Stallings v. Smith

11 S.W.2d 344
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 1928
DocketNo. 739.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 344 (Stallings v. Smith) 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
Stallings v. Smith, 11 S.W.2d 344 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, C. J.

This suit was instituted by appellee, Albert Smith, against appellant, E. A. Stallings, to recover the sum of $1,847.72, which he claimed under the alternate provisions of a certain verbal contract pleaded by him. Appellee pleaded that appellant had laid out an addition to the city of Dallas, and was engaged in building houses thereon and selling or offering the same for sale or rental to persons desiring to'reside in said addition; that such development of said addition contemplated the building of 100 houses; that appellee was constructing the houses built thereon by appellant on terms satisfactory to both of them; that when about 10 houses had been built it was found that the sale and rental of such houses was difficult because there were no water mains in said addition; that the city of Dallas refused to run a water main thereto, and that water could not be procured therefor from any other source on satisfactory terms; that appellant approached appellee and assured him that he *345 would finish building said addition as then laid out providing for 100 houses in the aggregate as aforesaid; that appellant proposed that appellee select a lot, bore a well, and install a water system; that appellant agreed in that connection to sell appellee a certain lot for the sum of $700 and finance the boring of the well and the installation of the water system, and agreed that appellee should repay appellant by his retaining the sum of $100 on the amount due appellee on each house thereafter constructed, and that he would credit the same on the cost of said lot, well, and water system until he was repaid in full; that in event appellant did not at once finish building the remainder of the 100 houses contemplated in developing said addition, or if he failed to secure title to said lot by September 15, 1926, he would repay appellee the entire cost incurred by him in boring said well and installing said water system, and would also pay him for all wort he had done thereon; that appellant stated at the time that he knew that said undertaking on the part of appellee would not be profitable unless t.he entire addition was built up. Appellee further alleged in that connection that said proposition was made by appellant to him on January 16,1926, and that at that time appellant did not have title to said addition, but had only an option entitling him to purchase the same on or before September Í5th as aforesaid. He further alleged that, with the express understanding with appellant that the remainder of. said houses were to be built immediately and that he would receive in September following a deed to the lot to be selected for the building of said well, he accepted said proposition, and, with the approval of appellant, selected a lot for which he agreed to pay him the sum of $700 in the manner aforesaid, bored a well, erected improvements, installed a water system, and furnished water to said addition. He further alleged that he continued building houses for appellant according to such contract until he had completed about 17 houses, when appellant claimed he was out of money and could not then further continue the development of said addition; that thereafter, on September 15th, he applied to appellant for a deed to said lot, and found that appellant had not procured title thereto, but had succeeded in having his option extended; that about January 1,1927, no further houses having been built, and said addition being still furnished with water by said well and water system, appellee approached appellant and insisted upon appellant’s paying him the sums expended in boring said well and installing said system; that he at that time exhibited to appellant an itemized account of moneys expended by him, being the account here sued on; and that appellant agreed to pay the same and made no complaint of any of the items thereof, and that appellant had wholly failed to comply with said promise. Appel-lee further alleged that the total cost of the boring of said well and the installing of said water system was $2,203.21; that appellant had paid him thereon the sum of $355.49, leaving a balance of $1,847.72, for which he asked judgment.

Appellant denied all the allegations of ap-pellee. He further pleaded that the contract for the building of said additional houses alleged by appellee, the making of which he denied, was not to be and could not have been completed within the period of one year, and invoked the Statute of Frauds (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. 1925, art. 3995) in his defense.

The ease was tried before a jury. At the conclusion of the evidence the court submitted a single issue as follows:

“Did the defendant, E. A. Stallings, agree that he would reimburse or refund to plaintiff, Albert Smith, all expenses for improvements placed by him on the lot in controversy in the event defendant failed to erect 100 houses in the addition in question, or secure for plaintiff a deed to said lot by September 15th, 1926?”

The jury answered said issue, “Yes,” and the court entered judgment in favor of ap-pellee against appellant for the sum of $1,810.-07, which judgment is here presented for review.

Opinion.

Appellant’s first proposition presents as ground for reversal the action of the court in overruling his general demurrer to appel-lee’s petition. He contends in this connection that appellee’s suit was for the recovery of the value of the improvements placed by him on said lot, and that appellee’s account consisting of items of money expended for labor and material would not support such a recovery. We do not understand that appellee in his petition seeks a recovery for the value of the improvements placed by him upon said lot. He sued directly for the recovery of the money paid out by him in the construction of said improvements, and the itemized account attached to his petition consisted of items of money expended for labor and material to construct said improvements. Said proposition is overruled.

Appellant presents as ground for reversal a proposition complaining of the action of the court in submitting to the jury for determination the issue above recited. Appellant in his written objections to the submission of said issue asserted: (a) That appellee’s pleadings did not raise said issue; (b) that the evidence did not raise an issue of a promise on the part of appellant to reimburse appellee for the money expended by him in making said improvements; and (c) that there was no evidence which warranted or justified the submission of said issue. We think the pleadings of appellee as hereinbefore recited were sufficient to raise the issue submitted and to justify the court in submitting the same.

*346 Appellee testified concerning his original contract in part as follows:

“I told him (appellant) if he would sell me a lot on the end of Eorney Avenue and finance the water works, I would put it in and pay him $100.00 every time I finished a building and for him to give me the contract for all the buildings; he said he thought that was all right, that he would do it. There was a provision that if he didn’t get a deed so he could give me a deed to the lot on September 15th, 1926, or if he quit building, he would pay me back the money I had put in the plant. I agreed to that. I went to work on that agreement.”

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stallings-v-smith-texapp-1928.