Sterling v. De Laune

105 S.W. 1169, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 470, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 534
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 105 S.W. 1169 (Sterling v. De Laune) 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
Sterling v. De Laune, 105 S.W. 1169, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 470, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 534 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

ÍTEILL, Associate Justice.

—This suit was originally brought by appellant against the appellee, A. De Laune, and E. D. Orr and R. E. Dickey to recover the sum of $3,500.

The plaintiff alleged as his cause of action, in substance, that on May 5, 1901, and prior thereto that he and Betty Bryan were partners engaged in the business of real estate brokers; that at the same time the defendants, Orr and Dickey, were also partners engaged in the same business; that on said date the appellee, De Laune, claiming to be the owner of a certain tract of land of 580 acres of the J. Garish survey situated in Jefferson County, placed the same for sale with Orr & Dickey with authority to sell the same at $100 per acre, cash, at the same time giving them authority to list said property with other real estate agents, and to agree upon the commission to be paid such other agents as they might list the land with for sale; that on said date Orr & Dickey, with the knowledge and consent of De Laune, listed the land for sale with plaintiff’s firm, authorizing it to sell the land at $100 per acre, agreeing to pay his firm a commission of ten percent on said price; that De Laune was then made aware that the land had been placed with plaintiff’s firm for sale, and it was to receive such commission, and ratified said acts of his agents, Orr & Dickey, and represented to plaintiff’s firm that Orr & Dickey had authority to so list and sell said land and instructed plaintiff’s firm to proceed to sell the same upon said conditions; that on or about said date plaintiff procured purchasers for 350 acres of said tract, and the fact that that number of acres could be sold for $100 an acre, cash, was made Imown by plaintiff’s firm to defendants Orr & Dickey, and to their principal, the defendant De Laune, who then agreed that said 350 acres might be sold upon the same terms as if the whole tract was sold, and De Laune and his said agents directed plaintiff’s firm to close and consummate the sale of the 350 acres with the purchasers so obtained; that thereupon plaintiff and his firm closed the deal with the purchasers upon the terms aforesaid; that the purchasers so procured were E. G. Scales, who agreed to purchase 175 acres at $100 per acre, John Tackberry, who agreed to buy 100 acres at the same price, and A. Baker, who agreed to buy 75 acres on the same terms; that all of said parties were ready, able and willing to pay $100 per acre cash for the number of acres respectively agreed to be purchased by each, provided the title of defendant De Laune was found to be good and in no way defective, and, as an evidence of their *472 good faith and ability to purchase, they .paid plaintiff and his partner ten percent of the purchase price, as earnest money, to be applied on account of the purchase price in the event the title was good, but to be returned to them if it should be found defective; that thereupon the defendant De Laune and his agent, R. B. Dickey, were advised by plaintiff’s firm of the sale as aforesaid and the conditions thereof and each agreed and instructed plaintiff and his firm to consummate the sale upon the terms and conditions agreed upon and to furnish the purchasers with an abstract'of title to said lands, and thereafter did furnish said purchasers with such abstract; that said prospective purchasers forthwith caused such abstract of title to be examined by their attorney who, upon examination, advised them that De Laune’s title to the tract of land was defective, and, for that reason, the prospective purchasers would not complete the purchase, unless the defects in the title were cured; that De Laune refused to take any steps towards curing said defects, by reason of which the sale was not consummated and the earnest money deposited with plaintiff’s firm was returned to the prospective purchasers. That by reason of the failure of the defendants to cure the defect in the title, and of defendant De Laune’s failure and refusal to convey said land and carry out his contract, the sale of the 350 acres, negotiated by plaintiff and his partner, was not consummated, though plaintiff and his partner fully performed their contract, and were, therefore, entitled to receive their commissions of ten percent on the purchase price of $35,000, as if the sale had been completed.

That plaintiff’s partner, on January 1, 1903, assigned her interest in the firm’s right to said commission to the plaintiff; that said sum of $3,500, though long since due, has never been paid, etc.

The plaintiff dismissed his suit as against the defendant Orr & Dickey, and the defendant De Laune answered by general and special exceptions, a plea of the two years’ statute' of limitation and by a general denial. The .trial of the case resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant, De Laune.

Conclusion of Fací.—The jury was warranted in finding that the evidence was insufficient to prove such allegations of plaintiff as were essential to his recovery.

Conclusions of Law.—1. The complaint made by the first assignment of error is that the court erred in permitting the defendant to introduce any testimony, except that in support of his plea of limitation, over the objection of plaintiff that the plea of limitation appeared before the general denial in defendant’s answer, the consequence of which was a waiver of the latter plea, because not in due order of pleading. On the same ground, it is urged by the fifteenth assignment that the court erred in submitting any issue to the jury save that of limitation. As these two assignments involve the same qiiestion, though presented in different forms, the disposition of one will determine the other.

No exception that the defenses were not pleaded in due order was interposed by the plaintiff to defendant’s answer. It is, under our *473 system of pleading, merely a matter of form that, in pleading matters in bar, a general denial of the allegations in the plaintiff’s petition should be made before pleading matters in confession and avoidance. In systems of pleading which require pleas to be consistent, the rule of due order of pleading is founded upon the principle that it would be illogical for the defendant to first interpose a plea which, in effect, admits the facts constituting plaintiff’s cause of action and avoids their effect by setting up new matter, and, then, by a subsequent plea, deny all the matters which the other plea admits to be true. But where, as in our system of pleading, the defendant may plead as many wholly inconsistent defenses as he chooses, the appearance in the answer in due order of the pleas in bar is merely a matter of form, the breach of which will not be noticed, unless called to the attention of the court by a special exception to the answer and the defendant given an opportunity to amend by correcting the formal error. Towns on Pleading, 304.

2. The second assignment complains of the court permitting the defendant to introduce in evidence, over plaintiff’s objection that it was immaterial and irrelevant, a certain option contract given on April 13, 1901, by the defendant De Laune to B. D. Orr and others affecting the 580 acre tract, of which the 350 acre tract, on which the commission was sued for, is a part. In connection with other testimony, the contract was admissible as a circumstance tending to disprove that the land was never listed by the defendant with Orr & Dickey for sale as alleged by the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.W. 1169, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 470, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-v-de-laune-texapp-1907.