Nowlin v. Frichott

32 S.W. 831, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 442, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 273
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 1895
DocketNo. 912.
StatusPublished

This text of 32 S.W. 831 (Nowlin v. Frichott) 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
Nowlin v. Frichott, 32 S.W. 831, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 442, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 273 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

FINLEY, Associate Justice.

Appellants, Lutie M. Nowlin and her husband, A. W. Nowlin, who were plaintiffs below, instituted this suit, in the County Court of Dallas County, Texas, on July 20, 1891, against the appellees, the American National Bank, Henrietta Frichott and Dorothea Nusbaumer, wherein they sought to recover of the American National Bank the sum of $500 deposited with it to the credit of Lutie M. Nowlin under the following written agreement:

“Dallas, Texas, November 4, 1885. We the undersigned, have this day deposited and do hereby deposit in the American National Bank in the city of Dallas, five hundred dollars to the credit of Mrs. Lutie M. Nowlin, to be paid to her or to W. L. Vaughan, her agent, or to any other duly authorized agent of hers whenever, and as soon as, the cloud upon the title of the Nowlin property is removed, said property being situated in the city of Dallas, Texas, at the corner of Boss Avenue and Lombard Street, the said cloud being caused by the levy of an execution issued out of the United States District Court at the city of Dallas on a judgment for one thousand dollars and costs, rendered in said court in favor of the United States and against John Pitts, A. W. Nowlin and Fred Guilin, said judgment rendered on 13th of June, 1884, and said execution levied, on said property on 7th of July, 1884, said five hundred dollars being part of the $1700 cash payment.
“Henrietta Frichott, Dorothea Nusbaumer.”

Appellants further alleged that said $500 was the balance of the purchase money for a certain lot of land situated in the city and county of Dallas, State of Texas, the separate property of Lutie M. Nowlin and homestead of appellants, conveyed by appellants to appellee Henrietta Frichott by deed dated November 4,1885, and deposited as aforesaid with the American National Bank, and that the appellees, Henrietta Frichott and Dorothea Nusbaumer, would not consent or permit the American National Bank to pay same to appellants, and appellants prayed judgment against the American National Bank for $500, and against Frichott and Nusbaumer for costs of suit.

The American National Bank, on August 18, 1891, filed its answer setting forth said memorandum of deposit, and alleged that plaintiffs and its co-defendants could not agree that the conditions of said memorandum had been complied with, and that it did not know that the conditions had been complied with, and tendered said $500 into court, and prayed to be protected by the judgment of the court.

Appellees, Henrietta Frichott and Dorothea Nusbaumer, filed their second amended original answer on September 5, 1893, wherein, besides general denial, they set up statute of two years limitation, and denied that said property was the’ separate property of Lutie M. Nowlin or the homestead of appellants, and denied that the cloud had been removed and did not exist. They also alleged that there was no written agree *444 ment whatever between plaintiffs and defendants concerning the subject matter of this'suit. That there was a verbal agreement made between plaintiffs and defendants during the pendency of the negotiations between them for the sale of the property, to the effect that these defendants should hold from plaintiffs $1000 until the cloud occasioned by the levy was removed, and that thereafter they deposited the $500 sued for and gave a negotiable note due six months after date for $500, which note was transferred before maturity, and which they had to pay at maturity, and that it was agreed that $1000 was to become the property of the defendants in the event that plaintiffs failed to comply with the terms of said agreement. This answer was not sworn to.

To said answer of Frichott and Nusbaumer, on January 8, 1894, appellants filed their first supplemental petition, in which they excepted generally and specially: First, to so much of said answer as alleged there was-no written agreement between plaintiffs and defendants. Second, to so much of said answer as attempted to set up a paroi agreement contemporaneous with or prior to said written agreement to vary, contradict or add to the terms of the written agreement, without alleging that said written agreement was entered into by mistake, ignorance or fraud. Third, to the damages set forth as not growing out of the subject matter of this suit; and answered that the levy mentioned in said written memorandum deposited with the bank constituted no lien because it failed to describe the property, and that same became functus officio on the second Monday in January, 1885, and was never revived; and that appellants conveyed to Henrietta Frichott the property on the 4th day of November, 1885, and the deed was filed for record in Dallas County, Texas, on said date, and that the United States levied an execution on June 1, 1887, and sold all the interest that said A. W. Nowlin had on that day to said property, and that the same was bought in by the Hnited States of America for $1000, which satisfied said judgment, and that the issuance of said second execution and a new levy thereunder was an abandonment of the levy of July 7, 1884; and that the defendant, Henrietta Frichott, on November 4, 1885, entered into possession and control and has been enjoying the uninterrupted and undisputed possession and use of said premises ever since, and is now in the possession and occupancy of same under a deed from plaintiffs to said defendant, of date November 4, 1885, and duly registered, and has been in the peaceable and adverse possession of said premises, claiming under said last named deed, and cultivating, using and enjoying the same and paying taxes thereon for more than five years, and that thereby said cloud upon the title had long since been removed and dissipated.

On January 9,1894, the case came on for trial, the special exceptions of plaintiffs’ supplemental petition were overruled and the cause tried with a jury, the jury rendering a verdict for Henrietta Frichott against the American National Bank for $500, and in favor of Henrietta Frichott against plaintiffs for $500, and for defendants Frichott and Nusbaumer *445 for costs of suit, and judgment was rendered accordingly, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

Opinion. — The first and second assignments of error challenge the correctness of the action of the court in overruling plaintiff’s first and second special exceptions to the answer of defendants Frichott and Nusbaumer. These exceptions were directed at the portion of the answer which set forth the facts under which the $500 was deposited in the bank to the credit of Lutie M. Nowlin. It is urged that the written document sued on, and which accompanied the deposit, sets forth the contract of the parties, and that its terms can not be varied by any antecedent or cotemporaneous verbal agreement. It is clear that the insrtument in writing does not undertake to state the terms of the contract under which this deposit was made. It merely sets forth the conditions upon which the bank is authorized to pay it over to Mrs. Nowlin, or her representative. This deposit and written instrument were mere incidents of the contract, and no rule of law was violated in allowing the entire contract, though verbal, to be alleged. Thomas v. Hammond, 47 Texas, 43; Preston v. Breedlove, 36 Texas, 96; Younger v. Welch, 22 Texas, 417; 1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 284a.

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Related

Younger v. Welch
22 Tex. 417 (Texas Supreme Court, 1858)
Preston v. Breedlove
36 Tex. 96 (Texas Supreme Court, 1872)
Haralson v. Langford
18 S.W. 339 (Texas Supreme Court, 1886)

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W. 831, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 442, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nowlin-v-frichott-texapp-1895.