Kleck v. Kleck

246 S.W. 720
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1922
DocketNo. 6835.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 246 S.W. 720 (Kleck v. Kleck) 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
Kleck v. Kleck, 246 S.W. 720 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

Appellee approves the statement of the case made by appellant as follows :

“Peter Kleck sued Jesse Kleck and Mrs. Bertha Kleck, alleging that they had conveyed to him by general warranty deed, dated July IS, 1917, certain premises known as lot 4, New City block 7S91, on San Pedro avenue in the city of San Antonio; that the conveyance was *721 made for a cash consideration of $2,000 and the assumption of a note by grantors to Mrs. J. W. Nibel on which there was due $5,009, and the execution and delivery by said Peter Kleck to Jess Kleck of a note for $2,500, payable one year after date, and bearing 8 per cent, interest. Plaintiff further alleged that he paid the cash consideration and the Nibel note, and that he made certain payments of principal and interest on his note to Jess Kleck. He further alleged that after his purchase of said property a demand was made on him for the payment of a note executed by Alfred H. Kleck and William E. Kleck to Ahrens & Ott Manufacturing Company on January 13, 1916, secured by deed of trust upon the premises so purchased by him; that in order to save his property from forced sale under said deed of trust he was compelled to pay off, and did pay off, said note on or about November 24, 1917. Plaintiff further alleged that on March 20, 1918, he was compelled to pay $57.40 past-due paving assessment levied against said property under an ordinance of the governing body of the city of San Antonio, passed November 29, 1915; also that he was forced to pay off taxes due the state and county on said property for the year 1916-1917 in the sum of $57.75, and taxes due for period from January 1, 1917, to July 18, 1917, to the extent of $27.65.
“Plaintiff further alleged that he would not have purchased the property had he known of any of said incumbrances, but that he bought in reliance on the warranty of title and the covenants incident thereto that all taxes, liens, assessments, and incumbrances had been paid, excepting the $5,009 due on the Nibel note.
“The plaintiff filed a trial amendment, wherein he claimed that, he paid out on the Ahrens & Ott note the sum of $1,350, and claiming that he had paid on the Jess Kleck note $105.-04 more than was due by him if credited with the payments made by him by reason of the in-cumbrances pleaded by him.
“The defendants answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, a general denial, ahd a special answer and cross-action. In the special answer they alleged that plaintiff, at and prior to the execution of the deed, well knew of the existence of the lien in favor of the Ahrens & Ott Company, and of the fact that the taxes and paving assessments had not been paid; that it was the express understanding and agreement between the plaintiff and defendants to the effect that the plaintiff, in purchasing said property from the defendants, promised and agreed to pay off and fully satisfy and discharge all liens, taxes, and any claims existing against said property; that the defendants consented to the sale of the same to plaintiff solely upon aforesaid conditions. And to carry out the agreement the items, ‘two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) cash and other good and valuable consideration,’ were inserted in said deed to cover the aforesaid matters. And the defendants further say that at no time prior to the serving of the writ of citation upon them did the plaintiff make any claim or demand upon defendants for any money paid for the purposes set forth in plaintiff’s pleadings, and the first notice of such payment and claims of reimbursement for the Ahrens & Ott debt and other items was given to the defendants, and was made through the service of citation upon them on the 19th day of July, A. D. 1921.
“Defendants further pleaded that on account of having relied ¿upon the promise and agreement of plaintiff to pay off and discharge the indebtedness in plaintiff’s pleadings described, and on account of plaintiff’s failure to inform defendants of the payment until the service of citation, the defendants were deprived of an opportunity to hold Mrs. Nibel ffpon. warranty in her deed to them for said property conveyed to plaintiff; that for said reason plaintiff has been guilty of such laches as to preclude him from recovering from defendants upon the matters pleaded by him.
“Defendants also pleaded the statute of limitations of two years.
“The defendant Jesse Kleck then pleaded a cross-action upon the $2,500 note executed to him by plaintiff and described in plaintiff’s pleadings, seeking to recover a balance of $1,-800 principal, interest, and attorney’s fees. Plaintiff’s supplemental petition consisted of exceptions and a general denial,
“The trial was without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff against both defendants for $75, also canceling the note' held by Jesse Kleck, and refusing him any recovery on his cross-action.”

The material question presented in this ease for our determination is whether the court erred in not permitting appellants to prove an alleged oral agreement on the part of appellee to pay other amounts than those expressed in the recital of the general warranty deed as a part of the consideration of the conveyance, the trial court holding it would not be permissible to show by parol testimony that the grantee agreed to pay as part of the consideration for the conveyance other debts secured by liens against the premises, notwithstanding the deed itself recited that there were other good, and valuable eoiv-siderations, paid to the grantors, which were not recited in the deed.

There is a fundamental principle of law in reference to written instruments, not to be departed from, that the doctrine of “expres-sio unius, exclusio alterius,” has generally, if not almost universally, been applied; that is the expression in a contract of one or more things of a class implies the exclusion of all not expressed, although ad would have been implied had none been expressed.

The cash consideration and special obligations assumed are recited, in the deed, and no question is raised as to them, and the consideration of those matters are here laid out of sight for the purpose of passing upon the alleged error of the pourt in not considering those proffered items sought to be impressed upon the conveyance as a part of its consideration, though excluded from, its recitals with those expressed obligations.

Of course we are not discussing questions of the reformation of written obligations where only through fraud, mutual mistake, etc., they were omitted from the instrument. *722 Robinson v. Clymer (Tex. Civ. App.) 170 S. W. 108. Whether or not the recital in the deed “other valuable considerations” would authorize the admission of such proof, counsel for appellants in open court, in response to suggestions as to whether it would have any effect, expressly declare it would have no effect on the question whatever in permitting such proof, because appellant had the right to produce the proof nevertheless, under well-settled authority.

It was also contended that under the authority to prove considerations in written instruments, such proof as here contended for would be let in under that doctrine.

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W. 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kleck-v-kleck-texapp-1922.