Rawdon v. Garvie

227 S.W.2d 261, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1883
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 13, 1950
Docket14159
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 227 S.W.2d 261 (Rawdon v. Garvie) 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
Rawdon v. Garvie, 227 S.W.2d 261, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1883 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

BOND, Chief Justice.

On August 4, 1947 appellee and appellant entered into a written contract in which appellant (designated as seller) agreed to sell to appellee (designated as purchaser) a certain described lot or tract of land situated in Forest Meade Addition to the City of Dallas, recited in the contract as Lot 5 in Block A, of said Addition, foir the sum of $7,500 payable $1,000 cash (of which the purchaser deposited with the seller’s agent $200 as part payment), and the execution of a note payable to the seller in the sum of $6,500 payable $61.70 per month, and to be secured by vendor’s and deed of trust liens against the property. The deed to the property was to be delivered to the buyer within a reasonable time on title policy security. On September 26, 1947 appellant, as vendor, executed and delivered to appellee a warranty deed in accordance with a subsequent oral contract, as shall be hereinafter referred to, with minor changes in the contractual consideration, — to the effect that the note of $6,-500 payable to the seller was changed to a $5,000 note payable to Rio Grande National Life Insurance Company in monthly installments of $53.10, and a $1,500 note to the grantor (seller) payable in monthly in *263 stallments of $15; and the property was therein designated as Lot 6 in Block A, of said addition. There is no dispute that the designated description of the Lot in the contract of August 4, 1947 was intended by the parties to be Lot No. 6 instead of Lot No. 5. At the time the contracts and deed were executed, ' appellant was in course of constructing a residence of certain agreeable contractual design or plan on the property, and, when completed, ap-pellee was to move onto the premises and pay the installments on the notes as they became due.

Appellee, as plaintiff in the court below, instituted this suit against appellant: First, for damages, actual and exemplary, under the provisions of Art. 4004, R.S., for false representations by the defendant of alleged material nature, as inducement to him to enter into the written contract of August 4, 1947, and but for which false representations he would not have entered into said contract; in that, the “defendant orally represented to plaintiff that said lot did not flood and, impliedly, warranted that said property was suitable for the purposes for which it was purchased, to wit, a residential dwelling, which representations, as said defendant then 'and there well knew, were false and 'were made by said defendant willfully and for the purpose of defrauding plaintiif, when in truth and in fact defendant then and there well knew the property flooded, improperly drained, and consequently unfit for residential purposes; that plaintiff relied upon said representations, that said representations were material, and in the absence of said representations plaintiff would not have entered into said contract.” Second, plaintiff further alleged “that thereafter, on the 15th day of September A.D. 1947 (date changed' by trial .amendment to August 27, 1947), flood waters rose and stood on said lot and in said house; that on the 16th day of September A.D. 1947 (date also changed by trial amendment to August 28, 1947) defendant, in consideration of plaintiff’s not rescinding said contract and/or suing for its cancellation by reason of said fraudulent representations by defendant, promised, contracted and agreed with plaintiff to immediately repair any damage to said house caused by said.water, and further promised and contracted to construct drains and do such work as was necessary to prevent the recurrence of water standing on .said lot and in said house, and expressly promised, contracted and agreed to begin said work immediately and that said work would be performed prior to any rain or rains which could or might cause the recurrence of said condition, and that such work would be performed in such manner that plaintiff’s house and lot would not flood and surface water would not stand on said lot or in said house. * * * That on the 29th day of' September A.D. 1947, in accordance with said .contract of sale and in reliance upon the promises, the contract entered into on. the 16th day of September A.D. 1947 (changed to August 28, 1947) and the representations of defendant in regard ■ to surface water as heretofore alleged, plaintiff paid defendant Eight Hundred ($800.00) Dollars in cash, and executed notes in the principal amount of Sixty-five Hundred ($6,500.00) Dollars; in this regard plaintiff says that one note in the principal amount of ($5,000) Five Thousand Dollars was made payable to the Rio-Grande National Life Insurance ■Company and one note in the principal amount of Fifteen Hundred ($1500.00) Dollars was made payable to the defendant; that defendant executed his warranty deed to said property to plaintiff; * * *■ In connection with the payment of said cash payment and the execution of said notes and deeds of trust, plaintiff says that he relied on the promises of the defendant, in regard to the'surface water as heretofore alleged, that said' promise was , a . material inducement to plaintiff to pay said money and. execute said notes and deeds of , trust and but. for which promise plaintiff would not have paid said money and. executed said notes and deeds of .trust; that said promise of defendant thus made has not been comr plied with and that more than a reasonable time has elapsed in which said promise could have been performed; * -* * Plaintiff would show that as - a direct and proximate result of the breach of said contract entered into on the 16th' day of September (changed to August 28) A.D. 1947, that the *264 improvements on said house have become worthless and that had defendant carried out said contract said improvements would have increased the value of said property ■in an amount equal to the cost of said improvements, as shown in paragraph 8 above, and that said improvements would have been worth said amount, all to plaintiff's damage. * * * Plaintiff says that because of said false and fraudulent representations of the defendant, O. S. Rawdon, and of the consequent fraud visited upon plaintiff that he has on many occasions offered to rescind said contract and sale, offering the possession and title of property to defendant, conditioned only upon said defendant’s refunding to plaintiff the amount paid to said defendant and reimbursing plaintiff for all payments made to Rio Grande National Life Insurance Company on said Five Thousand ($5000.00.) Dollars note and the assumption 'by. said defendant of plaintiff’s obligation under said note, the cancellation of the Fifteen Hundred ($1500.00) Dollars note above referred to which is held by said defendant and payment to plaintiff :by said defendant for the -improvements and expenses plaintiff has .expended on the said house and lot; that said defendant has refused -and still refuses to rescind said contract.”

In conclusion the plaintiff prayed for judgment, in effect, (1) - for actual and exemplary damages for the alleged false and fraudulent representations of defendant based upon the’written contract of August 4, 1947; (2) or, in the alternative, for his damages iby reason of the false and fraudulent promises of defendant and' the breach of the oral contract of August 28, 1947 as alleged.

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W.2d 261, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawdon-v-garvie-texapp-1950.