Nawas v. Holmes

541 S.W.2d 283, 20 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 133, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3148
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 9, 1976
Docket5581
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 541 S.W.2d 283 (Nawas v. Holmes) 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
Nawas v. Holmes, 541 S.W.2d 283, 20 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 133, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3148 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

*284 OPINION

JAMES, Justice.

This is a suit on a note by the payee against the maker. The central question before us is whether there was a conditional delivery of the note by the maker to the payee for a special purpose. Based upon a jury verdict, the trial court held that there was a conditional delivery for a special purpose. We affirm.

Plaintiff-Appellant Yousef S. Nawas brought this suit against Defendant-Appel-lee Richard Joseph Holmes for Holmes’s alleged failure to pay a $67,000.00 note made by Holmes individually payable to Nawas individually. Trial was had to a jury, which found:

(1) That Holmes delivered the note in question to Nawas upon the condition that if the indebtedness reflected in the December 1968 statement of Nawas to Holmes and Sons Tours, Inc. was not paid, (a $66,-820.00 debt) that the note would secure the payment;

(2) That the indebtedness which was related to the note in question was paid in full; and

(4) That Nawas is not indebted to Holmes and Sons Tours, Inc., on the account existing between them.

Pursuant to the jury verdict the trial court entered judgment that Nawas take nothing against Holmes, and that Holmes take nothing against Nawas, from which Nawas appeals.

Appellant asserts error of the trial court in “admitting parol evidence of an agreement which tended to vary the terms of a written promissory note;” in “admitting parol evidence of payment of the note by a third party pursuant to an agreement which was inadmissible,” and further contends that there is no evidence to support the jury’s answers to Special Issues Nos. 1 and 2 hereinabove. We overrule all of Appellant’s points and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Nawas was a resident and citizen of Beirut, Lebanon, and had been in the travel industry since 1949, and at the time of trial was the sole owner of Nawas Tourist Agency which operated twenty offices throughout the world, including three in the United States. Holmes was working for Alitalia Airlines in Lebanon when he met Nawas and later approached Nawas with a proposal that Nawas help underwrite Holmes’s starting a travel agency in Dallas, Texas. Nawas advanced $25,000.00 to Holmes for the venture with the understanding that $9,000.00 was for 30% stock ownership in the company and $16,000.00 was a loan; he did not receive a note for this amount. Holmes put up $5,000.00 and was 70% owner of the company’s stock. The company’s name was Holmes and Sons Tours, Inc., it was headquartered in Dallas, Texas, and business operations commenced in 1968. At the end of the first year of operation, Holmes and Sons Tours, Inc., (hereinafter called “Holmes Agency”) was indebted to Nawas in the sum of $66,820.00. The debt came about primarily through business dealings wherein the Holmes Agency sent tour groups to the Mediterranean and Middle East areas, and Nawas arranged and paid for the hotel and other accommodations for such groups. Holmes said the $66,820.00 debt was caused by undercapital-ization of the company and the Nawas Agency’s increasing prices of services supplied to Holmes’s customers after the Holmes Agency had made firm commitments; whereas Nawas contended the debt was caused by bad management on Holmes’s part. At any rate, at the end of the 1968 tour season, the Holmes Agency owed Nawas $66,820.00.

Holmes’s business required that he travel a great deal. Holmes testified he was afraid that if he were killed in an airplane crash, Nawas would have no way of recovering the money owed to him by the Holmes Agency, so he (Holmes) took out a term life insurance policy on his life. He was advised that since Nawas was not a citizen of the United States, that Nawas could not be made the beneficiary, so he made his wife, Mrs. Patricia Holmes, the beneficiary, and made the note in question to Nawas which would allow him to collect *285 the money in the event of his (Holmes’s) death at a time when the note could not be paid by the Holmes Agency. Holmes testified that the note was blank, that is, a blank promissory note form, when he signed it and that Nawas filled it in later. Nawas denied that it was blank when Holmes signed it. Be that as it may, the note sued upon is shown to be in the principal amount of $67,000.00, dated March 15, 1969, payable on demand, with the rate of interest and place of payment left blank; is payable to Yousef S. Nawas and signed by Richard Joseph Holmes. At the time the note was given, Holmes did not receive any additional consideration. Nawas testified that the note was given in connection with the first year’s indebtedness, and that no additional funds or any other consideration was given for the note, except the account indebtedness already incurred.

In May 1970, the Holmes Agency paid Nawas $60,000.00, and in June 1970, the Holmes Agency paid Nawas $30,000.00 on the account. Holmes’s testimony is that after these two payments the Holmes Agency had overpaid Nawas by $5573.00, and that the Holmes Agency was at that time in a credit situation. In other words, according to Holmes’s testimony the $66,-820.00 indebtedness, which was the occasion for the note, had as of June 25, 1970, been paid.

Further charges were incurred in 1970 by the Holmes Agency with Nawas, which Holmes testified were made after the account had been paid as of the June 25, 1970 payment of $30,000.00; however, these charges to the Holmes Agency were more than offset by payments and other credits, so that at the time the Holmes Agency ceased doing business, the account to Na-was was overpaid by $9835.00. Defendant’s Exhibit No. 7 was a statement of accounts for the Holmes Agency with Nawas Tourist Agency, which showed total charges against the Holmes Agency of $479,293.00, total credits in favor of the Holmes Agency of $489,127.00, and a balance in favor of the Holmes Agency of $9835.00.

The Defendant specially pleaded that the note in question was delivered to Nawas as a guaranty only of the payment of the indebtedness incurred by the Holmes Agency, and further pleaded payment of the note. As stated, the jury found that the note was delivered to Nawas upon the condition that if the indebtedness reflected in the December 1968 statement of Nawas to the Holmes Agency (the $66,820.00 indebtedness) was not paid, the note would secure payment, and that said indebtedness was paid in full.

Article 3.306 of the Business and Commerce Code of Texas provides, insofar as it pertains to the case at bar, as follows:

“Unless he has the rights of a holder in due course any person takes the instrument subject to
(3) the defenses of . delivery for a special purpose.”

Parol evidence is admissible in a suit between the original parties (as in the case at bar) to show a conditional delivery of the note for a special purpose, and proof of such conditional delivery constitutes a valid defense in law. Article 3.306, Business and Commerce Code of Texas; Williams v. Jones (Tex.Com.App.1932) 122 Tex.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
541 S.W.2d 283, 20 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 133, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nawas-v-holmes-texapp-1976.