Herring and Bryarly testified that both Jones and his wife signed it; and although Jones was on the witness stand twice, he did not deny having signed said contract. Jones and his wife executed and delivered a deed to their property and received a deed to Herring’s property, as well as the sum of $950 difference paid for their property, in consummation of the contract. We therefore conclude that there was no issue of fact as to whether appellants signed the contract. With refer- *327 enee to the option contract from Schaufele, Herring alleged that Cash acted as his agent in signing it, and about which there is no controversy in the evidence. Appellants alleged that they were to have the property on which Herring had an option from Schau-fele. The option contract was therefore admissible as the best evidence of its contents and of the property to be conveyed. We conclude that under the pleadings and proof the court should have admitted in evidence these two contracts, and having been admitted and proved without controversy, no issue was left for the jury. Sullivan v. Fant (Tex. Civ. App.) 160 S. W. 612; Kraker v. Bettman-Kleinhauser Clothing Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 12 S.W.(2d) 247.

The second allegation of fraud was that Herring and Bryarly .fraudulently concealed from appellants the fact that the railroad tracks and right of way of the Texas & Pacific Railroad Company were going to be lowered at and along the property conveyed by Herring to them, which fact materially affected the value of the property, and of which fact appellants were ignorant. Appellees answered that Herring was approached by Bryarly, who represented appellants, with the proposition of exchange of properties; that Herring took appellants out and went over the property; that appellants considered the matter for several days, and after making a second inspection entered into the sale and exchange contract. Appellees further alleged that at the time appellants inspected the property the Texas & Pacific Railroad Company was making large and extensive improvements in and near the property and was making a cut by said property for the purpose of lowering its tracks, and that this was obvious to appellants and known to them before they signed the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 325, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-herring-texapp-1929.