Love v. Southern Motors Mfg. Co.

261 S.W. 180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 7, 1924
DocketNo. 8443. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 261 S.W. 180 (Love v. Southern Motors Mfg. Co.) 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
Love v. Southern Motors Mfg. Co., 261 S.W. 180 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

Plaintiff brought this suit against the appellee company or association and its named officers or trustees to recover the sum of $3,500 alleged to be due hini as a reward or prize earned by him under an offer made by the appellee and accepted by plaintiff.

The cause of action is thus stated in plaintiff’s original petition:

“Defendants inaugurated a contest designated as the Southern Motor Endurance Run, for the purpose of demonstrating to the public the qualities, strength, and endurance of a certain automobile known as the ‘Ranger,’ which the defendants were at that time exploiting and offering for sale. That said defendants offered to the plaintiff and others to permit them to engage as drivers or auto mechanics in operating the said Ranger automobile upon a tour of approximately thirty-six hundred (3,600) miles, or that is to say from Houston, Tex., to Atlanta, Ga., and other points, returning to Houston, and offered to this plaintiff and others to pay ten thousand dollars ($10,000) in prizes to the persons engaging in said contract and endurance run as, drivers of said automobile upon the following basis, to wit: That the driver making the best time on said endurance run as a driver of one of said Ranger automobiles was to receive a prize of four thousand dollars ($4,000). That the plaintiff, relying upon the said offer of said defendants to pay said prize, accepted said offer, and at the instance and request of said defendants who desired as aforesaid to advertise,the' said Ranger automobiles, entered said endurance contest as a driver of one of said Ranger automobiles, departing from the city of Houston about the 13th day of October, 1920, traveling through the states of Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, Arkansas, and Oklahoma, and returning to Houston, Tex., about the 8th day of November, A. D. 1920. That the ear driven by plaintiff was designated as car No. 3, and that another car designated as car No. 1 was driven by another party. That plaintiff distanced the other competitor in said race and arrived upon the return trip several days ahead of said competitor, wherefore he was entitled by reason of the promises to receive and to be paid by the defendants the said sum of foiir thousa'nd dollars ($4,000).. That the defendant announced through the daily press that tne plaintiff had been awarded this four thousand dollars ,($4,000) prize. * * * That though often requested the defendants have failed and refused to pay the said amount to the plaintiff, save and except the sum of five hundred dollars ($500), leaving a balance due of thirty-five hundred dollars ($3,500), for which the plaintiff sues.”

The defendants answered this petition by a general demurrer, special exceptions, and general denial, and specially pleaded as follows:

“For further and special answer herein, these defendants allege: That while it is true the Southern Motors Manufacturing Association, Ltd., contemplated disbursing in prizes the sum of $10,000 to the participants in the endurance race mentioned in the plaintiff’s petition, yet it was ascertained by the Southern Motors Manufacturing Association, Ltd., shortly before the time 'designated for the beginning of said race, that it did not have available as much as $10,000 to be disbursed in connection with said endurance race, and thereupon plaintiff, F. C. Love, and the others who contemplated entering said,contest were called together a day or two previous to the beginning of said race, and were advised that it did not have available for the purposes of said race the sum of $10,000, as contemplated, and that, unless the persons contemplating entering said race, including F. O. Love, the plaintiff herein, were willing to accept the sum of $500 each, besides all expenses incident to the trip, the race would have to be declared off. That upon this fact being made known to the plaintiff herein, and the others who were contemplating participating in said race, and "who actually did participate therein, the said F. O. Love, and the others participating in said conference, and who actually did .participate in said endurance race, then and there agreed to enter said race and complete the same for the sum of $500 each and all expenses incident to the said trip. That in said conference and under said agreement so made, as alleged, no distinction was made between the winner of the race and the other participants therein, but each was to receive and did receive the sum of' $500 and all *181 expenses incident to said trip. That IP. Love, after agreeing to the proposition herein set out, entered the said race, did complete the said race, and all ot his expenses were paid by the defendant, Southern Motors Manufacturing Association, Ltd., and upon the completion of the said trip by him he was paid the sum of $500, which the defendant, Southern Motors Manufacturing Association, Ltd., agreed to pay him, it being the only amount it agreed to pay him, and took his receipt therefor, which said receipt therefor was duly signed by him, and in which it is stated that it was paid to him in final payment, and in addition thereto, the said receipt provides that it is in full of all claims of whatsoever nature arising on his part out of said endurance race, and his participation therein, which said receipt and release are hereby pleaded.” C.

In reply to this answer, plaintiff filed a supplemental petition which, after alleging that he did not agree to the modification of the original terms of the contest and that the original contract as pleaded by plaintiff, in his original petition was the contract under which he entered into the contest and which both parties had in mind when the contest was won, and which said contract was confirmed and ratified by the defendants publishing in the daily newspapers and in many periodicals and magazines that defendants had paid plaintiff, as the winner of the race, the sum of $4,000, contains the following allegations:

“Plaintiff further pleads in the alternative, if mistaken in the allegations hereinabove: That the sum of five hundred dollars ($500) was paid by defendants to plaintiff, and plaintiff was induced to give defendants a receipt therefor, signed by plaintiff. That if said receipt provides, as alleged, that it was in full settlement of all claims of whatever nature arising out of said endurance race, plaintiff alleges that the same was given in consideration of the payment of five hundred dollars ($500), and that said attempted receipt in release was without consideration for the full amount due plaintiff. That said attempted receipt and release, which purported to be a receipt and release in full settlement of plaintiff’s claim against defendants, and the modification of' said contract as alleged by defendants, was fraudulently induced and obtained in this, that at the time of the said conference mentioned in defendants’ first amended original answer that the said defendants, through their agents, servants, and representatives, at said conference falsely represented to plaintiff that it, Southern Motors Manufacturing Company, Ltd., did not have available for the purposes of said race the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) as contemplated. That said representation was false in this, that the said Southern Motors Manufacturing Company, Ltd., did as a matter of fact have on hand available the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000) for the purposes of said race. That plaintiff relied on said representations.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Schucht v. Stidham
37 S.W.2d 214 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 S.W. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/love-v-southern-motors-mfg-co-texapp-1924.