Potter County v. Boesen

191 S.W. 787, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 10, 1917
DocketNo. 1094.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 191 S.W. 787 (Potter County v. Boesen) 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
Potter County v. Boesen, 191 S.W. 787, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 52 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HALL, J.

Appellee, Boesen, filed his original petition in this case August 13, 1913. It was tried upon a second amended original petition, filed April 24, 1916. As stated in the opinion upon the former appeal, reported in 173 S. W. 462, the action was to recover compensation for the publication in the Amarillo Weekly Herald of the delinquent tax record of Potter county for the years 1885 to 1905, inclusive, amounting to the sum of $3,-425. The contract between appellant and ap-pellee contained this stipulation:

“Payment for publication to be made as delinquent taxes are paid into the hands of the tax collector.”

Appellee alleged in the alternative that various periods from two up to and including eight years after the publication of the delinquent tax record constituted a reasonable time within which appellant could have performed the contract by causing the delinquent taxes to he collected. It is alleged that the claim for compensation for publishing such list was presented to the commissioners’' court of appellant county, and rejected on August 12, 1913, and that this suit was filed the next day.

Appellant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and special answers, some of which were stricken out upon demurrer, and the case submitted to a jury on three special issues, as follows;

“No. 1. State whether or not the plaintiff, P. E. Boesen, within a reasonable time after the making of the contract above set forth, correctly published said delinquent tax list in the Amarillo Weekly Herald, a weekly newspaper published in Potter county, Tex., for three consecutive weeks? Your answer to this issue will be ‘He did,’ or ‘tie did not,’ as your hading may be.”
The jury answered: “He did.”
“No. 2. You will, from all the facts and circumstances introduced in evidence, determine and say whether a reasonable time has elapsed from and after the publication of the delinquent tax record, if you find it was published, within which collection of the delinquent taxes referred to in said record should have been paid. Your answer to this issue will be ‘It has,’ or ‘It has not,’ as you may find. If you answer this issue in the negative, you need not answer the third special issue submitted.”
The jury answered: “It has.”
“No. 3. If in answer to the foregoing special issue you find that a reasonable time has elapsed, 'then you will determine and fix the date of the expiration of such reasonable time within which such delinquent taxes should have been collected from and after the date of such publication, and will state in yojir answer to this issue the date that you so find. Your answer to this issue will be given by simply stating the specific date of the expiration of such reasonable time as you may find the same to be.”
The jury answered: “April 22, 1916.”

The first assignment is that the court erred in overruling the defendant’s general demurrer, and urges as the first proposition that the petition was insufficient because the contract of employment was conditioned that appellee should be paid for his services as delinquent taxes • were paid into the hands of the tax collector, and such payments were conditions precedent to any liability of appellant, and no allegation appeared in the petition that payments had been made.

[1] We held in our former opinion, and still hold, that the amount claimed was due and payable within a reasonable time, and therefore it is not necessary to allege that any of the delinquent taxes had been paid to the county.

[2] By the second proposition appellant insists that the petition was insufficient because the contract pleaded and made the basis of recovery stipulated for payments to be made from a definite source and from funds received in the collection of delinquent taxes and contained no allegations of failure or default on the part of appellant as to the collection of such taxes, and without such allegations no obligation of appellant would arise to make payment to appellee within a reasonable time. The amount being due ,as matter of law within a reasonable time, the failure of appellant to collect the taxes was a fact not necessary to be alleged. Under the law appellant owed the duty to appellee to make collection within a reasonable time, and appellee's right of recovery depends upon the lapse of a reasonable time, and not upon the fact of collection.

[3] By the third proposition appellant insists that appellant is not liable for the negligence of its officers or for their failure or omission to discharge their duties, and that appellee’s recourse was to mandamus and require the county officials by legal proceedings to discharge their official duties. We think the amount due appellee was payable out of the fund set aside for the payment of the current expenses of the county. This being the case, of course, appellee should not be required to await the collection of the delinquent taxes, penalties, and costs. As a matter of law, his debt being matured within a reasonable time, he was not required to resort to mandamus proceedings. Appellee’s suit against the county-is not based upon the *789 negligence of its officers, but upon a contract wfiicli tfie jury found matured April 22,1916.

Tfie action of tfie court in sustaining the plaintiff’s general demurrer to certain paragraphs of tfie defendant’s second amended original answer is made the basis of the second assignment. Tfie first proposition under this assignment is, in effect, that the contract between tfie parties with reference to the time and manner of payment and as to any direct and personal liability of tfie county was ambiguous, indefinite, and uncertain, and appellant’s allegations in tfie third paragraph of its answer of such ambiguity and uncertainty, and of tfie negotiations leading up to the making of tfie contract, and of tfie interpretation, construction, and action of tfie parties thereon, subsequently were proper matters of defense.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W. 787, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potter-county-v-boesen-texapp-1917.