Scovill v. Melton

85 S.W. 463, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 351, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 474
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 85 S.W. 463 (Scovill v. Melton) 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
Scovill v. Melton, 85 S.W. 463, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 351, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 474 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

EIDSON, Associate Justice.

The following statement of the nature and result of the suit taken from the briefs of appellants and appellee, appears to be full and correct:

“This is a suit originally filed by appellee Melton, plaintiff below, in the Justice’s Court against Y. A. Scovill to recover a balance of $70 claimed to be due him by Scovill for breach of a contract for pasturage, and for foreclosure of pasturage lien upon certain cattle, in which suit A. Barganier, one of the appellees was likewise joined and made party defendant, on the groupd that he had purchased the cattle upon which appellee was asserting a pasturage lien. The defendants in said Justice’s Court plead general demurrer and general denial, and set up an arbitration alleged to have been had between them and appellee in which they plead an award of the arbitrators in their favor in bar of this action, and further plead that appellant Scovill was induced to enter into the contract sued upon by fraudulent representations of Melton that the pasture rented to him was a good winter pasture, when in reality such was not the fact. Defendants also plead failure of consideration, and in re-convention against plaintiff for certain sums of money expended by defendant Scovill for feed of cattle, for labor of feeding same, and for making troughs for feeding same, aggregating the sum of $71.70. The first trial in Justice’s Court resulted in a mistrial. "Upon a second trial, there was a verdict and judgment for appellants herein, from which judgment appellee appealed to the County Court. In the County Court appellants amended their pleadings, setting up, first, general denial and failure of consideration for the contract sued upon by plaintiff in this, that before the making of said contract by plaintiff and defendant Scovill, Melton represented to defendant Scovill that the pasture therein referred to was a good winter pasture, and that such cattle as defendant might put upon said pasture would thrive and become fat for marketable purposes, whereas, in truth and in fact, said pasture was not a good winter pasture, and said cattle did not thrive thereon, but lost flesh and became poor, which plea was verified.

“Defendant further plead that all the matters in controversy between plaintiff Melton and himself, arising upon said contract for the pasturage of said cattle were, prior to the filing of this suit, submitted to a board of arbitrators duly selected, and that after due consideration by *353 said board, an award was duly rendered to the effect that the defendant Scovill did not owe plaintiff Melton anything by reason of the contract herein sued upon, and found in favor of the defendant Scovill against the plaintiff Melton. Which said award the defendant Scovill plead in bar of plaintiff’s right to recover anything in this suit. Defendant Scovill further plead that prior to the making of said contract sued upon herein, the plaintiff Melton represented to him that the pasture in question was a good winter pasture, and that cattle which, he, defendant, contemplated pasturing thereon would thrive and become fat; that said defendant believed said representations to be true, and was induced thereby to enter into said contract, but that said representations were untrue, that said pasture was not a good winter pasture, and the cattle he placed thereon did not thrive, but on the contrary, lost flesh, became very poor and that some of them died; that by reason thereof the defendant Scovill suffered the following injury and damage, to wit: The death of eight head of cattle on account of insufficiency of pasturage, .and the depreciation in value of the balance of said cattle, to the value of $125, which amount he plead in reconvention; that by reason of the insufficiency of said pasture he was compelled to feed said cattle at an additional expense of $73.20, which amount he likewise pleaded in reconvention.

“In the County Court the defendant Barganier demurred to plaintiff’s cause of action, plead general denial, and especially denied that plaintiff had or held any'valid lien against the cattle purchased by him, because all the sums due upon said cattle for their pasturage had been fully paid by the defendant Scovill, and further, if there had been any valid lien in favor of plaintiff against said cattle purchased by him, that the same had been lost and abandoned by the surrender of the possession of said cattle to said defendant, and further that he had purchased said cattle for a full and valuable consideration, without knowledge or notice of the pretended claim or lien alleged by plaintiff, and further that the value of the cattle on which said plaintiff asserted a claim or lien exceeded $200, to wit, were of the value of $600, and that said court was without jurisdiction to try said cause.

“Upon the trial in the County Court the jury rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $70 with a foreclosure on the cattle in controversy for the sum of $37.50 against appellee Barganier, and against defendant’s plea in reconvention. Upon which said verdict, judgment was duly rendered for plaintiff against defendant Scovill for the sum of $70 with interest thereon at the rate of six percent per annum from January 1, 1903, and it was adjudged that the same be foreclosed upon the seventy head of cattle in the possession of defendant A. Barganier to the extent of $37.50, and in the event that said cattle were not forthcoming that plaintiff recover of the defendant Barganier the sum of $37.50, with interest thereon at the rate of six percent per annum from the 1st day of January, 1903.”

“This suit was originally instituted in the Justice’s Court against appellants V. A. Scovill and A. Barganier upon a contract of pasturage, beginning on October 1, 1902, and ending on January 1, 1903, in which plaintiff alleged that defendant Scovill had used said pasture during *354 all of said time; that he had paid for the months of October and November and refused to pay for December; he asserted a lien upon the cattle so pastured for the pasturage during December, and asked for a foreclosure against defendant Barganier, alleging that the said Barganier, prior to his purchase, knew of the existence of said claim for pasturage and thereafter bought and removed said cattle from the pasture, without the consent of ’plaintiff.”

By their eighth assignment of error appellants complain of the action of the court below in instructing the jury to find against appellant Scovill on his plea in reconvention, and in refusing to give to the jury said appellants’ special charge No.

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Bluebook (online)
85 S.W. 463, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 351, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scovill-v-melton-texapp-1905.