Summergill v. Jemison

201 S.W. 216, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 5, 1918
DocketNo. 301.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 216 (Summergill v. Jemison) 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
Summergill v. Jemison, 201 S.W. 216, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 126 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, O. J.

Appellee, as‘plaintiff below, filed this suit on May' 31, 1915, making James Summergill, John Brown, and Tom Brown defendants thereto, but after-wards, and before trial of tbe case below, Tom Brown was dismissed from the suit, and the cause proceeded to trial against Summergill and John Brown as defendants, and upon the trial, judgment was rendered in favor of appellee against Summergill alone, who is the appellant here.

*217 It was substantially alleged in appellee’s original petition that his father, W. J. Jemi-son, on April 24, 1015, sold to the defendants named a span of mules, and that at the time of such sale, the defendants promised to pay appellee’s said father $50 in cash and $350 in addition, just as soon as a settlement between the parties relative to some other business matters between them could be had; that the $50 cash payment was to be put up as earnest money to bind the trade until said settlement could be made, hut that as a matter of fact only $5 in cash was put up at the time, that amount being all that defendants had at the time of making the contract, but that defendants agreed to put up $45 in. cash the very next day; that the settlement between appellee’s father, W. J. Jemison, and the named defendants relative to the other business transaction between the parties was had and made, but that defendants had never paid the purchase price of said mules, either to appellee’s father, W. J. Jemison, or to appellee himself, with the exception of the $5 cash payment. Appellee further alleged that subsequent to the contract between his father and defendants for the sale and purchase of the mules,, and on or about April 26, 1915, appellee purchased from his father the account owed his father by said defendants, and that by reason of his purchase of such account against defendants, appellee became the legal owner and holder of same, and was entitled to collect the same; that in consequence of the default on the part of defendants in making payment of the purchase price of said mules, defendants had • forfeited all right to the mules, and that appellee was entitled to the possession of said mules, or, in lieu thereof, the price which defendants had agreed and bound themselves to pay for said mules, which was the sum of $400. There is a further allegation in the petition to the effect that said defendants had had possession of the span of mules since April 24, 1915, and that appellee had been deprived of the use and benefit of said mules since that time; and the further allegation that appellee depended upon said mules for a livelihood, and that they were worth $5 per day to him, and that he could have and would have made $5 per day by the use of said mules during all the time that defendants had possession of them, had their possession been held by ap-pellee; that defendants, though often requested, had failed to pay the purchase price of said mules, and had also failed and refused to release said span of mules, to ap-pellee’s damage in the sum of $400, as the purchase price of said mules, and $5 per day .since April 24, 1915. The prayer was:

“That he have judgment against the said defendants, and each of them, for the sum of $400, or, in lieu thereof, the possession of the said one span of mules; that he be allowed $5 a day since the 24th day of April, A. D. 1915, as damages sustained by reason of the fact that he has been deprived of the use and benefit of said mules; that he be allowed the sum of $25 for attorney’s fees, herein expended, which is just and reasonable, for costs of this suit, and for such other and further relief, special and general, in law and in equity, that he may be justly entitled to, etc., and in duty bound will ever pray.”

Each of the defendants answered by special answer, and each interposed a general demurrer and certain special exceptions, and a general denial, and some of them other pleas which are unnecessary to more specifically mention here, for the reason that the same are entirely immaterial to the disposition of this appeal. The case was tried with a jury, and, when the evidence was concluded, the record discloses that it was agreed that the trial court (county court of Jefferson county) need not deliver any charge to the jury, either written or verbal, and after argument by counsel for both sides, the jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee against appellant, Jas. Summergill, for $395, which the verdict stated was the value of the mules, and also for $612, which the verdict stated was the rental value of the mules at the rate of $1 per working day from May 24, 1915, to the date of trial; upon which verdict the trial court entered judgment in favor of appellee against appellant, Sum-mergill, for $1,007, with interest thereon from the date of the trial at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum. The jury having expressly found that appellee should take nothing as against defendant John Brown, as to him judgment was entered accordingly.

It appears from the record that there was also filed by appellee, at the time the trial commenced below, what is termed “Plaintiff’s Eirst Trial Amendment.” In this instrument it is alleged that the plaintiff dismisses his causé of action as to the defendant Tom Brown, and thereafter this instrument proceeds as follows:

“That the team of mules referred to in said original pleading was sold by the party mentioned therein to James Summergill, and that after said money was not put up as a forfeit as agreed on, that the plaintiff repossessed himself of the mules, as he had a right to do, forbade the defendants from taking said mules; but that, notwithstanding the same, the defendants Summergill and Brown unlawfully seized and possessed themselves of said mules, and thereby deprived the plaintiff of said team, and by their withholding the same, notwithstanding demand therefor has been made, have damaged the plaintiff in the value thereof, and the rental thereof, from and since the 23d day of May, the year mentioned in said petition. That the allegation therein of the date of the forfeit money was paid should be May, instead of April, of the year mentioned.”

And the prayer was:

“Wherefore, premises considered, plaintiffs pray for judgment as in their former pleadings.”

[1] There are several assignments of error found in appellant’s brief, but we shall not discuss them in the order made, and, indeed, some of them could not be considered at all in the absence of a statement of facts, and there is no statement of facts in the record; *218 and tlie vital and main assignment, wJiicIi challenges the verdict and judgment on the ground that there is no basis in the pleadings for same, is the only one that we shall consider; and, if this contention by appellant be correct, this court should reverse the judgment and remand the cause, without formal assignment of error in that regard.

[2]

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W. 216, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summergill-v-jemison-texapp-1918.