McPherson v. C. W. Hahl Co.

151 S.W. 323, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 662
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 7, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 151 S.W. 323 (McPherson v. C. W. Hahl 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
McPherson v. C. W. Hahl Co., 151 S.W. 323, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 662 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

This is an action for the recovery of $2,000 deposited in escrow with the Houston National Bank, and is the second appeal; Judge Reese’s opinion upon the previous appeal being reported in 133 S. W. at page 515, where a full and complete statement of the case is made, and we will therefore not restate the same further than as may be rendered necessary by an amendment to plaintiff’s petition filed subsequent to the former appeal. As we construe Judge Reese’s opinion, he held that, under the state of pleadings' and such of the evidence as could properly be considered a part of the statement of facts, the trial court erred in holding the agreement of date February 23, 1909, did not require the extension agreement called for therein to be binding upon any one other than 1-Iahl & Co. and upon the owner of the land, W. J. Candlish. The court did not hold the clause of the contract, the meaning and scope of which was in issue, to be unambiguous, but emphasizes the fact that there were no allegations in the petition that the terms in the agreement,, “in the full exercise and enjoyment of the contract and its terms,” bore other than the ordinary signification, or that they were understood by the parties in any other sense, or that by mutual mistake the contract failed to express the meaning and intention of the parties, and they further state, “if there was anything in the circumstances under which this contract was executed to indicate that the parties understood this contract to bind Hahl & Co. to get such an instrument as would protect appellee against these liens, it is not alleged in the petition nor shown by the evidence, which shows only the existence and assertion, in a pending suit, of the vendor’s lien and right to rescind and recover the land; all of the other liens having been discharged. It may be that the evidence which the court evidently made the basis of its findings, and which appellee in his brief relies upon to support them, would put a different view upon the matter; but we are precluded, we think, as stated in limine, from going into this evidence.”

The amendment to the plaintiff’s petition, upon which it was last tried, contains the following allegations: “That at the time this contract was executed, neither plaintiff nor his attorneys knew with any accuracy the state of the title to these lands; they had never seen an abstract of the title, and the only information they had with reference thereto was from rumor and from statements made by defendants; that the defend-' ant C. W. Hahl represented that, on the day following the execution of the supplemental agreement heretofore copied in this pleading, he was going to consummate a transaction that would enable him to place the lands in plaintiff’s hands for sale, free from any imperfection as to title, and that the title would be in good and satisfactory condition, and that the extension of the contract which he was to procure under this supplemental agreement would be sufficient to protect the plaintiff and his associates in the full exercise and enjoyment of the contract in all its terms. By this expression it was meant and understood that the defendants would procure an extension of the contract, binding upon the owners of the superior title to the land, whoever they might be, or would *324 exhibit releases of any liens or incumbranc-es that might be menacing sale or foreclosure of the land, and it was especially understood that the defendants were to procure the concurrence of certain clients of Messrs. Cocke & Cocke, attorneys of San Antonio, who held certain liens against the land, the names of these clients not being divulged to the plaintiff or his attorneys at the time of these negotiations, and since neither plaintiff nor his counsel was familiar with the details of the title or the nature and extent of the imperfection that existed in it, if any, or the nature and extent of the liens that might be' against the land and subjecting it to sale, these things were not enumerated or set out at length in the contract, but, under the assertions of the defendants that all of the objections to the title would be obviated in such way that the sales could go forward without interruption, and that plaintiff and his associates could make sales and deliveries of the land free from objections on account of the title, it was written in the contract of the 23d of February, 1910, that this extension agreement to be procured would be sufficient to fully extend the original contract and protect the said McPherson and Prudential Land Company in the full exercise and enjoyment of the contract and its full terms, which meant, and was so understood by the parties thereto to mean, that defendants were then entering into various negotiations and arrangements, the full nature of which were not disclosed to plaintiff or his counsel, and the names of the parties with whom had were not disclosed to the plaintiff or his counsel, but that, under these arrangements then going forward and in process of early completion, the title to the lands would not only be left in good condition and be made acceptable to plaintiff and his counsel and any purchaser that plaintiff might have for the lands, but the title to the land would be in fact made good and merchantable.”

As we construe the opinion of Judge Reese and, as heretofore stated, the Galveston court did not hold the clause “in the full exercise and the enjoyment of the original contract and its terms” was unambiguous, but upon the contrary we think they clearly intimate that, under proper allegations supported by proper proof, it was a question of fact whether or not this clause would have required Hahl & Co. to obtain from the holders of the vendor’s lien and other superior liens agreements whereby plaintiff, McPherson, would have been fully protected in the exercise of the original contract and its terms, and under the paragraph of the plaintiff’s petition above quoted, we think it was permissible to show these facts; the language quoted being ambiguous.

Upon trial before a jury, the court- gave a peremptory instruction in favor of Hahl & Co., and the material question involved upon this appeal is whether or not an issue is raised by the testimony as to what was understood and meant by the parties 'by the clause above quoted, the meaning of which is in dispute. The nearest approach to any testimony showing "that it was contemplated by the parties that this clause was intended to require Hahl & Co. to obtain proper agreements from the lienholders is that of the witness Thos. P. Fenlon of Kansas City, attorney for McPherson, and of Mr. Wharton, likewise Mr. McPherson’s attorney, who drew the agreement sued upon, and the testimony of Mr. Cocke of San Antonio, an attorney for one of the lienholders.

Mr. Fenlon testified as follows: “Hahl represented to Mr. Wharton and myself, at the time this supplemental contract was drawn in Mr. Wharton’s office, that he was perfecting an arrangement by which all liens would be lifted from this land before March 5,1909, and stated that he was going to San Antonio on the night of the 23d of February, 1909, the date upon which this supplemental contract was signed, for the purpose of negotiating a deal which would leave the land entirely free and enable him to procure us the extension called for in this supplemental contract referred to. Mr. Hahl was told by both Mr. Wharton and myself that unless he had these liens extinguished, or procured an agreement from the holders of these liens, and especially from the .holders of the superior title, that the extension of.

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Hahl v. McPherson
176 S.W. 804 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1915)

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W. 323, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcpherson-v-c-w-hahl-co-texapp-1912.