Lovett v. Paschen

241 S.W. 685, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 905
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 1922
DocketNo. 6684.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 241 S.W. 685 (Lovett v. Paschen) 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
Lovett v. Paschen, 241 S.W. 685, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 905 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

SMITH, J.

At the inception of the transactions out of which this litigation arose, John Closner, Wm. F. Sprague, the Valley Reservoir & Canal Company, and the Edin-burg (Chapin) Town-Site Company owned separate tracts which together comprised a large body of land in Hidalgo county, including the tracts here involved. The Valley Reservoir & Canal Company was a public service irrigation corporation purporting to operate adjacent to and upon the land mentioned. The land, in its raw state, was suitable only for pasturage purposes, had but little selling value, and was not readily salable. If equipped with appropriate facilities and supplied with sufficient water to insure proper irrigation, however, the land was deemed good for agricultural purposes, and would have a market value of approximately |175 an acre. The owners conceived a plan of putting this land under irrigation, and of disposing of it in small tracts as irrigated land, to which end they entered into a comprehensive contract with Ralph R. Langley by which the latter was given the exclusive right, for a period of two years, to purchase and sell a large and specifically described portion of the land, which was to be conveyed to him from time to time, and tract by tract, as he procured contracts to resell them. The owners further obligated themselves to convey, to him, along with the title to each tract, certain permanent water rights from the Valley Reservoir & Canal Company. As a result of this contract, Langley, through agents of the Standard Land Company, a selling corporation, procured W. E. Pasehen, appellee herein, as a purchaser of 120 acres of the land, and, as provided in said contract, the owners conveyed the land to Langley, who in turn conveyed it to Pasehen. In this transaction, and as provided in the contract, Langley executed and delivered to the owners (in this instance Sprague and Clos-ner) his promissory notes secured by the vendor’s lien on the 120 acres, and Pasehen assumed the payment of these notes as part of the consideration passing from him to Langley. Subsequently these notes got into the hands of T. F. Lovett, appellant herein, who, upon Paschen’s default, brought this suit to enforce their payment and to foreclose the lien upon the lands. Pasehen defended, setting up ■ failure of consideration due to fraudulent representations of alleged agents of Closner and his associates, charging Lovett with notice of the fraud, and alleging that when the latter obtained the notes the first one was past due, rendering all of them subject to every defense available to Pasehen as against the original payees. A jury found for Pasehen upon all the issues submitted to them, and judgment was rendered on these findings, canceling the notes and lien, and removing cloud from Paschen’s title. The ' suit was originally brought by Lovett against Langley as the *686 maker and Sprague and Qosner as indorsers of the notes, against Paschen because of his assumption to pay the notes, and against the Valley Reservoir & Canal Company and others as claiming some interest in the land. In his cross-action Paschen sought to recover against all of the parties above mentioned. Upon the trial, however, all these parties were dismissed with the consent of both Lovett and Paschen, between whom alone the suit was tried.

[1] The whole case turns, primarily, upon the question of whether or not, by his contract and dealings with them, Langley was the agent of the owners in his sale of the land to Paschen, thereby rendering them liable to the latter on account of the alleged fraudulent representations which induced him to purchase the land and execute the notes he now seeks to have canceled. The determination of this question involves, in fact depends entirely upon, the construction of the contract between the owners, Closner and Sprague, on the one hand, and Langley, on the other. This contract covers 12 pages in the transcript, and therefore, of course, cannot be set out in full here. We think it will be sufficient for the purpose of the question about to be discussed to show that in this contract, “for the sale and purchase” of the lands, it was provided that, “in consideration of each of the mutual terms, conditions, and covenants hereinafter contained,” the owners “give and grant to [Langley] for the term of two years the exclusive right and privilege of selling and of purchasing all of the lands” therein described; that Langley “binds himself to use his best efforts to sell all of said lands”; that the price to be paid by Langley to the owners shall be $80 an acre, to be paid $1& an acre cash, and the balance to be paid in four annual installments, to be evidenced by Langley’s vendor’s lien notes payable to the owners, who shall, upon receiving the cash payments and notes upon any particular tract, execute their deed conveying such tract to Langley; that in the resale of the lands Lansrley may, if he desires, take from the purchasers property in lieu of cash, in which events he shall have six months in which to make his cash payment to the owners, and that until he does make this cash payment the owners shall not be required to convey to him; that in selling the lands Langley shall advertise and diligently promote such sales, “and to that end he shall use^he organization of the Standard Land Company and such other organizations as he may desire, to the end that said lands shall be disposed of promptly within the time and according to the terms herein expressed”; that the owners shall prepare abstract of title to all the lands and deliver the same to Langley within 20 days, together with the opinion of a reputable attorney as to the sufficiency of the title as shown in such abstracts; that there was an existing incumbrance upon the land, but that the owners would procure a release of such incum-brances from any tract “when sold” as soon as three-fifths of the purchase money thereon has been paid to them; that the owners will extend the canal of the Canal & Reservoir Company to the lands Involved, and that, “when' sold,” said lands are to “to be irrigated with water received from the Valley Reservoir & Canal Company, in accordance with the terms and conditions of contracts of said canal company existing between said canal company &nd other lands being watered by the same,” to which end the owners agreed to install additional and specifically described irrigation facilities; that, if Langley shall “fail to sell the quantity of lands” as provided, the owners, at their option, may forfeit the contract, except as to sales already made by Langley, which he was required to settle and close up within 90 days after such forfeiture; that the covenants and agreements above set out “shall be binding upon and extend to the respective parties herein and their heirs, executors, and assigns,” but that Langley should not assign this contract except upon the written consent of the owners. There was some oral testimony regarding this contract and its purposes and effect, but it was not of such nature as to vary the expressed agreement in any of its material aspects.

The concrete question presented is whether this was a contract for the sale of the lands to Langley, thus creating between the owners and him the relation of vendor and purchaser, or a contract for the sale of the lands by the owners through Langley to others, thus establishing between them the relation of principal and agent, respectively; these relations being inconsistent, each with the other. The real test.by which the relations of the parties must be determined Is found in their obligations, each-to the other, according to the provisions of the contract.

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

Related

Noblitt v. Barker
97 S.W.2d 1010 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)
Paschen v. Lovett
255 S.W. 385 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1923)
Payne v. Beaumont
245 S.W. 94 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)
Engelman v. Anderson
243 S.W. 728 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 S.W. 685, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovett-v-paschen-texapp-1922.