Millar v. Smith

67 S.W. 429, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 386, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 141
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 429 (Millar v. Smith) 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
Millar v. Smith, 67 S.W. 429, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 386, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 141 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

GILL, Associate Justice.

Appellee, E. B. Smith, brought this suit in the District Court of San Jacinto County to recover of A. M. *387 Millar, of Runnels County, damages for breach of contract-for the sale of cattle. It was alleged, in substance, that appellee in the year 1897 was engaged in raising and buying and selling cattle for profit. That on the 30th of January, 1897, he and the appellant entered into the following written contract:

“This agreement, made and entered into this 30th day of Janua 1897, by and between E. B. Smith, of Shepherd, Texas, and A. M. Millar, of Ballinger, Texas, witnesseth: That the said E. B. Smith in consideration of the agreements on the part of the said Millar, hereinafter named, agrees to and with the said Millar that on the lath day of next month he will deliver to the said Millar, f. o. b. cars on the Houston East & West Texas Railway, at Richardson’s Switch, the following property: Two hundred head of cattle or more, consisting of one and two-year-old heifers, cows, and cows and calves, at the following prices: One-year-old heifers at $6.75; two-year-old heifers at $7.75; cows at $10.75; cows and their calves at $14.
“The said Smith further agrees to and with the said Millar, that on the date of the first general delivery of cattle to be made by the people of Tarkington Prairie, Texas, he will deliver to the said Millar not less than 100 nor more than 500 head of cattle of same description as those hereinbefore mentioned; and the said Millar, in consideration of the aforesaid agreement and premises on the part of said Smith, hereby promises and agrees to and with the said E. B. Smith that he will pay to him at Shepherd, Texas, upon delivery of said cattle, the prices above named for all cattle delivered by said Smith under this contract.
“For the faithful performance of this contract, the said Smith, in order to complete and make the same binding upon his part, hereby agrees to deposit in the Commercial National Bank of Houston, Texas, his check certified by said bank for $1000, payable to the order of Millar as a forfeit. And the said Millar, for a like purpose, agrees to del posit in the above named bank his check certified to by the First National Bank of Ballinger, Texas, for $1000, payable to the order of said Smith; these checks to remain in the hands of said bank till this contract is completed. Upon the fulfillment of same, said checks are to be returned to the makers thereof when so advised jointly by said Smith and Millar. Should there be a failure on the part of either to comply with this contract, then the said bank is to deliver said checks to the party complying herewith, upon satisfactory proof that he is entitled to same.
“Witness our hands this 30th day of January, 1897, at Shepherd, Texas.
(Signed) “E. B. Smith,
“A. M. Millar.
“Witness: J. D. Langham, C. R. Miller.”

That in pursuance of the provisions of the contract the appellant gave to appellee his personal check on the First National Bank of Ballinger, *388 Texas, for $1000, payable on the -15th day of June of that year. That' appellee got ready and tendered to appellant 900 head of cattle on the delivery days named in the agreement, but the appellant failed and refused to receive them, whereby actual damages are alleged to have resulted in the sum of about $3000. That thereupon appellee presented to the Ballinger bank the check for payment. That payment was refused and the paper protested at a cost' of $3.50. He prays for the actual damages sustained or for $1000 as liquidated damages, as the court may determine.

■ Defendant answered'-on November 3, 1897, at the first term of the court after the institution of the suit: (1) By plea of privilege to be sued in Runnels County, the county of his residence. (2) After a general denial, it was averred that the contract, the alleged breach of which constitutes the basis of this suit, was never consummated and never became binding because the certified checks provided" for therein were never certified and placed in the bank at Houston as required by the contract.

Appellee answered the plea of privilege by supplemental petition, in which it is averred that if it should be held that the contract is not to be performed in San Jacinto County, nevertheless the appellant waived his plea by invoking the general jurisdiction of the court before action was had on the plea of privilege. Appellee further pleaded that the contract was complete in itself without reference to the provision for the certified checks, which were only intended to operate as a forfeit, and in case either party breached the contract to become a forfeit penal in its nature, and that in so far as the contract provided that the certified checks were to be deposited in order to make the contract complete and binding, etc., the provision was embodied in the writing by mistake, and was not the real agreement of the parties. That in truth and in fact the checks uncertified were drawn and exchanged at the time in satisfaction of that provision of the contract, upon the assurance of mutual friends that each party to the contract was solvent and that a personal check was as good as the money.

The court thereupon heard proof before a jury and instructed a verdict for appellee for $1000 and lawful interest from the date of the breach. From a judgment rendered upon this verdict defendant Millar prosecutes this appeal.

The undisputed facts are as follows: The contract in question was executed as alleged on the date indicated. Each party thereto thereupon gave to the other his personal check for $1000, payable on June 15, 1897. This was in lieu of the previous proposition to put up certified checks, the parties being assured that each was solvent. The check described in plaintiff’s pleading is the one given him by Millar. In pursuance of the terms of the contract Smith prepared for delivery and offered to deliver the cattle contracted for, and Millar refused to accept them.'

' Upon the question whether the provision in the contract that the *389 checks be put up to complete the contract and make .it binding was -inserted by mistake, the evidence may be said to be conflicting.

It was also made to appear without dispute that plaintiff had suffered damage in the sum of about $3000, but about $2500 of this is an item of such a nature as to render it very doubtful whether it should in any event be recovered. .

The principal matters complained of by the assignments presented in the brief are: (1) The failure of the trial court to sustain the plea of privilege. (2) The assumption by the trial court that the contract in question was consummated and binding. (3) The charge to the jury in which it is held to provide for damages in a liquidated sum; and (4) the refusal.of the court to grant the motion for new trial.

• The plea of privilege was based upon the contention that no written contract had been executed performable in the county of the forum. Inasmuch as the contract, if executed at all, fixed the venue in San Jacinto County, we will dispose of this and the second objection together.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 429, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 386, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millar-v-smith-texapp-1902.