Mateer v. Cockrill

45 S.W. 751, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 391, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 90
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 45 S.W. 751 (Mateer v. Cockrill) 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
Mateer v. Cockrill, 45 S.W. 751, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 391, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 90 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This is the second appeal to this court, from a judgment rendered against appellants in this suit, by the District Court of Fayette County. Upon the former appeal the judgment of the trial court was affirmed by this court in an opinion holding with the lower court, that the plaintiffs’ cause of action as set up in their petition would not be barred until the expiration of four years from its inception. But upon a writ of error to the Supreme Court, it held that the bar of two years, and not that of four, was applicable to the case presented in the petition, and reversed the judgment of this and the trial court and remanded the case. 88 Texas, 428.

The material facts of the case, as we deduce from the statements of appellants and appellees, are substantially as follows: About May 10,1887, the people of Flatonia and its vicinity in mass meeting entered into a compact for the purpose of inducing the San Antonio and Aransas Pass-Railway Company to build the branch of their road, then being constructed from Yoakum to Waco, through the town of Flatonia; that the parties to this suit were parties to that compact, and that said meeting appointed an executive committee to negotiate with the railway com- *393 pony, with full power to accomplish, if practicable, the object of the compact. The committee consisted of twenty persons, with power to increase its number, and seven of its members constituted a quorum. It was contemplated that the money necessary to secure the road should be raised by subscriptions made by the members of the meeting and other citizens of the county of Fayette. The executive committee appointed several of its members a special committee to confer with the railway company, and the committee effected an agreement with the company for the construction of its road to Flatonia; the consideration demanded by the company and accepted by the executive committee was a bonus of $6000 to be paid when the road reached Flatonia, depot grounds in the town, and a right of way through the county of Fayette along such line as should be selected by the company. This contract was reduced to writing and signed by thirteen members of the executive committee, and those signing the contract are designated in the brief of counsel as the guarantee committee. By the terms of this contract these members of the executive committee who signed the contract assumed a personal liability to the company. The plaintiffs and all of the defendants, with one exception, were members of the executive committee, and signed the contract made by the committee with the company. The executive committee was ultimately increased to thirty-three members. By a resolution passed in one of the meetings of the executive committee, three of their number, to wit, J. M. Harrison, M. Cockrill, and J. B. Faires, were authorized to hind the committee for the payment of right of way, and were instructed to execute notes for this purpose to parties demanding to be compensated for granting right of way over their lands. This power was given to this committee to be executed by all or any of them. The defendant Faires never executed any such note; Harrison and Cock-rill executed two notes, one for $450 to W. S. Bobson, guardian of the estate of Earns minors, and one for $300 to the representative of the estate of T. W. Pierce. These notes yrere given for depot grounds in the town of Flatonia, and dated September 19 and 30, 1887, respectively, and were payable twelve months after date, and they were paid by the guarantee committee, that is to say, those members of that committee who bring this suit. The one for $450 was paid, interest and principal, January 4, 1887, and the other note for $300 was paid, with interest, on April 5, 1892. Plaintiff Harrison paid a judgment which had been obtained by E. M. Eose for the right' of way over his land, and payment was made on May 1, 1893, and the amount of the judgment was $228. The four plaintiffs, Cockrill, Harrison, Lane, and Arnim, paid on a judgment in favor of T. C. Moore, rendered for costs of right of way, $2476.56; this payment was made on the 12th day of May, 1890, Cockrill and Harrison each paying one-third of the sum, and Lane and Arnim paying jointly the other third. Lane and Arnim, in addition to above payment, made several small payments out of their joint funds, aggregating about $110.75; some of these payments were made in 1891 and some in *394 1892, and Lane paid in execution of the guarantee contract, out of his own individual funds, $100; a portion of this was paid in 1887 and a portion in 1891. On the 20th day of December, 1887, some $2830.40 were paid on the bonus guaranteed the road, leaving a balance thereon, on August 13,1891, with 8 per cent interest from December 20, 1887, of $3169.60. The railway company complied with its contract, and in 1891 its property was placed in the hands of a receiver; and through the efforts of Lane and other members of the guarantee committee, a decree of the District Court of Bexar County, in which court the receivership was pending, was-obtained, authorizing the receivers, upon the conditions stipulated, to release the guarantee committee from their obligation to make good the balance due the railway company. The decree authorized the release upon the condition that the parties bound for the bonus should deliver deeds conveying to the San Antonio & Aransas Pass Bailway Company the right of way and depot grounds in Fayette County. To comply with this condition, the plaintiffs had to assume to pay to Leitenberg such sum as might thereafter be agreed on, or judicially determined, to be a fair compensation to him for conceding right of way across his lands to the company; and that this compensation might be determined judicially, he was made a party defendant to the suit. Not until some time in September, 1891, was the release executed by the receivers, though the contract to release was made on the 13th day of August of that year, the receivers refusing to deliver the release until deed of conveyance was delivered conveying right of way through Leitenberg’s lands. This suit was instituted in April, 1893, and all of the members of the executive committee were made defendants, on the first trial of the cause, in the court below. The court held that the -plaintiffs could only recover from their co-obligors on the guarantee given the company, and when the cause was remanded by the Supreme Court, the plaintiffs, with the permission of the court, dismissed as to all of the executive committee who did not sign the guarantee, and they also dismissed as to several who had, one of whom had, in the interval between the first and second trials, died, and the others who were dismissed were shown to be insolvent. The petitioners prayed for judgment for each of them, as against the defendants, who were their coobligors on the guaranty, for the amount paid by them severally in excess of his subscriptions; and they averred that until they had secured a release from the payment of the balance of the bonus due the company under the contract made with it by the executive committee, it was not possible to ascertain what was the excess, if any, of the payments made by any one of them over the sum for which he was bound. The petition also prayed the court to determine what should be the compensation of the defendant Leitenberg for the right of way granted by him to the railway, and that he have judgment for such sum against plaintiffs, and against the other defendants, the joint obligors with plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W. 751, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 391, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mateer-v-cockrill-texapp-1898.