Oliver v. Chapman

15 Tex. 400
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 15 Tex. 400 (Oliver v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Chapman, 15 Tex. 400 (Tex. 1855).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

No doubt is entertained of the right of a defendant to except to the petition for insufficiency in substance, as well after as before answering to the merits. Regularly, issues of law should precede in their order upon the record, those of fact; and so it has been repeatedly ruled. But there is no decision of this Court, which holds that exceptions going to the substance of the petition may not be entertained by the Court, after an answer to the merits. The contrary has been expressly decided. (Fowler v. Stoneum, 11 Tex. R. 478 ; Watson v. Loop, 12 Id. 11.) It has also been decided that, where exceptions were not well taken, so that, if entertained, they must have been overruled, the refusal to entertain them will afford no ground for reversing the judgment. (Hubbell v. Lord, 9 Tex. R. 472.) The question therefore is, whether the exceptions were well taken, and, if considered, should have been sustained. And we are of opinion they were not well taken, or maintainable in point of law; and, consequently, that the defendant sustained no injury by reason of this refusal of the Court to entertain them; that the striking them out, instead of overruling them, as the Court should have done, was a mere irregularity in practice, which affords no ground for reversing the judgment.

The petition seeks to set aside and annul certain deeds of conveyance from the plaintiff to the defendant, and to recover [403]*403back the property conveyed, on the ground that they were fraudulently obtained; and it sets out the circumstances in which the fraud consisted, with all the specialty and certainty, it is believed, which has ever been required in practice in such cases. The plaintiff’s feebleness of body and imbecility of' mind; the confidential relations subsisting between the parties ; the absence of any consideration ; the motives, inducements and false promises held out by the defendant to overreach the plaintiff, and obtain an unjust and unconscientious advantage over Mm, and induce him to make the conveyance, in the embarrassed state of his affairs, and his enfeebled condition of body and mind, are facts, particularly and specially averred as constituting the fraud; and we think the averments must be held amply sufficient to enable the plaintiff to maintain the action on the substantial ground of fraud. Though, in our. pleadings, specialty and certainty to every reasonable intent, so as to exclude all reasonable doubt as to the real grounds on which the party intends to base his right, is requiredyet, this doctrine has not been carried to such a length as to require the statement of all those minute circumstances which are but evidence of the right. On the contrary, it is held, that, if the facts relied on be pleaded, the evidence of such facts may be submitted to the jury, though not specially developed in the pleading, by a detail of all the attendant circumstances. (Wells v. Fairbank, 5 Tex. R. 582.) Such, too, is the rule in Courts of Chancery. Thus, while it is laid down, that every material fact, to which the plaintiff means to offer evidence, must be distinctly stated, to enable him to offer evidence of such fact, it is added: “ A general charge or state- “ ment, however, of the matter of fact is sufficient; and it is “ not necessary to charge minutely all the circumstances which “ may conduce to prove the general charge; for these cixcuna- “ stances are properly matters of evidence, which need not be “ charged in order to let them in as proof. Thus, under a bill to set aside an award, for fraud and partiality, a general [404]*404fl charge of the fraud or partiality will authorize the plaintiff to “ give evidence of circumstances tending to establish it, although those circumstances are not charged in the bill.” (Story’s Eq. Pl. Sec. 28.) “ If a bill is brought to set aside “ an award, bond, or deed, for fraud, imposition, partiality, or “ undue practice ; it is not necessary in the .bill to charge min- “ utely every particular circumstance; for that is matter of “ evidence, every part of which need not be charged.” (Story Eq. Pl. Sec. 252.) It will be found that the rules which have been adopted in our Courts are essentially the same, and are founded on the same reasons, as those which obtain in both Courts of Common Law and Courts of Chancery, as to the manner of stating facts in pleading. (Wells v. Fairbank, 5 Tex. R. 585.) They are rules of practical convenience and common sense, which must prevail alike in every well digested and rational system of pleadings. Tested by them, we think the present petition quite sufficient, in point of certainty and specialty.

As respects the objection that it is not directly averred that the plaintiffs alleged feebleness of body and mind existed on the very day on which the deeds were executed, the 7th day of August, although it is not expressly and directly so averred, yet we think it certainly and conclusively appears by the averment that such was the case. If “ for some time anterior to the 7th day of August last (1850) and up to within a few days past,” referring to the time of pleading, (the 10th day of September when the petition was sworn to,) such was the state of body and mind of the plaintiff, it is, at least, morally, if not demonstratively certain that it was so on that particular day. That day was evidently mentioned in that connection, for the purpose of fixing that as the day on which the fact alleged existed. The only possible ground of raising a doubt as to the certainty of its existence on that day is the expression “ a few days past.” And when a certain day is thus named in contradistinction to a few days past, it cannot be supposed that those [405]*405“ few days past” extended back to that period. It would have been better, to prevent the possibility of cavil, to have averred expressly its existence on that very day. But, by the rules which have been applied by this Court to test the sufficiency of pleading, we think the averment could not be held bad for uncertainty as to the time to which it referred, in any civil case, unless it were in a plea in abatement, where certainty to “ a certain intent in every particular ” is required; and the practice of this Court would scarcely warrant the application of so severe a rule of construction, even in that case. There can be no doubt, we think, that the defendant was apprised by the averment, that it was intended to give evidence to prove the existence of the fact, on that very day and that is all that is proposed by pleading.

Again, as to the admissibility of evidence to support the averments in the petition; it is a rule of evidence, which has been expressly recognized by this Court, that “ any fact may be submitted to a jury, provided it can be established by competent means, which affords any fair presumption, or in- “ ference as to the question in dispute.” (Id. 584.) We therefore think the petition was sufficient and the evidence properly admitted to prove the truth of its averments. It was no objection to the admissibility of the evidence that all the circumstances by which it was proposed to prove the allegations of matters of fact, were not stated minutely and at length in the petition. That would require a degree of prolixity and tediousness of detail in pleading, which would be intolerable ; and would tend to the imminent danger, if it did not superinduce the certainty, of variance between the allegations and the proof in almost every case. Such certainty in pleading has never been required; but needless prolixity has been justly deprecated and characterized as an abuse, whenever it has attracted judicial observation.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Tex. 400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-chapman-tex-1855.