Temple Electric Supply, Inc. v. Simmons

328 S.W.2d 931, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2178
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1959
Docket10693
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 328 S.W.2d 931 (Temple Electric Supply, Inc. v. Simmons) 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
Temple Electric Supply, Inc. v. Simmons, 328 S.W.2d 931, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2178 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

HUGHES, Justice.

This suit was brought by appellants Temple Electric Supply, Inc., James R. Wallis and wife, Virginia Ann Wallis and Perry H. Wallis and wife, Evelyn Mae Wallis, against Hobert Simmons and wife, Elizabeth Simmons, and C. L. Walker, Jr. and wife, Iladene Walker, appellees, to recover the sum of $32,967.19 1 allegedly due them under the provisions of a contract entered into between the parties other than the corporation on the 31st day of May, 1957, whereby the appellees agreed to sell and the Wallises agreed to buy all of the Capital Stock of the Temple Electric Supply, a private corporation and the immediate predecessor of the appellant corporation. The features of this contract, important here, are:

The purchase price to be paid by the Wallises was $75,000, $15,000 of which was paid in cash, the balance being represented by two promissory notes executed by the Wallises each in the sum of $30,000 one payable to- the order of appellee Hobert Simmons and the other to appellee C. L. Walker, Jr. These notes were payable in monthly installments of $483.15, principal and interest, and to secure the payment of which the Wallises pledged all of the stock which they had purchased.

The contract gave to appellees the right to inspect the books and accounts of the corporation or its successor during the time the purchase money notes were unpaid.

The controversial portion of the contract, paragraph IV, we quote:

“Seller agrees to be and remain liable for any and all salaries, accounts payable and taxes of all class or character incurred and accrued to date of the effective date of this instrument *933 and Purchaser shall he liable for all of the same incurred and accrued subsequent to the effective date hereof.”

The effective date of the contract was May 31, 1957. It is undisputed that the total accounts payable by the corporation on this date was $32,967.19.

Appellees answered the suit by pleading that John B. Daniel, Jr., a practicing attorney at law in Temple, Texas, had been requested to draw the contract herein referred to by the parties to it and that:

“ * * * there was no agreement whatsoever that the defendants should be liable for the debts of the corporation, the stock of which was being sold, and that if the'provision in the contract set forth in Plaintiffs’ Amended Petition should be held subject to the interpretation that the defendants were so liable, then these defendants say that such provision and obligation were embodied in said writing wholly through the inadvertence and mistake of the scrivener or draftsman of said writing, * *

Appellees further pleaded that:

“ * * * the inclusion of said provision in said writing was wholly due to a mutual mistake, and that neither said plaintiffs nor these defendants intended by their agreement, above referred to, to create or impose said claimed liability on said defendants to pay the debts of said corporation, and that the inclusion of said provision was due to a mutual mistake of all of the parties to said writing.”

The case was tried to a jury and in response to special issues submitted to it the jury found (a) that paragraph IV of the contract, supra, was not included by mutual mistake of all the contracting parties (b) that Mr. Daniel was acting as attorney for all the parties to the contract in preparing it and (c) that he did not insert paragraph IV in the contract by mistake.

Appellants moved for judgment on the verdict and appellees moved that the jury’s findings (a) and (c) be disregarded and judgment rendered for them. Appellees also moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

Appellants’ motion was overruled and ap-pellees’ motions were granted, the first of which being granted on the ground that the jury finding that John B. Daniel, Jr. did not insert the controversial provision of the contract in the contract by mistake was without any evidence to support it but that the contrary was shown by the undisputed evidence and since the jury had made a valid finding that Mr. Daniel was acting for all contracting parties in preparing the contract, appellants were not entitled to recover.

In the view we take of the case it is not necessary that we discuss the grounds upon which the Trial Court sustained appellees’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

We are of the opinion that the Trial Court correctly granted appellees’ motion to disregard the jury finding that the provision of the contract in question was not inserted in the contract by the mistake of the scrivener and to render judgment in their behalf because the contrary of such finding was conclusively established.

The rule of law to be applied is stated in 76 C.J.S. Reformation of Instruments § 25, pp. 352-353 as follows:

“It has been broadly declared that equity will assume jurisdiction to reform a written instrument where there has been a mistake on the part of the scrivener, and that equity has power to reform an instrument to correct a mistake of the scrivener. Equity may reform an instrument where, as a result of mistake, error, or misprision on the part of the scrivener or draftsman, it fails to conform to, or speak, the real or actual agreement between the parties, and this *934 rule has been applied no matter how the mistake occurred.”

This is the rule in Texas as shown by the following excerpt from Bates v. Lefforge, Tex.Com.App., 63 S.W.2d 360, 362:

“The undisputed evidence shows that in the making of the lease contract, the lessee Lefforge through Holman, his agent, agreed to pay for the street improvements, if any were made during the life of the lease, and if the attorney who drew the contract mistook its terms so that the writing did not represent the real agreement of the parties, there was such a mutual mistake as entitled the plaintiff, Bates, to a reformation of the contract expressive of such real agreement. Kelley v. Ward, 94 Tex. 289, 60 S.W. 311, 313. In said case Judge Williams quotes with approval from Albany City Savings Institution v. Burdick, 87 N.Y. 40, the following: ‘It is the general rule that where a written instrument fails to conform to the agreement between the parties in consequence of the mutual mistake of the parties, however induced, * * * a court will reform the instrument so as to make it conform to the actual agreement between the parties,’ and where the testimony is undisputed as to the circumstances the question then becomes a question of law for the court. Turner v. Montgomery, Tex.Com.App., 293 S.W. 815.”

Mr. Daniel freely admitted his mistake in inserting the words “accounts payable” in the contract. He attributed this mistake, principally, to the use of a form and, as he testified: “I used too much of it.”

Mr.

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328 S.W.2d 931, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temple-electric-supply-inc-v-simmons-texapp-1959.