Riggins v. Trickey

102 S.W. 918, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 569, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 29, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 102 S.W. 918 (Riggins v. Trickey) 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
Riggins v. Trickey, 102 S.W. 918, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 569, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 153 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit, instituted by appellant, to enforce the specific performance of a contract for the exchange of certain lands owned by appellant in Wharton and Fort Bend Counties, Texas, for land of appellee in San Bernardino County, California, and in the alternative to recover damages for breach of the contract. It was alleged that on September 27, 1905, appellant and appellee entered into a written contract, which was modified on January 6, 1906, by an additional agreement, that by the terms of the two contracts appellee bound himself to convey to appellant a certain orange grove, consisting of twenty acres of land in San Bernardino County, California, for and in consideration of the conveyance to him, by appellant, of four hundred acres of land in Fort Bend County, Texas, and seven hundred and eighty-three acres of land in Wharton County, Texas, aggregating eleven hundred and eighty-three acres, and that appellee agreed to assume an indebtedness of nine thousand dollars existing on the Texas land. The lands of appellant were valued in the contract at $29,300, and the California land at $20,000. By the modification of the contract the incumbrance on the Texas land was increased $1,800 and seventy-two acres of land were added to the amount. A failure to comply with the contract was alleged and specific performance prayed for, and in case that could not be enforced, appellant prayed for damages in the sum of fourteen thousand dollars. Appellee set up misrepresentations on the part of appellant in regard to the value of the lands in Texas, and that he was deceived, misled and defrauded thereby, and he prayed for a rescission of the contract. The cause was tried by the court, without a jury, and judgment was rendered against appellant. There is no statement of facts but, although it does not appear that he was requested so to do, the court filed his findings of fact and law which appear in the record.

*571 While it may be' that under the provisions of article 1333, Revised Statutes, the trial court has no authority to file his conclusions of fact and law without being requested to do so by one of the parties, and the same should not be considered, still in the absence of a showing in the record that he was not requested to file such conclusions, the presumption will be indulged that the court filed the conclusions of fact and law because he was requested so to do. This is said for the reason that it is the contention of appellee that there was no request to file the conclusions of fact and law, and therefore they should not be considered. Necessarily, if they must be considered, the conclusions of fact of the trial judge must be taken as those of this court.

The court found that the parties had entered into the contracts as pleaded, that when the time had arrived for performance' of the contract neither party was ready to close the deal and the time was postponed until February 3, 1906, and the time was then extended for a week at the instance and request of appellee. On February 7, 1906, appellee telegraphed appellant at Waco, Texas, where he had gone on a visit, that the deal must be closed immediately, and appellant took the train at once for Houston, and instructed his agents in Wharton to have the deeds signed and sent to Houston at once, and the deeds, properly prepared, reached Houston on the night of February 8, 1906. About 3 o’clock P. M. on that date appellee met appellant on the street and asked him if he was ready to close the trade and, being answered in the negative, he asked appellant if he would be ready to close on the next day, and he replied he was not sure as he did not know whether the deeds would reach Houston that night. Appellee then declared the deal off and nex-t morning when appellant placed the deeds in a bank, according to the terms of the contract, the appellee declined to perform his part of the contract. Appellant put the statement in the contract that his lands were valued at $29,300 and appellee’s at $20,000 and the court on that subject found as follows:

7The defendant stated that the plaintiff named a value of $25 per acre as the fair value of the land which he was to put into the deal in exchange for defendant’s California property, and that he assured the defendant that that was the value of the land, and that the trade was made upon that basis; and this the plaintiff denies, at least to the extent that he did not make the trade upon the assurance that the land was worth $25 an acre, that he did not warrant it to be worth that, and that any fact arising out of mathematical calculation showing or appearing to show any statement as to $25 an acre is purely a coincidence. Upon this point, whatever may be the legal effect to be hereafter stated, I am constrained to conclude that $25 an acre for the land that the plaintiff was to put in was the understanding, and was impressed upon the mind of the defendant; and am further constrained to conclude that he proceeded rather upon the idea of an exchange of $20,000 worth of Texas lands for $20,000 worth of California lands, for the following reasons:

“First: The lands are valued by plaintiff in the contract at $29,300, and the incumbrance thereon, when the contract was made, was $9,000, and the defendant was to pay in addition $300 in oranges, and if the incumbrances and oranges be deducted • it leaves a net *572 value of the land at $20,000; and plaintiff himself testifies that the orange grove of defendant is worth on the market twenty thousand dollars ($20,000).

“Second: If the number of acres of land, 1183, be multiplied by 25, the product is within $275 of the $39,300 value put upon the land in the contract.

“Third: When the 72 acres excess in the Northington survey was discovered, which discovery gave the defendant that much more land, than he had contracted to buy, that land was put in at $1,800, which is exactly $25 an acre.

“Fourth: The defendant’s property in California is put in at $20,000, valued at that, with a $3,000 incumbrance upon it, but he pays $3,000 in money and in oranges, or contracts to do so, which offsets the incumbrance and enables the plaintiff to pay it off, thereby leaving his (defendant’s) land net $20,000 as against plaintiff’s land.

“I conclude from the testimony of the plaintiff himself as supporting his own allegations, that the lands are really worth, fairly on the market about $16,000 and the incumbrance upon them is about $10,800 leaving the net value something less than $6,000.

“Concerning the relations that the parties bore to each other and the means of knowledge possessed by each, I find that the plaintiff was engaged on rather a large scale in handling Texas lands, and that he had been over the lands which he was to put into the deal, the title to which, however, was in another party who owned the lands and owed the money on them. I find that the defendant is an old man who lives in California and is engaged in raising oranges; that some four years ago he bought some land near Fairbanks, in Harris County, Texas, a station on the Central Railroad some 12 or 15 miles north of Houston, and that he had bought some land at one time in Louisiana, but that he had never seen the lands involved in this action until just before the contract was made, when he went over part of them in a buggy and saw a part of them from a train as he passed, and he did not see the lands any more from that time until he declared the contract at an end.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W. 918, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 569, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riggins-v-trickey-texapp-1907.