Presnall v. Adams

214 S.W. 357, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 881
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 18, 1919
DocketNo. 6246.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 214 S.W. 357 (Presnall v. Adams) 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
Presnall v. Adams, 214 S.W. 357, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 881 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

Appellant filed this suit in the district court of Jim Wells county on the 3d day of December, 1918, to recover of ap-pellees damages in the alleged sum of $14,-927.56. The suit is based upon a written Instrument, hereinafter set out.

Appellee filed his plea of, privilege demanding “that this case be either dismissed, or else transferred to Bexar county at San Antonio,” and the case came on for hearing on said plea, whereupon appellant filed his first amended original petition, alleging and saying:

“In response to the plea of defendant heretofore filed in this cause, wherein the defendant prays that before the court passes on his plea of privilege filed in this cause and on the' controverting affidavit to said plea of privilege filed by plaintiff be required to replead and elect as to which of the two causes of action pleaded in his original petition he will rely upon in response to said plea, and with leave of court first had plaintiff files this, his first amended original petition, repleading,” etc.

Alleging appellee held himself out as an expert architect, appellant engaged his firm to make plans and specifications for a residence for appellant to live in, and alleged further that on account of defective construction the building caught on fire and was totally destroyed, together with its entire contents.

He prayed judgment for $16,927.56, with interest from February 2, 1918, and costs.

The written obligation is as follows:

“Carl C. Adams Carlton W. Adams.
“Adams & Adams,
“Architects.
“516-518 Gibbs Building,
“San Antonio, Texas.
“Old Phone Crockett 423.
“August 15, 1914.
“Mr. P. A. Presnall, Alice, Texas — Dear Sir: We will superintend your building for eighteen (18.00) dollars per trip, or fourteen (14.00) dollars per trip if we are. going either to Robstown or Alice at .the same time.
“Or we will superintend for 1½% of the cost of the building plus traveling expenses, providing the building is completed in eight (8) months. You see as it is a day job you might *358 want to build slow, and be a. year or more in building, which would require more trips.
“The bill for the trips already made is as follows:
First trip Kingsville to Alice.$10 00
Second trip Kingsville to Alice. 10 00
Third trip Kingsville to Alice.10 00
And our Mr. Flannigan who is now visiting you .10 10
Total .$40 00
“I don’t know what Mr. Elannigan’s expenses will be, but he had to go to Alfred and I asked him to stop and see.you.
“I also want to spend a day with you here in San Antonio going over the plans and shopping for tile fixtures, hardware and anything you maV need. For this there will be no charge.
“Yours truly, Adams & Adams,
“JAL Per Carl C. Adams.”

Appellee filed a controverting affidavit. Whereupon an answer was filed on January 11, 1919, prepared by appellee to the controverting affidavit of appellant. And on the same day appellant filed a response to plea of appellee asking an election, stating that—

“He elects to prosecute his cause of action for breach of duty arising out of the contract to prepare plans and specifications and superintend the building affording reasonable safe construction.”

On January 18, 1919, the court sustained the plea of privilege and ordered cause transferred to the Seventy-Third district court, Bexar county, Tex., for trial.

At the request of appellant, the court made and filed findings of fact and conclusions of law sustaining the plea of privilege and transferred the cause to district court of Bexar county for trial on its merits.

Appellant’s first and second assignments of error and all the propositions are to the effect the court erred in sustaining the plea of privilege because appellees proposed in writing to plaintiff as architects to superintend his building in Jim Wells county, which was accepted, and necessarily contemplated it was to be performed in Jim Wells county, and the law, in the absence of express agreements, enjoined reasonable skill and care in the performance, and there was sufficient written agreement, upon its breach, to maintain a suit in Jim Wells county.

It is not alleged, or shown, when the building was completed and when appellant occupied it as a residence. It is alleged that appellee made the proposition to superintend erection of the building on or about August 15, 1914, and it was destroyed by fire February 2, 1918.

In considering this case, in the light of the appellant’s claim that the court erred in sustaining appellee’s plea of privilege, it is well to again look at appellant’s contention as reflected by the record made by him. He filed a pleading in which he says he “elects to prosecute his cause of action for breach of duty arising out of the contract to prepare plans and specifications, and superintend the building affording reasonably safe construction.”

Such grounds for the purpose of securing jurisdiction are independent the one from the other, but here may be treated as contemporaneous agreements, though the latter agreement was made after the plans were drawn. If the damage to the building was caused by defective plans and specifications, it would not be pretended that there was any agreement to pay. for damages to the building in Jim Wells county, if that stood alone and was all that was done. There was no such contract, express or implied. The mere fact that he knew that the plans were for a building to be erected there, would not authorize the bringing of a suit there to recover on his obligation to exercise proper skill in planning and writing specifications for the building. To take it out of the general rule would require a proper promise in writing to perform his obligation in the county where erected; but when the same architect entered into a written obligation to superintend the erection of the same building in Jim Wells county, and on account of improper plans, drawn and superintended by the same person, the construction was defective and by reason thereof it was destroyed by fire, there was a nonseverable breach of the obligations to plan with skill and to superintend with skill.

The letter referred to is a proposition to superintend the building “providing the building is completed in eight months” at a certain price “per trip from San Antonio.” It is not an express agreement, agreeing to perform his obligation in Jim Wells county, Rid make necessary changes in the plans; but it could be performed at no other place. True, as a superintendent, he is to perform personal services there, from time to time, in making trips from San Antonio to superintend the building. .

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Bluebook (online)
214 S.W. 357, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 881, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/presnall-v-adams-texapp-1919.