Nimmo v. O'Keeff

204 S.W. 883, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 717
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 25, 1918
DocketNo. 8885.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 883 (Nimmo v. O'Keeff) 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
Nimmo v. O'Keeff, 204 S.W. 883, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 717 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

*884 BUCK, J.

C. A. O’Keefe brought this suit in the district court of Tarrant county against the defendant, Charles Nimmo, to cancel a certain lease contract theretofore made and entered into between plaintiff and defendant, alleging that defendant made false and fraudulent representations to plaintiff, which induced the latter to execute the lease in controversy; the alleged fraudulent representations being that defendant, in order to induce plaintiff to enter into the contract, stated that he (defendant) was already the tenant occupying the promises’ on which he desired a lease, but that he wanted a lease for a period of two years and was willing to pay plaintiff the additional amount of $2.50 more per month for such lease contract. Plaintiff alleged that defendant was not his tenant, and such statement that he was was false and fraudulently made for the purpose of obtaining the lease, and that, had he (plaintiff) known the truth, he would not have accepted defendant as a tenant and made the lease contract, but that he relied upon said false statement, and representation, and was deceived thereby, and executed the lease upon the premises. Plaintiff further alleged that good solvent tenants were hard to obtain, and that he was satisfied with the tenants then occupying and holding the premises. He further alleged that defendant was molesting the tenants then in possession and was seeking to oust them from said possession, claiming to be entitled to the possession, and “that should the defendant, by his false threats or any other means, dispossess said tenants, he will cause irreparable injury to the plaintiff, for the reason that it is difficult to secure desirable solvent tenants who will take proper care of the premises and pay the rents promptly and perform other obligations required of the tenants; and it is therefore uncertain when the plaintiff could secure any other tenants who would be satisfactory to him.” The petition concluded with a prayer for a writ of Injunction enjoining the defendant from molesting or attempting to dispossess the said tenant, and for a decree canceling the lease. The court granted the injunction upon the representation of the application, amd upon a hearing on the merits the case was tried before a jury on special issues. A verdict having been rendered favorable to plaintiff, judgment was rendered for plaintiff canceling the leaste and perpetuating the injunction. The defendant has appealed.

[1] Appellant's first assignment complains of the action of the court in overruling his general demurrer to plaintiff’s petition. It is urged that the representations alleged by plaintiff to have been made by defendant, and which were alleged to be false and fraudulent, are not upon a material issue; that the petition fails to show that injury would result to plaintiff if the writ of injunction should not be granted. • Appellant cites 9 Corpus Juris, 1235, § 151, as authority to sustain his contention that the petition is bad as against a general demurrer. In treating of “Cancellation of Instruments” there, the text uses the following language:

“The bill of complaint should show that the misrepresentations made were material, and that complainant believed that the misrepresentations made by defendant were true and acted in reliance thereon. The rule in such case is that a misrepresentation in order to affect the validity of a contract must relate to some matter of inducement to the making of the contract in which from the relative positions of the parties and their means of information the one must necessarily be presumed to contract on the faith and trust which he reposes in the representations of the other on the subject of the contract. A i bill which shows that before the execution of the instrument sought to be rescinded plaintiff was in any manner informed of the falsity of defendant’s representations is without equity.”

In section 152, p. 1236, o-f the same work, it is said:

“It is also essential that the bill of complaint should show that injury has resulted to complainant from the misrepresentations. However, it would seem that the precise amount of damages sustained need not be alleged, as is necessary in an action for deceit.”

The evidence suggests: That the plaintiff was the owner of a number of rent houses and buildings in the city of Ft. Worth, and that the collection of his rents had been intrusted to an agent, and that he did not in many instances know who his tenants were. That F. O. Burge had been for some time prior to the transaction in question the agent who looked after the renting of plaintiff’s property and the collection of the rents, but that shortly prior thereto Burge had given up his position as agent, and had recommended a Mrs. Stewart to take charge of this agency for the plaintiff, and that plaintiff had accepted Mrs. Stewart as his agent for said purpose. That some time during September, 1915, the defendant and F. O. Burge called at the home of plaintiff for the purpose of securing for defendant a lease contract for two years on certain property at 102 West Exchange Avenue. During this conversation, Burge, who it appears was spokesman for defendant, stated to plaintiff that he had come with defendant in order to secure the lease; that he had promised defendant that, before he would give up the rental agency and turn the same over to Mrs. Stewart, he would let defendant have the building in question; but that he had put it off from some cause or other from time to time and had not made a contract of lease with defendant at the time he ceased to handle plaintiff’s business. The defendant had been a good tenant, and had been renting from month to month, but that defendant wanted to put some improvements on the place and was willing to pay an increased rental of $2.59 per month; the rent for the premises theretofore being $35 a month. That in order to secure said two years’ contract he would place the improvements needed at his own expense and pay the increased *885 rental. Plaintiff informed Burge, in the presence of defendant, that he did not know defendant, did not know all the tenants that were in the building, but that if defendant was the regular tenant, and had been such tenant, he would make with him the desired contract, because he wanted to give the tenants in possession the refusal of the premises. Plaintiff testified that at this time Burge was not his agent, and that Burge did most of the talking; that Burge told him that defendant had been a good tenant and had paid the rent promptly; that he relied upon the representation that defendant was the tenant in possession. That he had been sick and in the hospital for a long while and that in many instances he did not know who his tenants were. That he told Burge to have Mrs. Stewart draw up the contract with ■defendant. This contract, offered in evidence by defendant, is signed by defendant and by Burge as agent for plaintiff. Plaintiff further testified that when he learned the next day that defendant was not in fact the tenant in possession of the premises sought to be leased, but that other parties were in possession and using and occupying the same as tenants, and that these other parties desired to continue to occupy said premises, he at once saw Burge and defendant, and told them that they had misrepresented the facts to him, and that he wanted them to tear up the contract that he had had Mrs. Stewart to write and leave the tenant already occupying the building in charge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 883, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nimmo-v-okeeff-texapp-1918.