Taber v. Eyler

162 S.W. 490, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 490 (Taber v. Eyler) 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
Taber v. Eyler, 162 S.W. 490, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 168 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HUFE, C. J.

The appellants, C. C. Taber and wife, Bertie Taber, sued Charles Eyler, W. M. Burwell, and N. E. Hord, for breach of a lease contract. The allegation of the petition is, in effect, that on the 11th day of November, 1910, appellants leased to Charles Eyler, lot No. 11, block No. 32, Glidden & Sanborn addition to the city of Amarillo, of of the dimensions 30x140 feet, with a certain two-story building situated thereon, and certain additions thereto, a part of which was then leased from appellants by other parties, and by the terms of the lease the entire lot, with all improvements thereon, were leased to Eyler, and an assignment and right to collect the rents becoming due from all such tenants, and which lease contract was not to interfere with the other tenants. The lease was to begin October 14, 1910, and run to March 1, 1914, for the consideration of $8,133.33, to be paid monthly in installments of $200 each, the first installment from October 14, 1910, to March 1, 1911, was paid and receipt acknowledged, and the other installments of $200 per month to be paid in advance on the first day of each succeeding month, and in case of the failure to pay any installment, suit could be brought for the entire amount unpaid. It is alleged that Felix A. Bryan made the contract in the name of appellants, which they thereafter accepted and ratified. In order to secure and guarantee the lease contract, appellees W. M. Burwell and N. E. Hord guaranteed the installments of the rent according.to the terms of the lease contract; that Eyler went into possession of the premises, collected rent from the other tenants, and paid all rent installments up until about the middle of November, A. D. 1911, when he vacated the premises, and on December 1, 1911, failed to pay the installment then due, and at all times since said date. Appellants elected to declare all installments due, amounting to the sum of $5,400, with interest and attorney’s fees, and prayed for judgment therefor.

The appellees, in their answer, allege, in substance, that Eyler rented the premises for saloon purposes in which to carry on the business of retailing intoxicating liquors, and that the rent for such business was greatly in excess of the rent obtainable for any other business, and that it was so known by the parties at the time the contract was entered into, and that Eyler would not have paid such rent for any other business, or for any longer time, than he could carry on such business lawfully therein. It is further alleged that Bryan, the agent of appellants, by fraudulent acts and representations, induced the appellees to sign the lease contract, and that at the time Bryan acted for appellants in the preparation and execution of the contract.

The allegation in the answer is as follows: “That the drafting of said contract was left to said Felix A. Bryan by these defendants, appellees, after the terms and conditions of same had been fully discussed and were fully understood by him and the defendant Eyler, as hereinbefore stated; that said Bryan prepared a written draft of said contract on or about the 11th day of November, 1910, and brought same to the Gosser Cigar Store, on Fourth street in Amarillo, Tex., where defendants were at said time and presented same to defendant Eyler, who read same and discovered that said written draft of contract did not contain the provisions that said premises should be used as a saloon, and that if during the term of said lease conditions in Amarillo should be so-changed by putting into effect a prohibition or local option law, whereby the carrying on of said saloon business and sale of intoxicating liquors therein should become unlawful, said contract should terminate and be at an-end, whereupon said Eyler called the attention of said Bryan to the omission of said provision from said written draft of contract,, and requested him to insert same before said contract should be signed in accordance with their real understanding. Said Bryan then’ stated that he would fix said contract according to said suggestion of defendant Eyler, by inserting therein said omitted provisions; the said Bryan, taking said instrument, left said cigar store and in a short time thereafter returned said written draft of contract, stating and representing to the defendant Eyler, in the presence of defendants Hord and Burwell, that he had changed the same according to said previous understanding, by inserting therein said omitted provisions, and that the same was all right and ready for signatures, whereupon, without, reading said contract further, but relying upon the honesty and good faith of said Bryan in the preparation of said contract and the-insertion therein, the provisions, etc., * * * defendant signed said contract.” That the appellees had the utmost confidence in the-good faith and truthfulness of Bryan, and in the statements and representations as to *493 the contract contáining the provisions. That Eyler’s attention was then being demanded by workmen, who were arranging the building, and that appellees hurriedly signed the instrument without re-reading. If they had known of the omission they would not have signed the same. They further allege that a prohibition election was held in the commissioners’ precinct in which the property was situated, and that a law prohibiting the sale of intoxicants went into effect November 15, 1911, prohibiting the business for which the property was rented. Up to that time Eyler had regularly paid the rents, and after that time Eyler delivered the keys of the house and turned over the premises to appellant Taber, and that thereby appellees were relieved under the contract from the payment of further rents.

By supplemental petition, appellants deny that Bryan was their agent in the contract; that at that time they had left Amarillo and previous thereto had leased the premises to J. W. York and J. P. Jones, on the terms and price of the contract with Ey-ler set up in the original petition, and appel-lee Hord had guaranteed the York and Jones contract; that Bryan was only authorized to look after the property and collect the rents; that appellees knew or should have known of Bryan’s authority; and that his act in making the contract in controversy was unauthorized. After its execution it was sent to appellants, and they ratified it as written and signed, and as so drawn became binding upon them, and in no other manner were they bound by the statements, representations, or negotiations by Bryan, including the defea-sance clause. Appellants also pleaded estop-pel, in that while they were in Amarillo, Ey-ler tried to negotiate a lease on the property for the purpose of opening up a saloon, and that appellants refused to enter into a contract by the terms of which he could use the property during such time only as he could legally conduct the saloon business, and thereafter leased same to York and Jones upon the terms set out in the petition, all of which Eyler knew.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 490, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taber-v-eyler-texapp-1913.