Raper v. Parmenter

1 S.W.2d 343
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 1927
DocketNo. 344.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 S.W.2d 343 (Raper v. Parmenter) 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
Raper v. Parmenter, 1 S.W.2d 343 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

LESDIE, J.

This suit was tried in the district court of Throckmorton county, and, from a judgment based on an instructed verdict in favor of the plaintiff, the defendants perfect appeal ,to this court. In substance, the litigation grows out of the following transactions reflected by the pleadings and, the testimony:

W. E. Parmenter, plaintiff below, appellee here, owning a royalty interest in 400 acres of land, listed for sale with H. M. Raper, at a price of $4,000 an undivided one-fourth (100 acres) thereof, agreeing to pay a commission of 5 per cent. Within the time prescribed for the sale, Raper presented him with a deed to be executed by himself and wife, conveying to S. R. Davis the property listed, for the sum stipulated. Parmenter refused to execute it because there was no provision therein that he should receiv.e the annual rentals carried by his original lease. Parmenter came to town, discussed that matter with Davis, who waived that feature and agreed to accept a conveyance and pay the $4,000. Thereupon Parmenter and wife executed and delivered to Davis the conveyance of 100-acre interest, received the consideration, and immediately paid Raper the stipulated commission.

Within an hour subsequent to the deal between Davis and Parmenter, Davis conveyed to W. O. Pigg and the said H. M. Raper a 45-acre interest in the purchase, and this suit is by Parmenter to recover that 45-acre interest, alleging the same to be an excess profit or commission collected by his agent, Raper, over and above the stipulated fee he had paid him. Plaintiff alleges:

That this conveyance was “in furtherance of a design, theretofore formed by the defendants and each of them, to obtain a greater compensation for the services of the said Raper in effecting said sale, than that provided in the contract. * * * That no consideration passed between the defendants and the said Davis. * * * same was only additional compensation sought to be obtained by the defendants for the services of the defendant Raper, * * * in violation of the terms of the contract.” That Raper, “in procuring * * * a conveyance to himself and codefendant, Pigg, of said 45-acre interest was doing so in an effort to violate the trust imposed upon him by the plaintiff, and said interest in the hands of said defendants is in trust for the benefit of this plaintiff. * * * That the title to the said 45 acres is now in fact held in the name of the defendants in trust for the benefit of this plaintiff, the real owner thereof. That only a 55-acre interest was in fact sold to the said Davis, and the said interest now in the name of the defendants is in fact -the property of this plaintiff - and a trust in favor of this plaintiff resulted from all the transactions herein pleaded.”

In another paragraph the plaintiff charged Pigg with being a partner of Raper in all the transactions pleaded, ¿nd in the alternative that, if no partnership existed, then Pigg acted conjointly with Raper and “accepted conveyance of said interest with the full knowledge of the facts and rights of the defendant Raper in said contract with plain *345 tiff and of tlie terms of the sale to the said Davis; that neither of them parted with any consideration whatever.”

The defendant Pigg answered by demurrers, general and special, denied existence of partnership under oath, entered a general denial to plaintiff’s allegations. He specially denied any contractual relations as agent or otherwise with plaintiff, Parmenter, or that he owed him any duty as such. He denied making any representations' to the plaintiff ‘‘as to the price of the land sold or the amount sold to S. R. Davis,” or that he had in any form or manner received any commissions from plaintiff for selling the land.

The defendant Raper answered in manner similar to Pigg, after demurrers, denying generally plaintiff’s allegations, denying under oath any partnership relations with Pigg or that he entered into any scheme with him to defraud plaintiff, and stood on the terms of his listing contract, alleging:

“That defendant (Raper) entered into the contract as alleged by plaintiff, in which plaintiff authorized the defendant to sell plaintiff’s royalty interest at $40 per acre and agreed to pay defendant 5 per cent, of the selling price, and the defendant complied with the terms of said agreement by' selling * * * the (100-acre) interest listed * * * to S. R. Davis for $4,-000.”

Raper specially denied that he received any part of the acreage from S. R. Davis as his commission, but alleged:

That he “purchased a portion of said lease by a separate contract from W. O. Pigg and agreed to accept a deed from Davis to said acreage. That he advised plaintiff of the price Davis was giving-for the royalty, and that plaintiff ratified his contract with Davis and executed the royalty deed direct to S. R. Davis. * * * That the only services rendered by defendant Huey Raper for plaintiff, W. E. Parmenter, was to bring him and S. R. Davis together, and a final trade was made by plaintiff himself with S. R. Davis. That the original trade made with W. O. Pigg and S. R. Davis by the defendant Huey Raper was never consummated; plaintiff having refused to execute and carry out the trade as made by the defendant.”

Raper acknowledged receipt of the 5 per cent, commission.

S. R. Davis was not made a party defend-' ant by the plaintiff, Parmenter, but he asked and was granted permission to intervene, which he did, for the purpose of protecting his title to the 55-acre interest retained by him from having some possible cloud cast upon the title thereto. He affirmatively alleged :

That he purchased the entire 100-acre interest from Parmenter and received conveyance therefor. “That * ⅜ ⅜ he conveyed a 45-acre interest in said land to W. O. Pigg and H. M. Raper. That the trade was made wholly between your petitioner S. R. Davis and W. O. Pigg, but that the name of H. M. Raper was added in the deed at the request of W. O. Pigg and under a contract of conveyance entered into by W. O. Pigg subsequent to the original trade with W. O. Pigg. That said deed from your petitioner to W. O. Pigg was made in the due course of trade, and, so far as your petitioner knows, the trade was perfectly legitimate and free from fraud on the part of anybody. That your petitioner, before closing a contract to purchase with W. E. Parmenter, discussed every phase of said contract in detail with the said W. E. Parmenter, and the trade was finally made with him personally by your petitioner, and that the consideration therein set out was the full, complete consideration and in accordance with the agreement of conveyance with the said W. E. Parmenter. That the amount of land set out in said deed from W. E. Parmenter to your petitioner is correct and in accordance with W. E. Parmenter’s agreement of conveyance.”

Prayer that the plaintiff take nothing, etc.. Following the intervener’s filing of the* above plea of intervention, plaintiff, Parmen-ter, pleaded thereto, disclaiming “any right to or interest in and to 5¾00 mineral interest” claimed by Davis.

At this point we dispose of appellee’s numerous objections to the consideration by this court of the briefs filed herein by appellants.

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