Owen v. King

84 S.W.2d 743, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 747
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 1935
DocketNo. 4433.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 84 S.W.2d 743 (Owen v. King) 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
Owen v. King, 84 S.W.2d 743, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 747 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

Prior to February 1, 1931, Carl L. King, the appellee, and G. C. Owen, appellant, were engaged in the implement business in the town of Keyes, Cimarron county, Old., under the firm name and style' of “O. K. Implement Company.” On or about the 17th day of February, 1931, J. W. Jenkins executed his two notes, payable to King, in the principal sum of $750 each, due on or before August 1, 1931, and January 1, 1932, respectively. The notes were made payable to appellee, King, at Amarillo, Tex., and provided for interest at 10 per cent, and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. Default was made in the payment of the notes, and King filed this suit against J. W. Jenkins and G. C. Owen, alleging further that the notes were executed as a part of the consideration for a conveyance from- King to Jenkins of all the former’s undivided interest in certain personal property located in Cimarron county, Okl., consisting of cattle, tractors, farm equipment, and all machinery, repairs, accessories, and fixtures located in the place of business known as the O. K. Implement Company in the town of Keyes, Okl., together with the outstanding notes and open accounts due the partnership theretofore existing between King and Owen, and . including an • undivided one-half interest in said business in said O. K. Implement Company, together with the good will; that as a further consideration for the conveyance Jenkins assumed all outstanding indebtedness of the partnership of Owen and King. Plaintiff further alleged that Owen was in fact the real purchaser as the undisclosed principal of J. W. Jenkins, and that such transaction constituted a full and final settlement and accounting of the partnership affairs between King and Owen; that in the spring or summer of 1931 the defendant Jenkins executed a written bill of sale, conveying the above-described property to the defendant Owen, in which bill of sale Owen, as a part of the consideration for the transaction, assumed payment of, and agreed to pay, the two notes for $750 heretofore referred to. Notice was given defendants to produce said bill of sale. 'Plaintiff further alleged that, if the bill of sale failed to disclose that Owen assumed the payment of the notes, it did not reflect the entire agreement between the parties, and sought to have the contract reformed so that it would show that the defendant Owen had assumed the payment of the notes executed by Jenkins to Carl L. King. An exception was sustained to this paragraph of plaintiff’s petition, and the allegation was stricken.

King alleged in the alternative that, if he is mistaken in charging that Owen assumed the payment of the notes executed by Jenkins in writing, then he alleges that Owen verbally agreed with the defendant Jenkins to assume the payment of the notes, and that such agreement to assume was made before the notes were executed by Jenkins and subject to his execution of the same; that, by defendant’s false representations, Jenkins had purchased King’s interest in the business for himself and with his own money, and by an alleged bogus transaction of having Jenkins give Owen a check for the amount of a note for $1,155.50 which King owed Owen, and by representing that Jenkins was paying, out of his own money, the balance of the cash agreed to be paid in the sale between King and Jenkins, and, by delivering the executed bill of sale from Jenkins to Owen, and by having the defendant Jenkins work in said business as an. employee, the defendant actively, affirmatively, and positively concealed from plain *746 tiff the fact that the defendant Owen had agreed to pay and assume the payment of the notes, and that the plaintiff had a cause of action against the defendant Owen on such assumption to pay said notes; that plaintiff, though exercising reasonable diligence, did not discover that he had a cause of action against defendant Owen on his assumption to pay the notes until the month of December, 1933, at which time the defendant Jenkins disclosed such facts to plaintiff, and after which discovery plaintiff filed this suit. Plaintiff further alleges that he placed the notes in the hands of Monning & Akin for collection, and has agreed to pay them the 10 per cent, attorney’s fees stipulated in said notes, and that the same was reasonable and customary, that the notes were past due and unpaid, and, though often requested, defendants had failed and refused to pay the same, except certain payments made during the month of September, 1931, aggregating $120.

It is further alleged that as security for the payment of the notes the defendant Jenkins had executed and delivered to the plaintiff, King, a chattel mortgage on the above-described property, located in Cim-arron county, Old., beyond the jurisdiction of this court, and that this action was brought in the state of Texas without prejudice to whatsoever remedies plaintiff •might have in the state of Oklahoma for the enforcement of his mortgage lien.

' In the alternative plaintiff alleged as Tollo ws:

’ ’ “If, for any reason, it should be held that said defendant Owen is not liable on Said notes, then in the alternative plaintiff alleges that on or about the month of December, 1930 the defendants, at the instigation of said Owen, conspired together to purchase plaintiff’s one-half interest in said property in the name of J. W. Jenkins, but in fact for the benefit of said Owen, with the view of purchasing it .much cheaper in the name of Jenkins than 'said Owen could otherwise purchase it from plaintiff; that thereafter, on or about February 17, 1931, such purchase 'was completed by the said Jenkins, acting at the request, for the benefit and as the agent of G. C. Owen, the plaintiff acting in said transaction by and through his duly authorized attorney in fact, Benton King, such sale being made at the agreed price of $3,000.00, $1,500.00 of which was paid in cash, less the balance due on a note for $1,155.50 which plaintiff had given defendant Owen which was cancelled, and a balance of $1,500.00 was to be paid in two installments of $750.00 each, falling due on August 1, 1931 and January 1, 1932, respectively, such deferred payments to bear interest from January 17, 1931 at the rate of 'ten per cent per annum, and the debtor was to pay all costs of collection, including ten per cent on the principal and interest for attorney’s fees, if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection; that the connection of defendant Owen with said transaction was not disclosed, he being the undisclosed principal of such transaction, but on the contrary his connection with the transaction was carefully and purposely concealed by active artifices and positive affirmative acts on the part of defendants in that they falsely informed plaintiff’s said attorney in fact that said Jenkins was in fact purchasing the same for himself and that said Jenkins gave said Owen á check to pay said $1,155.50 note, which check was a bogus transaction and was not presented nor intended to be presented for payment, but was torn up by the said Owen when they got out of the presence of plaintiff’s said attorney in fact.

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Bluebook (online)
84 S.W.2d 743, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owen-v-king-texapp-1935.