S. A. Pace Grocery Co. v. Guynes

204 S.W. 794, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 705
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 1918
DocketNo. 1943.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 794 (S. A. Pace Grocery Co. v. Guynes) 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
S. A. Pace Grocery Co. v. Guynes, 204 S.W. 794, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 705 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

*795 HODGES, J.

The appellant is a private corporation [city of Corsicana, Tex. It instituted this suit in the court below against the appellee to recover a balance of $583.60 due on a I promissory note and $125.90 due on an open account. It also asked for the foreclosure of a chattel mortgage on some personal property given to secure the payment of the note. Among other defenses the appellee pleaded payment, and • also asked for judgment against the appellant for an excess of $400.44 which he claims to have paid on other indebtedness held by the appellant. He alleged, in substance, that in December, 1915, he owed the appellant a balance on the note here sued on and another note for the sum of $2,500 due the 1st day 'of January thereafter ; that the appellant, through its general manager, S. A.- Pace, offered to accept in payment of the latter note $1,000 less than its face value; that this offer was assented to by the appellee, and he began making an effort to borrow the money for that purpose. He finally succeeded in securing a loan and paid to the appellant $2,425, which he alleged amounted to $400.44 more than he owed the appellant at that time if he had been given credit for the $1,000 deduction promised, by Pace. In reply to this plea of payment the appellant alleged that the offer referred to, if made, was withdrawn before it was complied with, and, further, that it was wholly gratuitous and without any consideration. In a supplemental answer the appellee set out certain expenditures which he made in his efforts to secure a loan of the money needed, consisting of the costs of procuring abstracts, the examination of title, and the purchase of other interests in a tract of land he was required to mortga&e as security. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment against the appellant on its demand, and in favor of the appellee for a balance of $388.44.

In view of the disposition which we think should be made of the case, we shall consider first those assignments of error which may be regarded as attacking the sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment rendered. It was shown in the trial below that the note sued on by the appellant was executed by the appellee in January, 1915. It was originally for the sum of $687, due October 1st after date, and provided for interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum and 10 per cent, as attorney’s fees in the event the note wli-.s placed for collection. When introduced in - '\hlence on the trial, it showed credits ami-mi Mug in the aggregate to $352.-34. There was no dispute in the trial.as to the correctness of those credits. On January 16, 1915, the appellee executed and delivered to the appellant another note for the principal sum-, of $2,500 due January 1, 1916, with interest' from date at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum, and also provided for 10 per cent, attorney’s fees in the usual form. This last-mentioned note was secured by a mortgage on real estate. During the year 1915 the appellee contracted other debts to the appellant for goods purchased on account. These debts, however, were settled before this controversy arose. In the fall of 1915, some time after the note first described matured, the appellee made a payment of $250 which he directed to be credited on that note. S. A. Pace, the appellant’s manager, insisted that the credit should be applied in payment of the interest on the $2,500 note, and testified that this was agreed to, but that testimony was disputed by the appellee, and the verdict of the jury is such that it cannot be determined how that issue of fact was settled. It appears that some ill feeling was engendered during the dispute, which caused Pace, who had exclusive management and control of the S. A. Pace Grocery Company, to resolve to discontinue further business dealings with the appellee. A short time thereafter, and before the larger note matured, Pace wrote the appellee a letter offering to accept in full payment of - the $2,500 note $1,000 less than its face value. Omitting the immaterial portions, that letter is as follows:

“You owe me a note for twenty-five hundred dollars, secured by a mortgage on land. You owe a prior mortgage of four hundred dollars to Mrs. Baum on this land. Some time ago you had this matter up with Capt. Allyn, and he agreed to take up this four hundred dollars, and it has occurred to me that possibly, if he is a personal friend of yours, and has confidence in you, that he would be willing to. take up ours also, and if you can do this, or have some one else take it up, I will allow you to do so and will receipt the note for $1,500.00. Or, in other words, to get clear of this matter without any further friction between us, I am willing to accept fifteen hundred dollars for the twenty-five hundred dollars, and then there will be no trouble whatever for you to get sufficient money on the four hundred dollars to pay off the mortgage on your live stock. Or, if you want to do so, as I understand that you have twenty-five or thirty head of good cattle that are worth a great deal more as stock cattle than this note amounts to, I will take a new note for the amount of the balance due on the old one, and take a mortgage on the cattle and renew it until next fall. Then that will -leave everything that you have clear, and you can make your arrangements for groceries with some one else.
“Now, think of this please, and make an effort to do as I have suggested. I am sure that you can do it with just a little assistance from those near you, whom I believe would be glad to assist you.
“Trusting that you.will appreciate my motive in writing to you as I do, and be assured that I do it with the very best of personal feelings towards you, I remain, Yours truly, S. A. Pace, Prest. & Mgr. S. A. Pace Gro. Co.”

Appellee testified that within a day or two after receiving this letter he called on Pace, expressed his appreciation of the generosity extended, and accepted the offer. Being without the necessary funds, he immediately began efforts to secure a loan, and made an application through a local agent of a foreign money lending company for $3,500, intend *796 ing to use the excess over what was required. to meet the offer of the appellant in payment of debts due other parties. On January 24, 1916, no payment having been made by the appellee, Pace wrote him another letter, of which the following are the material portions:

“Dear Sir: In making you the proposition some time ago that I did as an inducement to have you pay what you owed me, I did not mean, and do not think you understood it so, that the proposition should stand open indefinitely. * * * If I do not hear from you promptly on receipt of this letter, and you do not do what I want you to do, then this is notice to you now that I withdraw my proposition, and you will have to come in and make some other satisfactory arrangement with me.”

Appellee testified that upon receipt of this letter he again called on Pace; and the following is his version of the conversation that took place:

“I told him that the reason I hadn’t been in there in the last three or four days ⅜ * ⅜ I couldn’t get the money there by the 20th, and I was tired of telling him what I was doing. And Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 794, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-a-pace-grocery-co-v-guynes-texapp-1918.