Powers v. Sunylan Co.

25 S.W.2d 808
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMarch 12, 1930
DocketNo. 1145-5439
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 25 S.W.2d 808 (Powers v. Sunylan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powers v. Sunylan Co., 25 S.W.2d 808 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

RYAN, J.

On June 28, 1926, plaintiff in error entered into contract with W. R. Archer, one of the defendants in error, for the purchase of a portion of block No. 5 in Sunylan, an addition to the city of Houston, in Harris coufity, for a total consideration of $3,950, of which $500 was paid in cash, and $3,450 agreed to be paid in monthly installments of not less than $39.-50, including interest.

The addition’ contains 58.76 acres of land, and at that time it' was bald, open prairie, with no improvements. Powers, the pur-. chaser, in company with a representative of the seller, went upon it, and selected a tract from a blueprint map, and made the cash payment at the time. The land contracted for faces Sunnyland street, which, agreed by all parties, was sixty feet wide, as indicated on the blueprint.at the time, and is now represented by lots 11 to 16, inclusive, in block No. 5, lying between Lawson and Kenmare [810]*810avenues, according to tiie plat shown herewith. '

On May 11, 1927, plaintiff in error filed suit in the district court of Harris county,

The seller agreed to lay out, grade, and shell in a substantial manner some nine streets, the grades to be lowered eight inches and covered with six inches of shell, sixteen feet wide in the middle of the streets and avenues. Standard cement sidewalks, to conform to ordinances of the city of - Houston, were to be laid on certain streets so as to be in front of all lots, and sanitary sewer mains and water mains constructed so as to serve all lots and tracts sold in the addition. Eire plugs were to be' placed in said addition for fire protection. The improvements were to -be begun not later than September 1, 1926, and prosecuted with all due diligence and dispatch to completion.

Some time in January, 1927, plaintiff in error ascertained that right of way could not be procured sufficient to make Sunnyland street more than thirty feet wide, and that the improvements were not being made, and had not been prosecuted with diligence and dispatch; he demanded of Archer a return of the purchase money paid, and was assured the improvements would be made.

Tex., to rescind the executory contract, alleging fraud or mutual mistake as an inducement in its execution, for the return of the money he had paid thereon with interest, and in the alternative for darnages laid at $1,-854.17. He also pleaded fully the breach of contract on the part of defendants in not making the improvements, as provided in said contract.

It was admitted that W. R. Archer held the property for himself and in trust at the time for P. C. Rehrauer and Denton Cooley; afterwards the property was conveyed to Sunylan Company, a corporation, which assumed all the contracts and undertakings entered into in the name of W. R. Archer. Sunylan Company, Rehrauer, and Cooley were made parties defendant to the suit.

Defendants answer by general demurrer, general denial, and plea of abandonment of the contract by plaintiff; they also pleaded certain provisions of the contract as constituting an exclusive remedy; they admitted the delays and failure to carry out their contract in the making of said improve[811]*811ments, but alleged that tbe delays were of such a character that they bad no control oyer them.

The ease was submitted on special issues, in answer to which the jury found that Archer, before plaintiff signed the contract in question, represented to him that Sunny-land street would be sixty feet wide; also that none of the other improvements mentioned in said contract, and to be done by the seller, were begun by the time'prescribed in the contract, nor were they prosecuted with all diligence and dispatch. The jury also found that plaintiff, Powers, relied upon such representations in entering into said contract, that they were a material inducement to him, and he would not have entered into it but for them.

The court in its judgment found as an undisputed fact that, when the sale of the land in question wás negotiated, and when the contract of sale was executed, there was a mutual mistake, in that the parties honestly believed Sunnyland street would be opened up sixty feet wide.

Based on such findings, the court “rescinded, canceled and annulled” the contract, and rendered judgment for plaintiff, Powers, against the defendants for the sum. of money plaintiff had paid in on the contract, with interest and costs; this judgment was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals [14 S.W.(2d) 894, 896], on the ground that the seller’s obligations, although never carried out, were simply promises to do things in the future, and there was neither fraud nor mutual mistake because of misrepresentation, nor an honest mistake as to an existing fact.

The Court of Civil Appeals also held that the following provision of the contract constituted the exclusive remedy for its breach, viz.: “This contract is executed in triplicate and the original copy is to be placed in escrow with the Houston National Bank of Houston, Texas, where all payments on the same shall be made and the purchaser shall have the right, by notice in writing, deliveredi to the Bank to stop the payment by the Bank to Seller of any money thereafter paid intO| the Bank on this contract at any time the Purchaser finds that the Seller is not mak-j ing the improvements in said action as specified in the foregoing paragraph, and until said specifications are complied with by the' Seller,” and under it the purchaser’s only, remedy was to notify the bank.not to turn over to the seller the moneys paid to it by the purchaser. |

It is uncontradicted that the other improvements have not been completed and Sunnyland street has not been made sixty feet wide. |

The blueprint in evidence shows said street to have a width of sixty feet, thirty feet on either side of a dotted line in the center. The Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word owned the land east of the dotted center line of Sunnyland street as said street is shown on said plat; a written agreement between them and W. R. Archer, dated July 24, 1926, recited that, in view of the fact that he, the owner of record of the Sunylan addition, had agreed with them to donate to the city of Houston one certain street sixty feet wide, thirty feet by Archer and thirty feet by the sisters, out of their respective properties, same lying parallel with the dividing line and running full length of said properties, said Archer agreed to construct said street at his own cost and expense in accordance with certain specifications therein set forth, under the city engineer’s supervision ■ and subject to his acceptance, when a warranty deed to the city of Houston should be executed by said parties with the provision that, so long as the city shall use and maintain the same for street purposes, the title shall be in the city, but should said street or any portion thereof be abandoned or closed, then it shall revert to the grantors, their heirs or assigns. It was further agreed that all said work should be completed not later than December 1, 1926, and said Archer should place the dividing fence on the proper line in its then same condition. Mr. Archer accordingly moved the sisters’ fence back thirty feet, but failed to comply with his contract, whereupon the sisters replaced the fence back on the original line, canceled the contract, and decided they would not renew it or grant any other contract of any description for street .purposes.

Opinion.

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25 S.W.2d 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powers-v-sunylan-co-texcommnapp-1930.