Schuette v. Bishop

153 S.W. 377, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 92
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 S.W. 377 (Schuette v. Bishop) 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
Schuette v. Bishop, 153 S.W. 377, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 92 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

The appellee, the plaintiff in the county court, was the tenant of appellant, cultivating the latter’s land under a contract for a one-half share in the crop, and alleged that, before the expiration of the tenancy, the appellant, the defendant in the trial court, in disregard of the contract, by force and threats, willfully and intentionally dispossessed and ejected him from the premises, and compelled him by such force and threats to abandon the same, and refused to permit him to re-enter, and that the defendant took possession and converted all the crops raised upon the place to his own use, plaintiff suing for a half interest in 10 bales of cotton and 5% tons of cotton seed (disclaiming interest in the balance of the crop *378 for reasons not necessary to mention), and acknowledging certain deductions for money earned by himself and wife during the unexpired term of the lease, and further confessing a deduction of $50, cost of board for himself and wife during said time. The defendant, after denying the eviction of plaintiff, answered that the latter abandoned the crop in an immature condition, and that the same was grown up in weeds, and that some of the crop, at the time of abandonment, was not “laid by,” and that he never returned to the premises to finish the necessary cultivation of the crops, or to gather .the same, and that, when plaintiff left, he expressed his intention not to return, and that under the contract of tenancy plaintiff was to cultivate the crops in a “farmerlike” manner and gather the same and deliver to him a one-half thereof, free of expense, as his rental for the use of the land, and that, in violation of his contract of tenancy, he, plaintiff, voluntarily abandoned the premises and crops, and is estopped to claim damages.

First. Prior to the 9th day of July, 1910, there had been some difference between appellant and appellee as to the manner in which the crop was being worked by appellee, and hard feelings between the litigants had arisen, involving the use of the horses furnished by appellant to appellee, the consumption of the feed also furnished by appellant, and the testimony discloses a failure by appellant to furnish feed to the appellee for his teams after a certain time, except by daily delivery to the appellee’s place, attempted to be justified by appellant on the ground of an improper use of the feed by others visiting at appellee’s house, and other minor matters of difference are in evidence with reference to the cultivation of the crop, and some testimony of threats claimed by appellee to have been made by the appellant against him before the 9th day of July, 1910. The appellee in this case is the son-in-law of the appellant, and their places of residence were situated about 100 yards apart and the farms were adjoining. There was testimony that three disinterested neighbors had been sent by appellee to his father-in-law, the appellant, for the purpose of •selling his interest in the crop, or to induce appellant to buy his, appellee’s, interest, and, if appellant was not willing to buy or sell, for the emissaries to ascertain what the father-in-law was willing to do, who replied that he neither wanted to buy or sell, but was willing for his son-in-law to sell to any other third person, and he would furnish the teams, tools, and feed to complete the cultivation and gathering of the crop, and that he wanted a strict compliance with the contract. On the 9th day of July, 1910, young Schuette, the son of the appellant, was instructed by the latter to. go to-.Bishop’s, the appellee’s, for a pair of harness lines, and at this time the appellant, .his-wife and son, were cutting corn and stalks- in- the field adjoining, the former using a butcher knife for that purpose, and the son-in-law was at his place about 100 yards away, and upon the son’s arrival and after the request for, and the delivery of, the lines, words arose between son and son-in-law to the .effect that each had been talking about the family of the other, when appellee shot at young Schuette. The testimony is in a sense conflicting between the son-in-law and the neighbor who was present, the latter testifying that the boy had no gun, and had turned to start back to the place where his father was cutting corn; Bishop, the appellee, contending that the boy started to draw a pistol from the inside of his “jumper,” and also testifying that he saw his father-in-law coming at him “just as the shooting began or maybe a little before,” and was running at him, and had a butcher knife in his hand. The defendant testified that he had the butcher knife while he was cutting corn, but had handed it to his wife, who had started to the house, and when he started to the scene of the difficulty, it was for the purpose of keeping his boy from getting hurt, and stopping Bishop from shooting at him, but not for the purpose of taking part in the fight. The neighbor, who was the only other eyewitness on the stand, testifying that “Mr. Schuette ran at Bishop like he was awfully mad,” but that he saw no knife. Appellee also testified that Mrs. Doneheime, a daughter of the appellant, and who was living with the latter at the time ran out with a gun, and discharged it, and that subsequent events were of no further interest. He left and did not return. This difficulty on the 9th day of July, 1910, was the culmination — the main incident around which this case to a certain extent revolves; and it is argued by appellee in his brief that it was a prearranged affair, which is denied by the appellant, and enough of the testimony is reviewed by us to show that a serious conflict prevails as to the appellant’s participation in it as a real belligerent

[1] Second. The appellee assails the fifth paragraph of the court’s main charge, asserting that the trial court assumed in said charge that the difficulty had occurred between appellant and appellee when it was a disputed issue of fact between them to be decided by the jury. The charge complained of is as follows: “The evidence relative to the attempted arrangement of matters between plaintiff and defendant by persons testified about and spoken of as arbitrators can be considered by you only for the purpose of illustrating and throwing light upon the question of whether or not there was a controversy between the said parties plaintiff and defendant, the differences between them, if any, and as tending to show and explain, if it does, the reason for the final difficulty between them on the 9th day of July, 1910; also for the purpose of showing whether or not plaintiff voluntarily abandoned said premises, and may be considered by you for no other pur *379 pose.” (The underscoring is ours.) "We are unable to disagree with the appellant, and this assignment will have to be sustained. The portion of the charge complained of is without ambiguity in its statement, and the very statement of it declares the assumption of a fact, which the evidence detailed shows is a controverted one and should have been left to the jury; and by no process of justifiable reason or grammatical construction are we able to say with appellee that, when the charge is taken as a whole, there is no such fact assumed. Neither are we able to apply rule 62a (149 S. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 S.W. 377, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schuette-v-bishop-texapp-1913.