Riley v. Palmer

250 S.W. 762, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 88
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 1923
DocketNo. 2128. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 762 (Riley v. Palmer) 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
Riley v. Palmer, 250 S.W. 762, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 88 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

KLETT, J.

In the amended original petition the appellee sued appellant and 27 others in two counts, asking: First, for judgment on four vendor’s lien notes of $3,000 each and one note of $1,500, executed by defendant S. R. Van Buskirk in part payment for lots in Amarillo, Tex., and for foreclosure of the vendor’s lien upon said property as against all defendants; and, second, that plaintiff, in the trespass to try title count, have judgment for the title and possession of said lots. Defendant W. L. Riley styling himself as an intervener, filed a. plea of intervention, as well as an answer, adopting the aver-ments of the plea of intervention, alleging that he was a broker at the time of the sale of the lots by plaintiff to the defendant Van Bus-kirk, and was employed by plaintiff to find a purchaser, and that he did find a purchaser, to wit, the defendants herein, to whom the lots were conveyed for a consideration of $15,000; that plaintiff promised to pay in-tervener a commission of $750 for making the sale; that the plaintiff agreed to pay inter-vener the commission out of the first proceeds collected on said notes; that plaintiff assigned to intervener an interest in said notes sufficient to pay the commission on said deal; that it was agreed that said notes, or the proceeds thereof, should be held as collateral security for the payment of said commission; that intervener is the owner of an interest in the vendor’s lien notes to the extent of $750, and asks that he have judgment for his debt and foreclosure of his lien. The statement of facts contains copies of answers filed by other defendants. These pleadings were introduced in evidence by plaintiff. They do not appear in the clerk’s transcript. Some of the defendants filed only general demurrers and general denial and some disclaimers.

Defendant Van Buskirk filed a verified answer alleging that prior to the date of said deed and notes a number of the defendants, naming them, associated themselves together for the purpose of forming and becoming stockholders in a corporation, to be known as the Plains Co-operative Building Association, and that by agreement between plaintiff and said defendants the deed was made to the defendant Van Buskirk as trustee for said defendants until the corporation could be organized and chartered and with the explicit understanding that said Van Buskirk was not to be responsible as maker of said notes.

It was after the filing of this answer by Van Buskirk that the plaintiff filed his amended petition. Plaintiff's second supplemental petition alleges that on or about March I, 1920, plaintiff was the owner of the lots in controversy; that on said date defendant Riley sought to obtain from the plaintiff a listing of said property for sale; that plaintiff listed said lots with the defendant Riley for sale for $12,000 of which one-fourth was to be paid in cash, with the understanding that, in the event of a sale, the plaintiff would pay the defendant Riley a commission of $600; that soon after the listing the plaintiff decided to advance the price of the property and informed the intervener that he would not take less than $15,000, but stated to the intervener that, in the event he found a purchaser for said property who would give $15,000 and pay as much as $3,-000 in. cash, he would make the sale and pay the commission stated; that on or about March 12, 1920, the intervener reported he had found a purchaser, but that the purchaser was unable to pay $3,000 in cash; that thereupon the plaintiff refused to sell the property; that, as an inducement to obtain the plaintiff to sell and convey said property to the intervener’s purchaser, it was proposed and agreed by the intervener, who was also one of the purchasers, that if the plaintiff would take only $1,500 in cash and accept notes for the balance of the consideration, the intervener would waive, and not claim, any commission until the first note was paid; that the note was never paid; and that therefore intervener was not entitled to the commission.

On the day the case was called for trial the defendant Riley entered a denial of plaintiff’s second supplemental petition, and demanded strict proof of the allegations therein contained, and on the same day filed another pleading, stating that he admitted that the plaintiff had a good cause of action as set forth in the amended original petition, “except so far as same may be defeated in whole or in part by the facts of the answer and plea in intervention, constituting a good defense which may be established on the trial,” and prayed that he be permitted to open and close the testimony and argument. A bill of exception at this point in the transcript, which recites an agreement between the parties as to the pleadings on file, shows that the de *764 fendant 'Riley was refused the right to open and close either the testimony or argument.

In answer to special issues the jury found: (1) That after the plaintiff had raised the sale price of his property to $16,000 the amount he agreed to pay defendant Riley as a commission was $750; (2) that the plaintiff (a) did not unconditionally agree to pay to defendant Riley a commission for effecting the sale, but did agree (b) to pay such commission only in the event that the sale should he made, and that the first $3,000 note executed in part payment for the property should be fully paid; (3) that the defendant Riley agreed that he would waive and not claim a commission unless and until the first $3,000 was paid; (4) that the plaintiff did not assign to the defendant Riley an interest in the notes sued on; (5) that the plaintiff did not agree with the defendant Riley that said notes or the proceeds thereof should be held as collateral security for the payment of any commission; (6) that the plaintiff and the defendant Riley did not agree or intend to charge the note sued on or the funds realized from the collection of same with the payment of the commission; and (7) that said parties did not contemplate or agree that a lien should be retained upon said notes to secure the payment of commission. When the answers of the jury were returned, defendant Riley filed a motion asking that he have judgment as prayed for in his pleadings. The trial court overruled the motion and entered judgment for plaintiff for the title and possession of the lots.

The material facts, about which there was much controversy, are reflected in the findings of the jury. The appellant has an assignment that “the evidence is not sufficient ’to support the verdict of the jury or the judgment of the court,” but we think this assignment too general to require us to consider it, because, as said by Spencer, J., of the Texas .Commission of Appeals:

“There is nothing to inform the court what evidence is relied upon to show the inconsistency between the verdict and the evidence.” Railway Oo. v. Patterson, 228 S. W. 119.

We are not persuaded that there was error in refusing to allow appellant, as inter-vener, the right to open and conclude either the evidence or the argument. The Legislature of the state has prescribed the order of proceedings on trial by a jury as follows:

“Art. 1951. 1. The plaintiff or his counsel shall read his petition to the jury.
“2. The defendant or his counsel shall read his answer.
“3. If there be any intervener, he or his counsel shall read his pleadings.
“4.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 762, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-palmer-texapp-1923.