Port City Lumber Co. v. Wade

16 S.W.2d 429, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 472
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 21, 1929
DocketNo. 9230.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 429 (Port City Lumber Co. v. Wade) 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
Port City Lumber Co. v. Wade, 16 S.W.2d 429, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 472 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

The appellee, plaintiff, was awarded a $1,369 judgment against the appellant, defendant, as for an agreed commission of 2 per cent, for procuring a purchaser for it for $68,009 of first-lien notes on 10 houses and lots on Norfolk street in Castle Court addition to the city of Houston, upon these answers of a jury to the special issues they thus severally follow:

“No. 1. Did or did not the defendant, Port City Lumber Company, acting through A. I. Cammack, employ Mrs. Minnie P. Wade, the plaintiff, to procure a purchaser for first lien notes in the aggregate of about Seventy Thousand ($70,000.00) Dollars secured by property in Castle Court Addition to the City of Houston, and on Norfolk Street therein, consisting of certain houses and lots? It did.
“No. 2. Was or was not T. J. Holbrook, acting for the Security Trust Company of Galveston, Texas,' ready, able and willing to purchase the first lien notes which the defendant, Port City Lumber Company, through its manager, A. I. Cammack, had so employed plaintiff to sell? He was.
“No. 3. Was or was not T. J. Holbrook, acting for the Security Trust Company of Galveston, Texas, accepted by and satisfactory to, Port City Lumber Company, acting through its manager, A. I. Cammack, as a purchaser for the first lien notes which the said defendant employed plaintiff to sell? He was.
“No. 4. What amount of such first lien notes did the Port City Lumber Company, acting through its manager, A. I. Cammack, agree to sell to T. J. Holbrook, acting for the Security Trust Company of Galveston? $68,-000.00.
“No. 5. What' amount .of such first lien notes did T. J. Holbrook, acting for the Security Trust Company, agree to purchase *430 from the defendant, Port Oity Lumber Company? $68,000.00'.
“No. 6. State what commission, if any, was agreed upon between the plaintiff and the defendant, Port Oity Lumber Company, acting through A. I. Cammack, for finding a purchaser by plaintiff for the first lien notes which the defendant, Port Oity Lumber Company, employed plaintiff to sell, if you have found plaintiff was so employed? 2%.
“No. 7. Were there any deductions agreed to be made from such commission as you have found in answer to the preceding issue; if so, state what would be the usual and reasonable amount of such deductions? None.
“No. 8. Under the employment agreement, was plaintiff, without further approval of such defendant, authorized to procure a purchaser for less than all of said notes, on fourteen lots? She was.
“No. 9. Did defendant ever approve the procuring by plaintiff of a purchaser of less than all of said notes, on fourteen lots? It did.”

This verdict and judgment, looked at as an entirety, matured the appellee’s particular cause of action substantially as in purport declared upon in her pleadings and supported by her proof; the appellant defended in the trial court upon pleadings — after general demurrer, not shown to have been acted upon, and general denial — in effect declaring: (1) That the specific agreement between the parties was that the notes it desired to have sold were those of third-person lot owners, which could only be sold with the latters’ consent and co-operation, appellants’ only interest and objective being the liquidation of its debts against such persons, resulting from having furnished them the means of improving their properties, through the negotiation by these respective owners of new loans thereon, out of which it was to be paid; that in dealing with appellee, it honestly believed these owners were in position to and would deliver first-lien mortgage papers against their properties to be so negotiated, but, before the ap-pellee herein secured a purchaser pursuant to this agreement, superior deed of trust liens held by others were foreclosed thereon and the properties of these lot owners sold out thereunder, which legally incapacitated them from carrying out the contemplated arrangement ; wherefore, there had been such a mutual mistake between the parties here as to the actual existence of an indispensable element of their attempted contract as rendered it nugatory. (2) That the agreement further was, in consonance with a general custom then prevailing in that community relative to such transactions, which custom was well known to the appellee, that she would neither be entitled to any commission until she had procured a purchaser for first-lien notes aggregating $70,000 in amount on all 14 of the lots they covered, on terms acceptable to the owners of the lots, nor unless and until the negotiation of such notes had been completed and the proceeds therefrom made actually available.

The same defensive theories run through the assignments in this court, there being detailed complaints to the effect: (1) That the appellee, having declared upon an alleged contract of employment to sell first-lien notes for a stipulated commission, failed to prove either its existence, identity, nature, and essential terms, or any conformity thereof to the prevailing general custom in that community affecting- such business; (2) that the court erred in refusing to submit proffered inquiries and instructions touching these features, including appellant’s motion for an instructed verdict, as well as in admitting and excluding certain testimony. *

None of the assignments, we think, point out reversible error, since th'e issues submitted by the court fairly present what seem to us to be the material issues raised by the pleadings and evidence, and there is no lack of sufficiently supporting proof for the jury’s verdict thereon; indeed, no attack is made' upon any of the findings as being without such support, the first fourteen of the presentments made assailing the court’s refusal of requested special issues and charges embodying the details of appellant’s answering theories above outlined, three of the remaining five relating to the receipt or rejection of testimony, one to- the overruling of its motion for peremptory instruction, and the last to the claim that special issue No. 1 should not have been submitted because too broad and general.

The verdict, on sufficient evidence, concludes adversely to it appellant’s contentions on the facts as to the substance and nature of the contract touching a commission between its manager with plenary authority, Hr. Cammack, and the appellee: (1) That the notes forming the subject-matter of it were those of third-person landowners that were, with their co-operation, to be converted into new loans; (2) that appellee was to get hex-commission only when all the notes on 14 lots, aggregating $70,000 in amount, had been sold and the proceeds were in hand. So that, there was neither the mutual mistake underlying nor the contingency inhering in the contract actually made, as it averred; on the contrary, it must in this court be assumed, under the findings and the evidence, that appellant’s manager employed the appellee to find it a purchaser for about $70,000 worth of first-lien notes against 14 houses and lots on the designated street, which notes he represented to be then in existence, for an agreed commission of 2 per cent.; that, in pursuance of that contract, she procured in the person of T. J.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 429, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/port-city-lumber-co-v-wade-texapp-1929.