Samples v. Wever

121 S.W. 1129, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 562, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 556
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 1129 (Samples v. Wever) 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
Samples v. Wever, 121 S.W. 1129, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 562, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 556 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

This suit was instituted by appellee Wever against appellee Samples on a promissory note executed by Samples to Wever June 15, 1901, for one thousand dollars, payable twelve months after date with interest and attorney’s fees, and to foreclose the vendor’s lien on the following tracts of land situated in Scurry County, viz.: School land sections 97, 102 and 103, block 97, H. & T. C. Ry. Co. surveys. Appellant’ Samples defended upon two grounds: First, a total want of consideration in the note in that it had been obtained by false and fraudulent representations as to the title of two of the three sections of land for which the note and one thousand dollars in cash had been given; second, a subsequent agreement by the terms of which the original sale was canceled, a new deed made to section 103, and the note sued on to be returned to Samples for cancellation. The trial resulted in a judgment in appellee’s favor *564 for eighteen hundred and forty dollars and twenty cents, with foreclosure of the vendor’s lien on said three sections of land, and from this judgment Samples has appealed. ,

Several errors have been assigned, but in the view we have taken of the case we think they may he disposed of in a general way. The following facts seem to be undisputed :■ Said section 103 was duly sold by the State to appellee as an actual settler August 28, 1899, which sale was in good standing at the time of appellee’s conveyance of the section to appellant on June 15, 1901. Section 97 was duly sold by the State to one J. H. Burke as an actual settler on August 28, 1899, at one and one-half dollars per acre. Some time in July, 1900, Burke negotiated a sale of section 97 to appellee and abandoned the section, making formal conveyance thereof to appellee on the 1st day of January, 1901. Section 102 was awarded to one Carruthers by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, who purchased or purported to purchase as an actual settler upon school land section 88 as his home section. Carruthers at the time, however, was an actual settler upon section 112 in the same block, instead of upon section 88, it not appearing that' Carruthers ever abandoned his actual settlement upon section 112, nor how it happened that in making his application for the purchase of section 102 he stated his actual occupancy as being upon section 88 instead of 112. At a date and in manner not clearly shown Carruthers sold section 102 to appellee, and appellee’s application to purchase 102 as additional to his home section 103 appears to have been rejected by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, possibly because his application was not accompanied by a written transfer from Carruthers. In the condition of title thus stated, on June 15, 1901, appellee Wever conveyed all three of said sections, 97, 102 and 103, to appellant, appellant' giving therefor one thousand dollars in cash and executing the note sued upon in this case, which reserved the vendor’s lien upon the land.

The evidence is conflicting on the issue of whether at the time of this sale appellee represented that he had good title to all of the sections named. But however this was, soon thereafter it was learned that section 97 was subject to forfeiture because of Burke’s said abandonment, and section 102 subject' to forfeiture because of Carruthers’ want of actual settlement on said section 88, and appellant went to appellee complaining of such defect of title, and appellee, so appellant testifies but which appellee denied, agreed to adjust the matter by making a separate conveyance to appellant of section 103, of which appellant was then an actual occupant, having received possession at the time of the original sale, and to return the note sued on, he (appellee) to retain the cash paid. The facts show that in fact appellee then made a quitclaim deed separately conveying to appellant section 103 for the recited consideration of seven hundred dollars. Appellee testifies, however, that he did not read the deed, and in effect that it was executed for appellant’s convenience, and not in rescission of the original sale. At all events, the original awards to section-97 and section 103 were later forfeited by the Commissioner of the General' Land Office, and the lands re-awarded to appellant upon his application upon the original terms as additional to his home section, Ho. 103.

*565 The court submitted the issue of the alleged subsequent agreement by the terms of which the note sued upon was to be returned to appellant, and instructed the jury in event of a finding in appellant’s favor on that issue to find for him. No complaint is made of the charge in this respect, but the court further charged that if the award of section 97 to Burlce was not canceled until November 11, 1901, after appellee’s sale to appellant, that appellee had such title at the time of the original sale as was the subject of contract, and that if at the time of the award of 102 to Carruthers be resided upon and occupied section No. 112 as a home, and that the award of section No. 102 had not been canceled by the State until March, 1902, appellee had such right to section 102 at the date he sold the same to appellant as was the subject of contract. These general instructions, which are assigned as error, were followed by a further instruction to the effect that if the jury found that, at the date of appellee’s conveyance to appellant, appellee bad such title t'o sections 102 and 97 as were subject to contract, and that appellant later purchased these sections upon the same terms upon which they were originally sold to Burke and Carruthers respectively, then the verdict should be for appellee for the amount of the note sued on, principal, interest and attorney’s fees, “less the amount of money which the defendant Samples paid to procure the repurchase of said land, and such other expenses, if any, shown by the evidence which were reasonable and necessary to procure the title to said land.”

The verdict is objected to as too indefinite to warrant the judgment, “in that it fails to fix the amount due on the note sued on, and in that it fails to fix the amount to be deducted from the amount found due on the note.” The verdict, in so far as necessary to notice, is as follows: “We, the jury, find our verdict in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant Samples for the amount of principal, interest and attorney’s fees due on the note sued on, less the amount of forty-three dollars with interest on same, and the foreclosure of the vendor’s lien on all the lands described in plaintiff’s petition.” We fail to find reversible error in the respect here pointed out. The appellee’s petition fully set forth the note with its date, principal amount, rate of interest, rate of attorney’s fees, etc., which can be looked to in aid of the jury’s verdict, and when so considered certainly was sufficiently definite to fix the amount due on the note. See Darden v. Mathews, 22 Texas, 320; Veck v. Holt, 71 Texas, 715; James v. Wilson, 7 Texas, 231; Newcomb v. Walton, 41 Texas, 318; Pearce v. Bell, 21 Texas, 688. If in any event there was error in respect' to the forty-three dollars allowed appellant, it is certainly harmless from the fact, as appears from a mathematical calculation made by us, that the forty-three dollars was deducted from the principal of the note, which consequently carried interest from its date, and therefore more favorable to appellant than he had a right to demand.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 1129, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 562, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samples-v-wever-texapp-1909.