Obets Harris v. Speed

211 S.W. 316, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 520
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 10, 1919
DocketNo. 998.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 316 (Obets Harris v. Speed) 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
Obets Harris v. Speed, 211 S.W. 316, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 520 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

Appellee, Speed, by written contract leased to appellants Obets and Harris an irrigated farm for five years from January 1, 1918. To cover the rental appellants gave five notes, payable, respectively, on January 1, 1919, 1920,1921, 1922, and 1923. It was provided that the lease should become void upon failure to pay any of the notes as they matured. Speed agreed to complete the clearing of a portion of the land, to put in two headgates in the main ditch, and to furnish all’ necessary water to irrigate the land for farming. Appellants agreed to complete the clearing of the remainder of the land, to' place all necessary laterals for irrigation, and to place the land in good state of *317 cultivation. Other provisions of the contract are not material to a consideration of this appeal.

On January 14, 1919, Speed procured the issuance of a distress warrant which was levied upon certain property upon the premises. The warrant and citation issued by the justice was made returnable to the district court. Thereafter Speed filed his petition in the district court, declaring upon the note due January 1, 1919, and sought judgment thereon with foreclosure of the landlord’s lien upon the property seized under the distress warrant.

Appellants answered, setting up a breach upon, the part of Speed of his obligation to put in the two headgates in the main ditch and to furnish water for the irrigation of the land as he had agreed to do, and reconvened for damages; further alleged that in December, 1918, Speed agreed to extend until February 1, 1919, the rent note which matured on January 1,1919, and agreed not to distrain 1 or otherwise attempt to enforce the collection of said note until February 1, 1919. *

In February, 1919, the cause was tried and submitted to a jury upon special- issues, and the following facts found:

That Speed had not furnished all the necessary water to irrigate the land for farming purposes during the year 1918, and did not put in the necessary headgates on the main canal in the manner and time they should have been put in, in order to allow the required water to flow from the main canal onto the premises; that appellants had suffered loss by reason of Speed’s failure to furnish the necessary water, and that his failure to put in the required headkate caused, or contributed to cause, loss to appellants’ crops on account of the lack of necessary water; that .appellants put in the necessary laterals to properly distribute the water on the premises from the main canal; that appellants had properly prepared, planted, cultivated, and harvested the 'various crops which they attempted to grow on the premises, and that the net loss of the appellants, by reason of Speed’s failure to furnish the necessary water to the vatious crops, amounted in the aggregate to the sum of $1,500; that Speed agreed with appellants, some time in the latter part of December, 1918, or at some other time prior to the levy of the distress warrant, to extend the payment of the first $1,200 rent note until February 1, 1919, and that prior to February 1, 1919, appellants had the money available to pay said note; that appellants would, if Speed had accepted it and agreed to permit them to continue their lease, have paid the said note with the accrued interest thereon on or before February 1, 1919; that appellants constructed proper laterals to irrigate the land in question, and had constructed the same in time to have watered the land and in time to have used the water in the canal previous to the time the headgate was put in.

Other issues of fact in this case raised by Speed were determined against him by the jury, but it is not necessary to detail same. Upon the findings of the jury the court in that ease (which was No. 2502) entered judgment that Speed take nothing by his suit, and that upon their cross-action, appellants have judgment against Speed for the sum of $180, being the difference between the amount of their damages established by the finding of the jury and the amount due upon the rent note with accrued interest sued upon by Speed. The record here before us discloses that an appeal was taken by Speed from the judgment rendered in that case, and is now pending in this court. On February 17, 1919, appellants presented their petition in the present suit to the district judge in chambers, setting up the rent contract; that they had entered into possession of the premises, planted crops thereon, and otherwise discharged their obligation under the contract, that the defendant had failed to furnish water; that they had been damaged, setting up the judgment rendered in the other suit above mentioned; that about January 5, 1919, Speed had gone into possession of the premises, and had attempted to forfeit the lease, and had forcibly taken possession, and making other allegations not necessary to here detail. A temporary injunction was sought, requiring Speed to deliver up possession of the premises to appellants, together with all of their property thereon, and to allow them to peaceably go into possession, and peaceably work and cultivate same, and to restrain and enjoin Speed from interfering with their possession, working and cultivating the premises.

A writ of injunction was ordered issued as prayed for. Thereafter Speed filed a motion to dissolve the injunction, which was heard by the court in vacation, and the court, having heard the motion upon the petition, answer, evidence, and affidavits, dissolved the injunction, and from the order of dissolution, appellants prosecute this appeal.

[1] There is no statement of facts in the record, but the transcript contains the affidavits presented upon the hearing which have been filed under order of the court. Attached to the petition for injunction and made part thereof is the lease contract and a certified copy of the judgment rendered in the other suit, which judgment contains the special issues submitted to the jury in that case, with the jury’s answer thereto. Incorporated in the transcript is also the petition filed by Speed in the other suit and appellant’s answer and cross-action.

Opinion.

We have been very greatly hampered in the consideration of this appeal by the failure of appellants to bring up a statement of facts. The court’s order of dissolution discloses that the motion was heard on the petition, answer, *318 evidence, and affidavits. All affidavits were filed under the order of the court, and may properly be considered by us; likewise the petition and answer with the exhibits attached. But we have no information as to any other “evidence” which may have been heard and considered by the court. In this state of the record the order of dissolution must be affirmed, unless the facts shown by the petition and motion to dissolve disclose the order to be erroneous. The motion to dissolve is very lengthy, and we will not undertake to detail all of its allegations. Many of the allegations are denials of facts which have been decided against appellee by a jury, as shown by the verdict and judgment rendered against him in cause No. 2502. The only right he could have to forfeit and repossess himself of the premises would be for nonpayment of the rent note maturing January 1, 1919. The findings of the jury and judgment in cause No.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W. 316, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obets-harris-v-speed-texapp-1919.