State v. Teague

111 S.W. 234, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 535, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 622
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 2, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 234 (State 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
State v. Teague, 111 S.W. 234, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 535, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 622 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This is a suit in the name of the State of Texas for the use and benefit of Gregg County brought by J. H. McHaney, county attorney of said county, against L. W. Teague, as principal, and H. S. Knight, J. W. Watt, H. L. Smith and A. A. Batson, as sureties, upon a bond given by Teague as a liquor dealer in a county in which the sale of liquor, except for medicinal purposes^, ivas prohibited under the law.

The petition alleges ten breaches of the bond by Teague in making sales of liquor upon illegal prescriptions and prays for the recovery of penalties amounting to $2500. The sufficiency of the petition is not questioned.

The defendants answered by general denial and the following special pleas:

“Specially answering the defendants say that a substantial compliance has been made with all the conditions and requirements in said bond.

“That if the said bond referred to in plaintiff’s petition Avas delivered or presented to the County Judge of Gregg County on October 17, 1905, or thereabout, the said bond was an unfinished document and invalid as an obligation against any of these defendants, in that it was not signed by the principal, and that there A?as no agreement between the defendant, L. W. Teague, and the other defendants, that the said bond should be delivered to the County Judge without first being executed by the said L. W. Teague; and that there was no agreement between the County Judge and the said defendants that it should he delivered AA'ithout being first signed by the said L. W. Teague. And that the bond showed upon its face that it Avas an unfinished instrument of Avriting and not valid at the time it was delivered. And that if it Avas ever signed by the said L. W. Teague, it was not until about the 5th day of July, 1906, and was then executed by him without the knoAvledge of the said sureties, and without any agreement on the part of the said defendants that it should be a valid obligation against them for any breach thereof occurring prior to the date that the signature of the principal was affixed thereto.

“Further specially ansAvering the defendants say that at no time prior to July 5, 1906, Avere they obligors on the bond set out in plaintiff’s petition, and that the transactions upon which this suit is brought *538 are alleged to have occurred prior to that date and did occur prior to that date.”

After hearing the evidence upon the issue of the execution of the bond by the principal Teague and the date upon which he signed same, the court sustained objections of the defendants to the introduction of the bond in evidence and instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of defendants, and upon the return of such verdict rendered judgment in accordance therewith.

The evidence shows that on October 17, 1905, Teague filed with the county clerk of Gregg County an application for a license to engage in the sale of intoxicating liquors in the town of Longview, in said county. This application was prepared in conformity with the statute on such subject, and was sworn to by Teague. The application recited that Teague intended to commence the business of liquor dealer on October 30, 1905. On the day last named Teague presented to the clerk his tax receipts and bond and procured his license. This bond had been approved by the County Judge, but had not been signed by Teague. The fact that the bond was not signed by Teague was not discovered until July 3, 1906, when the clerk took it from his files for the purpose of recording it. As soon as the discovery was made the clerk took the bond to the County Judge and called his attention to the fact that it was not signed by Teague. Thereupon the County Judge took the bond to Teague and requested him to sign it, which he did, stating that he thought he had signed it. None of the sureties upon the bond knew that it was not signed by Teague when it was approved by the County Judge and filed with the clerk, and none of them knew that Teague signed it on July 3, 1906, or agreed that he might execute it on that day as of the day of its approval. All of the breaches of the bond for which penalties are sought to be recovered in this suit occurred prior to the 3d day of July, 1906. The testimony as to the delivery of the bond and its approval by the County Judge and the subsequent signing of same by Teague is as follows:

Edwin Lacy testified as follows: "On, and prior to, October 17, 1905, I was County Judge of Gregg County, Texas, and have been such from that time up to the present. On or about October 17, 1905, Mr. L. W. Teague came to me with a liquor dealer’s bond for my approval. When he first presented me with this bond he had for his sureties H. S. Knight, J. W. Watt and H. L. Smith. I told him I would not approve it because his sureties were not sufficient, and I told him that he would have to obtain another surety. He then asked me if I would approve it with A. A. Batson as surety on it, and I told him I would. In one or two days thereafter he again came to the courthouse and presented to me the bond which is sued on herein and I looked at it and saw A. A. Batson’s name additionally thereto as a surety. I thereupon approved same. On or about July 3, 1906, I discovered that L. W. Teague had never signed this bond at the bottom, whereupon I took the bond and went to his place of business and told him that his name was not signed thereto, and that I wanted him to sign it,. as his. failure to do • so might get him and me into trouble. He said to me that he thought he had signed it, and thereupon signed *539 his name and gave it back to me, stating that he did not want to get either of us into any trouble.”

L. W. Teague testified as follows: “I am one of the defendants in this case. When I first saw this bond here presented to me was when I received it from the hands of either J. W. Watts or II. S. Knight, I can’t remember which. I did not read it, and did not know what it contained. I did not know who wrote it out. I did not write it out, nor did not tell anyone to write it out for me. I did not write my name in the middle of the bond, nor authorize anyone to write it for me. I did not know that it was written there. I do not know who wrote it there. I did not get the sureties to sign this bond. When I received this bond from either J. W. Watts or H. S. Knight I carried it to the County Judge. This was several days before October 17, 1905. I handed the County Judge the bond, and he looked it over and said to me that it would not do, and that he could not approve it because the sureties were not sufficient. I asked him if A. A. Batson signed it would he be satisfied? On the 17th day of October, 1905, afterwards I again handed this bond to the County Judge and asked him if it would do, and the County Judge then took it and marked it and said I could go ahead and get my license, and that he approved it. I then went to D. Shaw, the county clerk, and made application for license and showed him the bond and he wrote out an application and I signed and swore to it before him. I saw the clerk write out the application and I signed it, but I did not understand it and paid no attention to what was in it. The clerk issued to me a license to sell whisky. I began selling whisky on prescription as soon as I got this license, which was on October 20, 1905.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kerbow v. Wooldridge
184 S.W. 746 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 S.W. 234, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 535, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-teague-texapp-1908.