Matson v. Jarvis

133 S.W. 941, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 376
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 941 (Matson v. Jarvis) 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
Matson v. Jarvis, 133 S.W. 941, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 376 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

TALBOT, Associate Justice.

This is the third appeal in this case. *377 See 94 S. W., 1079, and 113 S. W., 326. The suit is one for contribution. There is no controversy over the pleadings, and the material facts, among others that will appear in the discussion of the assignments of error, are as follows: On the 21st day of October, 1902, E. Jarvis, the appellee herein, and J. V. Matson, J. M. Carroll and T. C. Morgan, the appellants, and Lee Frisby, W. B. Bounds, J. S. Davis, M. P. Harwood, Jim J ones, Jr., J. M. Peden, W. A. Putman and S. B. Boyd executed a written contract or bond payable to B. H. Baker, in which said parties obligated and bound themselves to procure for the Trinity & Brazos Valley Bailway Company the right of way for a certain distance in Hill County, Texas, and as rapidly as the same was required for the construction of said road. The bond or agreement was transferred by Baker to plaintiff Jarvis for a valuable consideration. The signers of this instrument were constituted a right of way committee to procure said right of way, and it was contemplated that the necessary funds with which to secure said right of way would be raised by subscriptions and donations from the citizens of Hill County. The said committee was unable to collect sufficient money by contributions and subscriptions to purchase the right of way as rapidly as was required for the construction of said road, and it became necessary, in order to perform their obligations to B. H. Baker as the representative of said railway company, to secure an advancement or loan of money. The necessary loan or advancement, which amounted to $4000, was obtained from appellee in two separate amounts, namely, $2500 on the 17th day of July, 1903, and $1500 on the 26th day of August, 1903. It was the custom of said committee to execute notes, through such members of the committee as were accessible to sign them, for money advanced to it for the purposes stated, and that sundry such notes were so executed. At the time of advancing the $2500 referred to above, plaintiff took a note for that amount bearing ten per cent interest and falling due November 1 after its date, which bore the following signatures: E. Jarvis (the plaintiff in this suit), W. B. Bounds, J. M. Peden, J. S. Davis, and M. P. Harwood. At the time of advancing the $1500 above mentioned, plaintiff took a note for that amount bearing ten per cent interest and due November 1 after its date, with the same signatures thereto as were attached to the said $2500 note, except the name of the plaintiff Jarvis. The plaintiff Jarvis intended to sign the $1500 note, but through neglect or oversight he did not do so.

The money furnished by plaintiff and evidenced by said notes was furnished on behalf of and for the benefit of the right of way committee, and it was contemplated and expected that said sums were to be repaid to plaintiff Jarvis out of collections made from time to time from subscriptions and contributions, and was not an ordinary loan to the signers of the notes. About August 17, 1905, all of the money that could be collected by contributions and other sources had been received, and on said date a complete statement of the account on the part of said committee with said funds so received and paid out by it, was made, and it was ascertained that appellee had been repaid of said $4000 the *378 sum of $1375.45, leaving due him by said signers of said contract and bond referred to, the sum of $2629.55. J. E. Clonch also signed said bond, but his name at his request was erased, and W. A. Putman limited his liability thereon to the sum of one hundred dollars. This limitation was not noted on the contract or bond at the time Putman signed the same, but was placed thereon by him the same day he signed the contract and within a few hours, perhaps, thereafter. At the time appellant J. Y. Matson signed the said contract or bond the name of J. E. Clonch appeared thereon as one of the obligors, but was afterwards erased without Matson’s knowledge or consent, at the time, of the erasure. J. S. Davis died and his widow, Myrtle Davis, was made a party to the suit. S. E. Boyd died insolvent and without making any payment, and the representative of his estate, if he left any, was not sued.

The case was tried before the court and a jury on March 10, 1909. Upon the conclusion of the evidence, it appearing that the defendants, Peden, Davis, Frisby, J ones, Jr., Harwood and Putman, had paid their proportional part of the amount sued for, the court instructed a verdict in their favor and also in Clonch’s favor, and submitted the case to the jury as to Matson, Carroll, Morgan and Bounds. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff Jarvis for $277.95 against each of these defendants, which amount was reduced by a remittur to $240.39 against each of the said defendants, and from the judgment entered in accordance with such remittitur they have appealed.

The first assignment of error complains of the court’s refusal to give the following requested special charge: “You are instructed that it appears from the undisputed evidence that after the right of way agreement, which is set out in plaintiff’s petition, was executed by J. Y. Matson, that there was a material change in the written instrument, in that the name of J. E. Clonch was erased from said instrument without the consent of the said Matson and without his knowledge. You are therefore instructed that as to the said J. Y. Matson the plaintiff has shown no right of recovery, and you will render a verdict in favor of the said J. Y. Matson.” There is evidence that J. E. Clonch’s name was signed to the contract or bond given to secure the right of way for the railway company as an obligor in said bond when Matson signed the bond, and that his name was afterwards erased therefrom without the knowledge or consent of Matson at the time. 'To this effect was the positive testimony of Matson.

How, the general rule is that a wilful and material alteration of a written instrument made by one of the parties to it after execution, and without the authority or consent of another party to it, will avoid such instrument as to the non-consenting party. Texas Printing & Lithographing Co. v. Smith, 14 S. W., 1074; Harper v. Stroud, 41 Texas, 367; First Nat. Bank v. Pritchard, 2 Texas Ct. App., Civ. Cas., sec. 130; Wilbarger Co. v. Bean, 3 Texas Ct. App., Civ. Cas., sec. 16. It is also a general rule that any change in the personality, number or relations of the parties to a contract in writing, is a material alteration. 2 Daniel on Heg. Inst., sec. 1387; Harper v. Stroud, supra; Parker v. *379 Glover, 23 Texas, 469. And the erasure of the name of one of two or more obligors in a contract, or makers or drawers or payees of a bill or note who have endorsed the paper, or one of several co-sureties, is likewise a' material alteration. There are authorities, however, to the effect, that a material alteration of the instrument, made by one of the parties thereto before its delivery, vitiates the instrument or renders it non-enforceable against the party not consenting to such alteration. But that an interlineation, erasure or other material alteration in a written contract, can not, as a general rule, affect its validity unless the alteration was made after execution and delivery is sustained by the decisions of many of the higher courts of the United States and generally, it seems, by the weight of authority.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 941, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matson-v-jarvis-texapp-1910.