Kunkel v. Poe Land & Development Company

393 S.W.2d 191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 29, 1965
Docket83
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 393 S.W.2d 191 (Kunkel v. Poe Land & Development Company) 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
Kunkel v. Poe Land & Development Company, 393 S.W.2d 191 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

SHARPE, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of Poe Land and Development Company, Inc., appellee, plaintiff below, hereafter sometimes called Poe, against Oscar T. Kunkel and his wife, Mary Kunkel, appellants, defendants below, hereafter sometimes called Kunkel. The judgment, in substance, awarded Poe rescission of a contract for the exchange of properties entered into in November, 1961; vested title in Poe to the Holiday Lodge Motor Courts in Rockport, Aransas County, Texas; ordered cancellation of certain notes and liens held by Kunkel, received by him in part payment of a dairy farm located in Cameron County, Texas, which he had exchanged for the Aransas County Property; ordered cancellation of a note and lien held by E. L. Mayberry, a defendant in the trial court who has not appealed; and awarded Poe a recovery of $1,600.00 against Kunkel for net profits realized by him from the operation of said Holiday Lodge Motor Courts between November 4, 1961 and January 16, 1963, the date of judgment.

Kunkel asserts ten points of error on this appeal, in substance, as follows: (1) Failure to grant a continuance, (2) error in submitting Special Issue One, (3) error in admitting incompetent hearsay evidence in connection with Special Issue One, (4) error in entering judgment based upon the answer to Special Issue One, (5) refusal to submit appellants’ requested special issues in connection with the cause of a foreclosure by the first lien holder on the Cameron County property, formerly owned by Kun-kel, (6) error in the submission of Special Issue Two, particularly, since in inquiring about a “failure of consideration” it submitted a legal rather than a fact issue for determination of the jury, (7) error in submitting Special Issue Four, (8) error in entering judgment based upon findings, which, in effect, established that E. L. May-berry was an agent for Poe and also represented Kunkel, (9) error in entering judgment in the absence of a necessary party, i. e., Sinton Building and Loan Association, *193 which held an indebtedness and lien on the Aransas County property, and (10) error in entering judgment some ten months and several terms of court after the jury verdict.

The material facts will be briefly stated. On October 23, 1961, Poe and Kunkel entered into a written contract whereby Kunkel agreed to convey to Poe a farm located in Cameron County, Texas, consisting of some 617 acres of land together with a herd of dairy cattle and certain equipment and buildings for an agreed price of $346,-000.00, payable by Poe’s assumption of a first lien indebtedness of approximately $167,000.00 held by Mr. Charles Gray and the execution of a second lien note in the amount of $80,000.00 to Kunkel; and whereby Poe agreed to convey to Kunkel the Holiday Lodge Motor Courts in Rock-port, Texas, at an agreed price of $135,-000.00, on which there was an indebtedness and lien in the amount of $35,000.00 placed against the said property by Kunkel as a part of the transaction. The original exchange agreement provided that Poe would pay the monthly installment of $1304.80 due to Gray on November 1, 1961. However, prior to said date, Mr. P. O. Eiller, representing Poe, and Kunkel had an oral understanding that Kunkel would make such payment and that Poe would pay certain taxes of approximately the same amount owed by Kunkel on the Cameron County property to which Poe acquired title. The transaction was closed at Rockport, Texas, on November 3, 1961, at which time Lewis Bogdanow, President of Poe, Mr. Cabiness, attorney and representative of an abstract or title company, Mr. E. L. Mayberry, a real estate broker, and other persons involved in the over-all exchange of properties, the details of which are not necessary to decision of this case, were present. Kunkel did not attend the meeting at which the transaction was closed, but the jury found, in answer to Special Issue 4 that Kunkel was represented by Mayberry on such occasion, and, also, in answer to Special Issue 9, that Mayberry was the agent of Poe on November 3, 1961. The jury further found, in answer to Special Issue 5, that Mayberry represented that the November 1, 1961 payment to Gray, the first lien-holder, had been made by Kunkel and, in answer to Special Issue 6, that Poe would not have consummated and closed the transaction but for such representation by May-berry.

The basic facts concerning the payment of November 1, 1961, are as follows: Pursuant to Kunkel’s instructions, his farm manager mailed a check to Gray in the amount of $1304.80 to cover the said installment. The check was returned by the Los Fresnos State Bank, Los Fresnos, Texas, when it was presented for payment on November 7, 1961, on account of insufficient funds. The check was good on October 31, 1961, its date of issue, until November 14, 1961, except on November 6th and 7th. Kunkel’s explanation of why the check to Gray was not good on such dates was that his farm manager had to write checks for the payroll and expenses in the operation of the dairy farm, acquired by Poe on November 3, 1961, which should have been paid by Poe, resulting in the reduction of the bank balance to approximately $200.00 below the amount of the check to Gray. Kunkel testified that he was not aware of the fact that check had been returned unpaid until he was contacted by an attorney for Gray on or about November 11,1961, who advised that Gray was going to foreclose his lien on said property unless the balance due thereon was paid in full. The foreclosure sale was held on the first Tuesday in January, 1962, when Gray bid in the property. Thereafter, Gray recovered a deficiency judgment against Kunkel in the amount of approximately $40,000.00. Kunkel testified that prior to November 11, 1961, Mr. Eiller, who had taken charge of the Cameron County Dairy Farm on November 3, 1961, had sold a number of the cattle covered by Gray’s mortgage, in apparent violation thereof. On the trial of the case Kun-kel requested two special issues inquiring, in substance, whether the sale of cattle by Poe was a cause of the subsequent foreclo *194 sure of the deed of trust on the Cameron County farm, which werte refused by the court.

Poe’s second amended original petition contained the following allegation: “That thereafter said property was foreclosed under said mortgage by said Charles Gray; that said insufficient check caused and made possible said foreclosure proceedings which constituted failure of consideration and said representation that said payment had been made was in fact false, and were valid grounds for rescission of said transaction.”

Special issues 1 and 2, submitted to the jury and the answers thereto are as follows:

“SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 1
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the failure, if any, to make the payment due November 1, 1961, on the Charles Gray note caused and brought about the foreclosure of the mortgage held by Charles Gray?
Answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No’.
We, the jury, answer: Yes.
If you have answered Special Issue No. 1 ‘Yes’, then you will answer the following Special Issue, otherwise you need not do so.
SPECIAL ISSUE NO. 2
Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that causing the foreclosure of the mortgage by Charles L.

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393 S.W.2d 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kunkel-v-poe-land-development-company-texapp-1965.