Marlow v. Medlin

558 S.W.2d 933, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3555
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 17, 1977
Docket5775
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 558 S.W.2d 933 (Marlow v. Medlin) 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
Marlow v. Medlin, 558 S.W.2d 933, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3555 (Tex. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

This is a common law fraud action for actual and exemplary damages brought by Cynthia Medlin against William Marlow and wife Elli Marlow as partners. The gist of plaintiff’s suit was that her landlords were defendants’ vendees under a contract of sale of the premises she was renting, and that she was induced by defendants’ false representations to pay defendants rent money she was withholding from her landlords as an offset against a debt they owed to her. Defendants answered with a general denial, several special pleas, and a counterclaim for unpaid rent. After a hearing without a jury, judgment was rendered awarding plaintiff actual and exemplary damages, and denying defendants recovery on their counterclaim. Defendants appeal. We affirm the awards of damages on plaintiff’s action, but we reform the judgment to allow defendants recovery on their counterclaim.

On July 3,1973, defendants sold a duplex-type house and lot located in the City of Austin, Texas, to Tom Kosowski and Mike Vogel under a written contract of purchase and sale. The terms of the contract called for a total price of $41,600.00, a down pay-' ment of $4,000.00, payment of the balance in monthly installments of $400.00, and execution by defendants of a general warranty deed to the purchasers upon payment of the entire purchase price. The monthly payments were payable to defendants at Silver Lake, Indiana. Although the contract provided that if the purchasers breached its terms defendants would be authorized to terminate the contract and retain all money paid by the purchasers as rental and liquidated damages, nothing was stated in it concerning the parties’ rights to rent paid by tenants of the property. However, the language of the whole instrument (which we need not set forth) clearly evidenced an intention that the purchasers should have possession of the premises. On the day the contract of sale was executed, Kosowski and Vogel borrowed $2,700.00 from plaintiff, executed their promissory note to plaintiff for the loan, and used the borrowed money in making the $4,000.00 down payment to defendants. The note from Ko-sowski and Vogel to plaintiff called for full repayment of the loan by January 1, 1974, with 9% interest.

Within a few days after execution of the contract of sale and the note in July, 1973, plaintiff, who was a student at the University of Texas at Austin, leased the house from Kosowski and Vogel at a rental of $175.00 per month. She also managed the premises in an informal fashion, collected rent from other tenants, and deposited it with her own rent in Kosowski’s and Vo-gel’s bank account. Kosowski and Vogel never made any payment of either interest *936 or principal on plaintiff’s note, and in August, 1974, plaintiff determined to withhold her rent from them. She did so for the months of September, October, and November, 1974. By this time, Kosowski and Vo-gel were in default on their payments to defendants under the contract of sale.

Plaintiff testified that defendant William Marlow telephoned her twice in the month of November, 1974. Her account of their conversation is as follows:

“[On the first call] Mr. Marlow wanted to know what happened, what had happened to Mr. Vogel and Mr. Kosowski and why he hadn’t been receiving the full amount of house payments from them. I speculated as to why I thought that he was not receiving that money, and one of the things I told him was that I was withholding my rent from them because they had not attempted to repay my loan. And he became very angry with me and told me I had no right to do that; that it wasn’t my money, that it wasn’t — well, it wasn’t my money to keep. That it was his money and I was stealing from him if I was withholding the rent, and I told him I did not believe that was so because I was not renting from him, and I was renting from [Kosowski and Vogel], He was very insulted that I was doing it to him, and I told him I was not doing it to him but I was doing it to [Kosowski and Vogel]. He became very angry with me and told me — like I said, he told me I had no right to do that and he said I was stealing from him and he was going to call his attorney and find out what he could do about it, and then he said he would call me back. In a few days to two weeks, I am not sure how long it was, he called me back and he told me that he had checked with his attorney and I had no right to that money; that I was stealing it and that he would call the Sheriff, and I had — he wanted, he wanted me to send the money to him instead of withholding it from Vogel and Kosowski. He said that if I didn’t send it that he could get me in trouble, that he would call the Sheriff. After that last conversation, I sent him the money. If it were not for those conversations I would not have sent him the money. I sent it then because I was afraid not to.”

Plaintiff’s brother resided with her in the leased premises. He testified, “Cynthia informed me of the first conversation. She was very upset and scared over it, and she asked me to listen in on the second conversation. I did.” He gave this account of Mr. Marlow’s attitude and statements:

“Mr. Marlow was very upset, very indignant. Insulted my sister profusely and insulted me, my sister, and the other people in the house in general. Was very flagrant and inflammatory toward Michael Vogel and Thomas Kosowski and proceeded to tell Cynthia, my sister, that if she did not send him the money that she had been withholding for rent against Mike Vogel and Thomas Kosowski, that if she did not send the money that he would have the Sheriff come out and arrest her, that he had his lawyer to check into the legality of it, and that she was stealing his money. After the conversation was completed Cynthia was very upset, very scared. She was in tears, and being very scared she went ahead and sent the money”

On December 2nd, after the conversations, plaintiff mailed defendants $476.44, stating in her letter of transmittal that this sum was the rent for the months of September, October, and November, 1974, at the rate of $175.00 per month, less $48.56 paid by her for a water bill which Kosowski and Vogel should have paid.

Mr. Marlow denied that he told plaintiff to pay the rent she was withholding to him.

On December 27, 1974, defendants rescinded the contract of sale, notified Ko-sowski and Vogel that they had done so, and caused an instrument reflecting those facts to be filed in the deed records of Travis County, Texas.

*937 Plaintiff continued living in the house until March 20,1975, when she was judicially evicted under a forcible detainer action filed by defendants in the Justice Court of Travis County. During this time she paid only $175.00 for rent. This payment was voluntarily made by her to defendants in January, 1975. She testified that this was a “good-faith gesture” on her part when they were discussing the possibility of her purchase of the property.

The trial court made and filed the following findings of fact and conclusions of law: “FINDINGS OF FACT

“1. In December, 1974, Cynthia Med-lin was a tenant of Tom Kosowski and Mike Vogel at 3111 Hemphill Park, Austin, Texas. At that time Vogel and Ko-sowski were owners of 3111 Hemphill Park under a Contract of Sale from the Defendants William and Elli Marlow.
“2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
558 S.W.2d 933, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marlow-v-medlin-texapp-1977.