O'Neil v. O'Neil

258 S.W. 588
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 12, 1924
DocketNo. 10470. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 588 (O'Neil v. O'Neil) 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
O'Neil v. O'Neil, 258 S.W. 588 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

Connor O’Neil sued his brother, John O’Neil, in the district court of Wichita county for certain commissions alleged to have been earned by the plaintiff in the sale of certain oil properties. • In his original petition he sued for a commission of 10 per cent, on the sale of the capital stock of the Burkburnett-O’Neil Oil Company, to the amount of $37,178, or a commission of $3,-717.80. He acknowledged the receipt of $1,-900 on this claim. He further claimed an agreed commission of $2,000 on the sale of the Taylor lease in the Hardin tract, Wichita county, and acknowledged payment of $1,-000 on this claim. He fuz'ther claimed $4,900 on the sale of what was known as the Hawkins lease, out of the Hardin tract, in the amount of $41,000, upon which he acknowledged payment of $1,500. He further claimed $10,000 commission on the sale of 2½ acres out of the northeast corner of blhck 74, Red River Valley lands in Wichita county. The fifth item in the petition was for $2,000 for finding a person who would drill a well on three pieces of property-belonging to the defendant, to wit, Burkburnett-O’Neil Oil Company, A. B. C. Oil Company, and No. One Oil Company, located in the Akers addition to the town of Burkburneitt. He claimed that he secured the Jane-Eouise Oil Company to drill said well, and that the defendant agreed to pay plaintiff $2,000 out of the first production obtained from said well so drilled, and that production had been obtained and had amounted to more than $5,000, and that the $2,000 promised the plaintiff was due and unpaid. In his prayer he asked for judgment for the sum of $20,267.48.

The defendant replied, in his first amended answer, by way of a general demurrer, certain special exceptions, and further pleaded *589 a settlement with the plaintiff in full, set out in his answer various amounts alleged to have been paid to the plaintiff, or for the plaintiff’s benefit, at various times, in September, October, and November, 1918, and that on December 9th thereafter he paid the plaintiff $1,188.31 in full satisfaction of all claims and demands, which payment was accepted by plaintiff as such full satisfaction. He

The plaintiff then filed what is styled his first supplemental petition, and in this he asked for $9,284.50 as commission on the ■Burkbumett-O’Neil Oil Company deal, and $3,255 as commission on the sale of the oil and gas lease on the Hardin tract to Mr. Slay and associates. He asked for $2,000 as commission on the sale of the 5 acres out of the Hardin tract to one Mrs. Taylor, and $4,900 on the sale of 10 acres out of the Hardin tract to Mr. Hawkins and associates. He further pleaded that defendant owed him $2,000 for securing a fifty-fifty drilling contract for the defendant from the Jane-Bouise Oil Company. He further claimed $15,000 as commission on the sale to R. A. King, for the benefit of the Utah-Colorado Oil Company, of a 2%-acre fifty-fifty drilling contract, and that the defendant had received $30,000 therefrom, and that plaintiff was entitled to $15,000. He further pleaded the appropriation by defendant of certain machinery belonging to plaintiff, of the alleged value of $1,053.66, and that defendant owed him for Liberty bonds delivered to the defendant in the amount of $5,035. Other items were mentioned making a grand total of $24,502.-90, for which suit was brought.

To this answer, the defendant filed a lengthy first supplemental answer.

The cause was submitted to a jury on special issues, some 40-odd in number. In answer to these issues the jury found that no settlement had been made between the defendant and plaintiff, and that defendant had paid the plaintiff $1,188.21 on account; that the defendant had received from Hawkins and associates $5,000; that the defendant had agreed to give the plaintiff one-half of what he received, out of the fifty-fifty contract he made on the 2½ acres of land in block 74 to R. A. King for the Utah-Colorado Oil Company, and that the said company, or its successor in title, carried out its contract, and that the defendant received $28,000 therefrom; that the Utah-Colorado Oil Company, and its successor in title, the King Petroleum Company, later surrendered to the defendant one location for a well (four wells being required), and later sold the location for the fourth well to one McKinney for $10,-000. The jury further found that the defendant had received from the Jane-Louise Oil Company, from oil produced by such company under the fifty-fifty contract, the sum of $10,432.13, and that John O’Neil and the oil companies receiving the oil from the Jane-Louise Oil Company expended for said last-named company, in drilling and equipment and operation, $20,207.81; that the defendant had used and converted machinery belonging to plaintiff of the value of $698.61.

Upon this verdict, the court entered judgment for $14,698.61, with interest from January 1, 1921, or $15,737.49 at the time of the judgment. Prom this judgment the defendant has appealed.

The appellant attacks certain findings of the jury as being unsupported by the evidence. We have examined the testimony with reference to these issues, the answers to which are attacked, and find that the testimony is reasonably sufficient to support such answers. Moreover, during the oral argument before this court, appellee’s counsel stated in the presence of appellant’s counsel that the issues submitted by the court had been prepared by counsel for defendant, without any assistance or suggestion from counsel of appellee, or any change made by the court before submission. There was no denial of this by counsel for appellant. While, perhaps, counsel for appellant is not called upon to deny oral statements or charges made by appellee’s counsel, yet it would seem that if the facts were different from those stated by counsel for appellee, counsel for appellant would have challenged the truth thereof. Furthermore, the defendant below objected to the submission of issues Nos. 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, and 9, and no peremptory instruction was asked by plaintiff below, either as to the whole cause made by plaintiff’s pleading or as to the answer of any issue. The defendant asked for the submission of the following issues, among others, to wit: Whether defendant agreed to give plaintiff one-half of what he received out of the fifty-fifty contract he made on the 2½ acres of land in block 74 to R. A. King for the Utah-Colorado Oil Company; whether said company, or its successor in title, ever carried out said contract, and how much defendant received from said contract, and how much said company, or its successor in title, paid to defehdant out of the one-half or seven-sixteenths of the oil produced from the three wells on said tract in block 74. Hence the plaintiff in error, hereinafter called appellant or defendant below, is in no position to claim that there was error in submitting those issues, and is estopped from denying that there was any evidence to support the finding of the jury thereon, but probably can claim that there was not sufficient evidence to sustain the findings of the jury. See Panhandle & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Huckabee (Tex. Civ. App.) 216 S. W. 666; Poindexter v. Recvrs. Kirby Lumber Co., 101 Tex. 322, 107 S. W. 42; Lake v. Jones Lumber Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 233 S. W. 1011; Express & Baggage Co. v. Ablon, 110 Tex. 235, 244, 218 S. W. 1030. Hence we overrule these assignments.

The judgment of the court was evidently *590

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneil-v-oneil-texapp-1924.