Park v. Sullivan

12 S.W.2d 265
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1928
DocketNo. 695.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 265 (Park v. Sullivan) 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
Park v. Sullivan, 12 S.W.2d 265 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

Suit was filed by appellee, G. T. Sullivan, against appellant, P. S. Park, *266 and J. H. Park, and John Lane, to recover damages against all three of said parties for breach of a lease contract executed by P. S. Park by his agent, J. H. Park, to appellee, G. T. Sullivan, by the terms of which what was then known as the Henson Hotel, with all the furnishings therein contained, was leased to appellee for $60 per month, from December 1, 1924, to December 1, 1926. At the time said lease was executed, November 20, 1924, John Lane was occupying said hotel under a lease which did not 'expire until April 6, 1925, but appellee contended that at the time the lease was given to him November 20, 1924, P. S. Park, by J. H. Park, agent, agreed to give him possession December 1, 1924, and the said Lane agreed to vacate and give him possession on said date. Lane contended he agreed to give appellee possession December 1, 1924, if he (Lane) could get another place to move into. Appellant’s principal defense was that J. H. Park, his brother, had no authority to execute said lease as his agent.

In response to special issues, the jury found:

(1) That at the time of the execution of the lease and contract to plaintiff by J. H. Park, J. H. Park did have actual authority from his brother, P. S. Park, as agent, to rent or lease said property.
(2) That J. H: Park did unconditionally contract and agree with plaintiff to lease him the premises, hotel, and fixtures for the time and under the terms expressed in the written contract in evidence, free from the contingency of Lane’s agreement to give possession of the premises on December"l, 1924.
■ (3) That the defendant Lane did unconditionally promise and agree to deliver possession of the hotel and property in question to plaintiff on December 1, 1924, free from any contingency of his securing another place by that time. .
(4) That the value of the lease or rental contract upon the hotel and fixtures in question covering the period from December 1, 1924, to December 1, 1925, was $4,009.

The court found that appellee agreed to pay $720 for said lease for one year from December 1, 1924, to December 1, 1926, and that he had paid $60, leaving a balance of $660 rent unpaid, which amount the court deducted from said $4,000, leaving $3,340, for which amount the court entered, judgment in favor of appellee Sullivan against P. S. Park and G. H. (John) Lane, jointly and severally, and decreed that appellee take nothing as to J. H. Park. P. S. Park alone has appealed, and presents the recor.d here for review, complaining only of the judgment of appellee against him. This is the second appeal in this, case, the former being reported in 286 S. W. 541.

■ That J. H. Park, on November 20, 1924, as the purported agent of ,P. S. Park, did execute a lease to appellee, giving appellee the right to occupy the Henson Hotel property from December 1, 1924, to December 1, 1925, for $60 per month, is not controverted. That said contract was breached is not disputed. That appellee sustained damages to the amount of $3,340 is not questioned. As we view the case, the principal question involved is the sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding of the jury to the effect that J. H. Park did have the authority to execute said lease. Appellee alleged, in substance, that J. H. Park was in full control of said hotel property as agent for P. S. Park, with authority to lease same; that on November 20, 1924, he leased said property from P. S. Park under the following lease contract — copying same in full. The lease is signed: “P. S. Park, per J. H. Park, Agt. and Atty.” Appellee alleged further that P. S. Park, by his agent, J. H. Park, agreed ap-pellee should have possession on December 1, 1924; .that John Lane was in possession at the time said lease was executed November 20, 1924, but that the said P. S. Park, by his agent, J. H. Park, and also John Lane, agreed the said Lane would vacate said property by December 1, 1924, but that on December 1, 1924, the said Lane informed appellee that he would not surrender possession of said property, and that P. S. Park, by his said agent, refused to take any steps to assist appellee to secure possession, but, on the contrary, informed appellee that.John Lane would continue to keep said premises, that he would see that appellee did not get possession, for the reason that oil had been discovered at Wortham and that the lease had become very valuable. Appellee alleged further, in effect, that after oil was discovered at Wortham and a lease on said property became very valuable, the said J: H. Park, individually and as agent for P. S. Park, entered into a conspiracy with Lane to keep John Lane in possession of said property, and all of said parties divide the revenues derived from said property during said oil boom, etc., and that if P. S. Park did not enter into said conspiracy, he afterwards ratified same, and did assist in keeping Lane in possession, and accepted rent from him, .etc., and the division o.f profits from the operation of said hotel by defendant Lane was fully carried out, etc.

The record discloses that J. H. Park and P. S. Park were brothers; that J. H. Park lived at Mexia and was engaged in the insurance and notary business, and P. S. Park, the owner of the hotel situated in Mex-ia, lived in Bryan, Tex.; that prior to the execution of the lease in question, J. H. Park had been looking after the hotel for his brother, collecting rents, etc.; that the lease on said hotel to Lane dated April 1,1924, and expiring on April 1, 1925, was signed, “P. S. Park, by J. H. Park, Agt. & Atty.” It is true both J. H. and P. S. Park testified that J. H. Patk talked to his brother over the phone before executing the Lane lease. It seems *267 the negotiations resulting in the execution of the lease to appellee continued over three days, November 18th, 19th, and 20th. The jury could well conclude that he talked over the phone to his brother before executing the lease to appellee, or, at least, that J. H. Paris had good reasons to believe he had such authority, else he would have done so. The lease executed by J. H. Park as agent and attorney for P. S. Park, to appellee, was dated November 20, 1924, and runs from December 1, 1924, to December 1, 1925. This lease authorized appellee “to clean up said place at his own expense, to paint and paper such room or rooms, lobby and signs as may suit his mind or convenience, also at his own expense.” On November 22, 1924, appellee employed a painter and began, with the permission of Lane, who was then in possession, to clean up and repaint, and did repaint the inside woodwork in the lobby, and some 16 rooms in said hotel, and finished same on Saturday night before December 1, 1924. Also, at the suggestion of J. H. Park, appellee changed the name of said hotel from the Henson Hotel to The Oil City Hotel, and had a sign painted and put up evidencing such change. • The jury could well conclude that P. S. Park must have heard or been apprised of the improvements being made in his hotel by appellee, changing the name, etc., extending over a period of some 10 days.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-v-sullivan-texapp-1928.