Rowe v. Daugherty

196 S.W. 240, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 643
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 1917
DocketNo. 224.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 240 (Rowe v. Daugherty) 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
Rowe v. Daugherty, 196 S.W. 240, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 643 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

This was a suit instituted by Howard C. Daugherty, appellee, the plaintiff below, in the justice court, precinct No. 1, Harris county, and was a suit to recover of E.O. Rowe, defendant below, the balance due upon eight promissory notes executed by the said Rowe to R. T. Easley, and which notes were indorsed by the said R. T. Easley to said Howard O. Daugherty. The petition does not plead an election of the holder as declaring the unpaid notes due; it appearing from said petition, which was filed May 5, 1914, with the notes attached thereto, that the first note sued on .was not due until May 15, 1914. Plaintiff, in connection with his suit, sued out a writ of attachment, and levied upon certain land situated in Harris county, Tex., belonging to defendant, E. C. Rowe. The defendant in the justice court filed an answer to the plaintiff’s petition by which he generally demurred to plaintiff’s petition, and further a general denial, and by special answer pleaded an agreement between the said defendant and R. T. Easley, based upon a consideration paid to the said Easley in the resale of the property for which said notes were given, that the said E. C. Rowe should be released from his liability on said notes, and- that the said Howard O. Daugherty, plaintiff, knew of said agreement and ratified and confirmed the same, and that the said Rowe paid to the said Easley certain sums of money after having said understanding both with Easley and Daugherty that he should be released, by .which he paid said Easley $235 in cash; alleging and pleading estoppel and ratification on the part of the said Daugherty, and further pleading by said answer that he should be allowed to go hence with his costs, and that his land should *241 be free from said attachment. The instrument upon which said notes originated was a conveyance from R. T. Easley to E. 0. Rowe, conveying to the said Rowe certain personal property in the nature of household furniture. In the justice court, before going to trial, the defendant filed a trial amendment, alleging, among other things, as a defense to the plaintiff’s cause of action, that the said Easley, who had sold him the property described in the instrument above mentioned, which had been reconveyed to him in settlement of certain land purchased by said E. 0. Rowe from said Easley, with the knowledge, consent, and acquiescence of the plaintiff, sold the property which had been reconveyed by said Rowe to him to one J. H. Lehr, ,who assumed the payment of said notes so assigned to and held by the plaintiff, and had agreed to look to said Lehr for the payment of said notes, that the said Lehr did thereafter pay off one of said notes, and that thereafter the plaintiff, by an arrangement with the said Lehr, took possession of said property, and thereafter proceeded to sell the same at public sale, at a great sacrifice, and without the knowledge of the defendant, E. 0. Rowe, and that said sale was made with the purpose and intent of defrauding the defendant, Rowe, defendant alleging that he was not in Houston and was out of the state at the time said sale was made, did not know thereof, and further alleging that the said property was worth the sum of $600, but .was sacrificed at said sale for $102, and praying for judgment upon hearing against the plaintiff for the difference between the amount for which said property was sold and its market value. Defendant further pleaded in said trial amendment that, if he is mistaken in the law of estoppel and his right to damages, then the conduct, action, and agreement on the part of the said plaintiff had in connection with the said Easley, and knowing that the defendant, Rowe, was acting thereon and upon the theory that he was released from the payment of said notes, and that the said Daugherty was bound by having ratified and confirmed the statement of said Easley, who had the agreement with the said Daugherty as to said release, and said acts and conduct in connection with the permission of the said Lehr by the said plaintiff of the said Easley to sell to the said Lehr, pleading ratification of the assumed agency 'of the said Easley for the said Daugherty in making the said agreement .with said Rowe, and in which it is charged that the said Daugherty had full and complete knowledge.

On said pleadings a trial was had in said justice court on April 9, 1915, on which a judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the full amount sued for, from which judgment an appeal was sued out to the county court of Harris county. On December 30, 1915, a trial was had in said county court, but before the trial was begun the defendant filed in said court, under the law and rules permitting him to do so, a plea of confession and avoidance, with a view of having the right to open and conclude both the introduction of evidence and the argument, which said plea is found in the transcript. On said date said motion was overruled by the court. Thereafter, before announcing ready for trial, the defendant presented his general demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition, which said general demurrer was overruled by the court. After the evidence was introduced, plaintiff moved for a peremptory instruction, which was sustained by the court, and said jury was instructed to find for the plaintiff. Appeal was properly perfected, and the case is before this court for adjudication.

Complaint is made in the first assignment of error that the court erred in overruling and not sustaining the general demurrer of the defendant to the plaintiff’s petition, as set out in the defendant’s original answer and cross-action, because the plaintiff’s petition did not allege and show a cause of action, in this, that as a part of such petition the plaintiff attached to his petition the several notes sued upon, which notes contained the following clause: “Failure to pay any two thereof shall, at the election of the holder, mature all;” because the mere attaching of said notes to plaintiff’s petition as exhibits did not show that said notes had been matured, the said petition being filed on May 5, 1914, and the earliest note sued upon was not then due until May 15,1914, and the other notes sued on being due monthly thereafter until December 15, 1914, said petition nowhere alleging such default as would permit said suit to be filed or judgment taken thereon, and therefore said petition did not state a cause of action of which the court could take cognizance, and the general demurrer should have been sustained, and the court erred in overruling the same.

The suit was in the justice court originally, in which the pleadings may be oral, and the technical rules of pleading do not apply to the manner of forming issues in the justice court in ordinary suits, and on appeal from the justice court the pleadings also may be oral in the county court.

The testimony shows that there was a series of notes in which it was provided that they all become due upon default being made on two of them. The filing of plaintiff’s petition is prima facie evidence of plaintiff’s election to treat them all as due.

There seems to have been filed by the appellant in the court an admission setting up the fact that plaintiff had a good cause of action, save and except as to the facts set up in the answer constituting his defense. To a general demurrer it would be sufficient answer to say that the appellant admitted that appellee had a good cause of action, and therefore the defense would be confined to specific matters set up in the admission. At *242

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 240, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowe-v-daugherty-texapp-1917.