Senter v. Teague

164 S.W. 1045, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1280
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 164 S.W. 1045 (Senter v. Teague) 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
Senter v. Teague, 164 S.W. 1045, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1280 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.'

T. A. Teague instituted this suit against J. W. Patrick and J. M: Senter upon a promissory note executed by the defendants in favor pf the plaintiff, and, from .a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Senter has appealed.

' Tire evidence shows, that the note in suit was a renewal of another note executed by Senter alone as consideration for two mules fjio.ld to him by Teague. The mules were afterwards. sold by Senter' to Patrick, who ássúmed payment of the note. The principal defensé urged by Senter consisted of the contention that he was released by Teague from liability upon the note by reason of the following facts alleged , in' his answer, to ivit: Senter held another note against Patrick secured by a mortgage on the same property covered by plaintiff’s mortgage, as well as other property, which he sold to Dr. Campbell; 'and which Patrick desired to renew with' Campbell. Patrick, who was a tenant of Senter, was also indebted to Senter in the - sum of about $180 upon open account, which was likewise secured by the same mortgage transferred' to Campbell. Senter Was' unwilling to a renewal of the note held by Campbell against Patrick, "unless Teague would release him from liability upon the note held by him-against Patrick and Senter, but was willing to agree to a renewal of the note held by Campbell, and also to discharge the account he held against Patrick, if Tea-gue would release him from liability on the note which Teague held. These facts were communicated to Teague, who thereafter agreed with Patrick that, if the latter would execute to him a new note with sureties other than Senter, satisfactory to Teague, he (Teague) would accept the same in lieu of the note he then held against Senter and Patrick, and at the same time wrote a letter to Campbell, which was afterwards duly delivered and later shown to Senter, stating, in substance, that Patrick had made satisfactory arrangements to take up the note of Senter and Patrick, and that Senter had been released from liability upon that note. Senter further alleged that, relying upon said representations by Teague, he agreed to an. extension of the note held by Campbell, and also released Patrick from liability upon the open account, and hence upon the principle of estoppel he had been discharged from liability to Teague upon the note sued on.

There was evidence tending to support the allegations of fact recited above in the plea of estoppel, all of which was submitted in detail in the second paragraph of the court’s charge to the jury, with an instruction that, if those facts had been established by the evidence, a verdict should be returned in favor of Senter. Several assignments of error are presented to that paragraph of the charge, substantially to the effect that, if it was shown by the evidence that Teague wrote to Campbell such a letter as pleaded, stating that Senter was released from liability on the note in suit, and that, relying upon the same, Senter consented to a renewal of the note held by Campbell, and also surrendered the account held by him against Patrick, those facts alone would constitute a sufficient defense to the note independent of other facts pleaded, and that the effect of the charge was to require the jury to find all of the facts pleaded as an estoppel before a verdict could be returned in his favor. The instruction was favorable to Senter; in no wise did it authorize a verdict in favor of the plaintiff; it followed the allegations contained in Senter’s plea of estoppel, and, even though it. should be held not as favorable to him as he was entitled, still it cannot be said to be such an error as would require a reversal of the .judgment. Abilene L. & W. Co. v. Robinson, 146 S. W. 1052, and cases there cited.

Teague testified, in effect, that when Patrick, requested of him a release of Senter. from liability on the note in suit, he agreed with Patrick to cancel that note, if Patrick would execute and deliver to him a new note with sureties thereon that would be accepted and cashed by the bank at Alvarado, and' that that was the only agreement he made *1047 with Patrick relative to' a cancellation of the note in question. He further testified that Patrick mentioned the names of two per-. sons whom he said he could get to sign a new note with him as sureties; that he asked the cashier of the bank whether or not a note signed by those two men as sureties would be accepted by him as a bankable note, and that the cashier replied in the negative; that later he told Patrick that the bank would not accept such a note; that Patrick never offered such a note to him thereafter; that the written communication he sent to Campbell contained nothing more than a statement that he and Patrick had “agreed to make a satisfactory settlement or arrangement” of the note in controversy in this suit.

By the third paragraph of the court’s charge the jury were instructed that, if the proposition by Teague to Patrick detailed by Teague in his testimony and noted above, was the only agreement or proposition which was made by Teague to Patrick, and the note which Patrick proposed to give Teague was not such a note as the bank would accept and pay cash therefor, then a verdict should be returned in favor of Teague against Senter, as well as Patrick. By several assignments appellant insists that, if the communication addressed to Campbell by Teague contained the statement, as testified by two or three witnesses, that Sen-ter had been released from the note in controversy, and if Senter saw the communication, and was induced thereby to agree to an extension of the note held by Campbell, and to release his account against Patrick, plaintiff would be estopped from holding him liable in this suit, and that the instruction contained in the third paragraph of the charge and last noted' had the effect of excluding this defense. Under none of the assignments complaining of that paragraph of the charge is there a statement of any evidence showing that appellant sustained any loss by reason of his reliance upon the statement contained in the communication to Campbell. No evidence is pointed out to show that appellant signed a renewal note with Patrick to Campbell, instead of merely releasing the account he held against Patrick and the lien to secure the same without signing the renewal, as indicated was done by certain portions of Patrick’s deposition offered by appellant, and the refusal of which is made the basis of the nineteenth assignment of error. There is a statement that he told Patrick that he released him from the account which Patrick owed him, amounting to about $180; but no testimony is'referred to in the statement under the assignments to refute the testimony of Teague and other facts and circumstances in evidence which seemingly estáblish the conclusion without doubt that Patrick was insolvent, and hence that no substantial portion of the account he owed appellant could have been collected.

Furthermore, the instruction in the third paragraph begins with the expression, “on the other hand, you are instructed that, if you find from the evidence that the only' agreement or proposition which was made by the plaintiff to J. W.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W. 1045, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/senter-v-teague-texapp-1914.