Nassos v. Duke

241 S.W. 547, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 867
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 10, 1922
DocketNo. 1965.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 241 S.W. 547 (Nassos v. Duke) 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
Nassos v. Duke, 241 S.W. 547, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 867 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

BOTCH, J.

Pete Nassos, Tom Zikas, Steve Pullman, Demeterios Caulfaliotis, and Sera-phim Gioldasis, who will he hereinafter referred to as Nassos & Co., brought this »"uit against N. I. Duke and Paul and John Snir-meos, who will be later called N. I. Duke & Co., and Charles Yeros, to enjoin the maintenance of a restaurant business in' a building at 507 Eighth street, in the city of Wichita Falls, and for damages caused by the conduct of such business at such place. The basis of the cause of action generally stated was that Nassos & Co. had bought a restaurant business of Duke & Co., located at 509 Eighth street, and that Duke & Co. as part of the consideration for said sale agreed not to allow a similar business to be conducted at 507 Eighth street. The plaintiffs alleged that John Snirmeos and Charles Yeros, after the agreement aforesaid, and in violation thereof, began running a restaurant business at said 507 Eighth street, to plaintiff’s great damage. Charles Veros denied that he was in any way a party to the agreement. The defendants John and Paul Snirmeos denied the execution by them or any one acting with authority from them of any agreement prohibiting the maintenance of a restaurant business at 507 Eighth street, and alleged that, if N. I. Duke made such an agreement, it was without their authority. John Snir-meos, by way of cross-action, asked judgment against plaintiffs on three notes given by plaintiffs in part consideration for the sale of the business at 509 Eighth street.

A trial was had before the district judge, who found that N. I. Duke made the agreement alleged by plaintiff and was personally bound thereby^ but that he had no authority to bind the other members of the partnership of N. I. Duke & Co.; that this agreement had been violated, and the plaintiffs were damaged in the sum of “three notes (each for the principal sum of $1,000) and interest thereon” executed by plaintiffs, payable to N. I. Duke & Co., and held by N. I. Duke. These notes', together with three other notes, for $1,000 each, held by John Snir-meos,* represented the remaining unpaid purchase price of the restaurant purchased by plaintiffs. The judgment was that the three notes held by N. I. Duke, which had been produced in court, be canceled in satisfaction of plaintiffs’ damages, and that John Snirmeos recover of the plaintiffs the amount due on the three notes held by him. Nassos & Co. have appealed from this judgment, basing their specific propositions on two general grounds asserting error: (1) In the finding that all the members of the firm of N. I. Duke & Co. were not bound by the agreement providing against the maintenance of a restaurant business at 507 Eighth street; (2) in the assessment of the amount of damages, it being claimed that these are inadequate under the evidence.

The defendants N. I. Duke, John and Paul Snirmeos, and George Burras (who is not *548 joined in the suit because he was a nonresident) were, prior to December SO, 1919, conducting a restaurant business as partners at 509 Eighth street, in the city of Wichita Palis. They had a lease on the building in which the business was run for a term ending January 1, 1925, paying a rental of $400 monthly in advance. All the members of the firm had authorized N. X. Duke to sell such business, including in the sale a transfer of the lease on the building. On December 30, 1919, this business was sold to Nassos & Oo. N. X. Duke conducted the negotiations, though all of the parties signed the bill of sale which conveyed the personal property. This bill of sale contained an agreement to transfer the lease on the building. N. I. Duke alone executed the following transfer, indorsed on the lease contract:

“For and in consideration of the sum of $1,-250.00 to be paid N. I. Duke & Oo. January 1, 1920, by Pete Nassos & Co., this lease is this day transferred and assigned to Pete Nas-sos & Co. They assume all obligations of the above lease and become sublessors of N. I. Duke & Co. and faithfully guarantee all of the conditions in the within lease. It is distinctly agreed and understood by N. I. Duke & Co. will not use the joining building, which lease is held by N. I. Duke and Charles Yeros,' the joining building known as 507 Eighth street, as a restaurant. [Signed] N. I. Duke.”

■ The total consideration paid N. X. Duke & Co. by Nassos & Co. was $21,000. At the time of the trial N. I. Duke and JolurSnir-meos each held three notes for $1,000 each, executed by Pete Nassos, and being the balance of the $21,000 then remaining unpaid. The evidence sustains the finding of the trial court that Duke’s partners knew nothing of the agreement prohibiting the conduct of a restaurant business at ‘507 Eighth street, though the evidence as to such matter is eon-.flicting. None of the members of the firm of N. I. Duke & Co., except N. I. Duke, had any interest in the lease on the building at No. 507 Eighth street; this lease being owned, as stated in the transfer, by N. I. Duke and Charles Veros. In May, 1920, Charles Veros began conducting a restaurant business in said building. The location of these restaurants was desirable for securing the transient trade, and it was plaintiffs’ contention that the opening of the business at 507 Eighth street greatly reduced their business. Plaintiffs’ books showed that the receipts of their business were in March, 1920, $14,313.-60; in April, $13,671.60; in May, $13,311.90; in June, $8,755.45; in Jhly, $8,134.76; in August, $8,464.05; in September, $7,694.85; in October, $8,509.10; in November, $7,769.-85; in December, $7,478.38. It was their contention that this decrease in business was caused by the competition at No. 507 Eighth street. They offered evidence to show that about 45 per cent, of this decrease in the business would have been profits. The plaintiff Nassos testified that the difference in value of the business at 509 Eighth street with and without the competitive business at 507 Eighth street was from $15,000 to $16,000. The defendants offered evidence to the effect that there was another restaurant between plaintiffs’ business and the depot; that there was a marked falling off in business of all kinds at ‘Wichita Palls about the time that plaintiffs’ business showed such a radical decline; that the business of all other restaurants in the city féll off during such time from 50 to 75 por cent.; and that the restaurant at No. 507 catered to a different class of patronage from that which plaintiffs had and would have little effect on plaintiffs’ business. The trial judge announced this conclusion as to the damages:

“I find that the plaintiffs have been damaged by reason of the restaurant being put in at 507 Eighth street by Oharjes Veros in the sum of the three notes and interest due thereon as held by N. I. Duke, one of the defendants herein, and that the plaintiffs are entitled to have said notes canceled in settlement of said damage. In connection with the damages herein found I find that during^the spring and summer of 1920 there was a general depreciation in the restaurant business in the city of Wichita Palls, and that plaintiffs’ business was affected by the general conditions in the falling off of transient business and travel and the opening of other restaurant business and the general decline of patronage from the public of restaurants in general, ail of which was not caused by the defendant putting in the restaurant adjoining plaintiffs’ business, but due to the general conditions, which matters have been taken into consideration in fixing the amount of damages.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 S.W. 547, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nassos-v-duke-texapp-1922.