Texas Military College v. Taylor

275 S.W. 1089, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 795
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 11, 1925
DocketNo. 1273.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 1089 (Texas Military College v. Taylor) 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
Texas Military College v. Taylor, 275 S.W. 1089, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 795 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

Appellant, as plaid-tiff below, filed this suit against the appellee on two promissory notes for the sum of $150 each, due respectively November 1, 1921, and January 15, 1922, and providing for the usual 10 per cent, interest and attorney’s fees.

Appellee answered by a general demurrer, a general denial, and then specially pleaded that the consideration for both notes had. failed, which plea was duly verified; that the notes were1 given as a part of the consideration for the tuition and board of his son, H. H. Taylor, Jr., in the Texas Military College for the sessions 1921-1922; that at the time of the execution of said notes, and as a part of the contract under which young Taylor entered the college, it was agreed between appellant and appellee that in the event of illness on the part of young Taylor, requiring his withdrawal from the college, then and in that event the notes would be canceled and returned to appellee; that at the time of the execution of the notes, and at the time of entering into the contract, young Taylor was suffering with asthma and was incapacitated for study or attendance at school, and that it was the belief of appellee that by making the change from the city of Austin to the city of Terrell, where the appellant institution is situated, the health of young Taylor would be benefited. Appellee then further alleged that it was a condition of such contract that in the event young Taylor did not improve in health, .the contract for his tuition and board for the sessions 1921-1922 would be canceled, and the notes would ba returned to appellee; that appellant college was fully advised of the condition of young Taylor, and agreed -to acquiesce in the conditions of the contract; that the change from the city of Austin to the city of Terrell was not beneficial to young *1090 Taylor, and that it was impossible for him to ■remain in the college on account of ill health; that on the 20th day of December, 1921, he did withdraw from the college, and within a few days after his arrival back at Austin it became necessary for a surgical operation upon him in order to relieve his suffering and that the'' condition of young Taylor’s health during the time he was at appellant college was worse than it had previously been, and that the change of residence, instead of being beneficial, was a detriment to young Taylor, and that during the time young Taylor remained in the college, he was under the treatment of a physician in an effort to relieve him; of his suffering; that appellee had offered, and still offers, to pay the reasonable cost of the tuition of young Taylor for the time he actually remained in the appellant college.

Appellee then further answered by á cross-action, alleging the above stated facts, and the further fact that at the time young Taylor entered appellant college appellee paid to appellant the sum of $350 in cash, and fhat it was specifically agreed between appellant and appellee that in the event the change was not beneficial to the health of young Taylor, and his withdrawal from the college became necessary, that appellant would refund to appellee all money paid out by him for such tuition and board. He then repeated that young Taylor’s health did not improve, but continued to grow worse, and that he finally had to withdraw from the college. He prayed for the recovery of $350, less such reasonable amount as the court might find was due appellant college for the board and tuition of young Taylor while he was actually there.

Thereupon, appellant filed a supplemental petition, containing a number of special exceptions to appellee’s answer, and a general denial. The exceptions were directed to all of appellee’s answer that undertook to plead the special contract and conditions under which young Taylor entered the appellant college. The grounds of these exceptions were, in substance, that it was an attempt on appel-lee’s part to contradict, modify, and alter the written contract between the parties, which was the catalogue, circulars, etc., of appellant college, which iit alleged had been furnished to appellee before his son entered that institution, and that the rules and regulations and terms of tuition, etc., as contained in the catalogue, constituted all the contract between the parties, and being in writing could not be altered, varied, or contradicted ■ by the claimed special verbal contract. There is no use in stating the pleadings at greater detail.

The facts were, in substance, that appel-lee’s son was a chronic sufferer from asthma,” and his father, who lived in Austin at the time, thought that it would be beneficial to young Taylor’s health to send him to Terrell to Texas Military Oollege. ' Appellee admitted that when he conceived the idea of sending his son to the appellant college he wrote for one of appellant’s catalogues and acquainted and advised himself of appellant’s rules and regulations and terms of tuition, board, etc., as contained in the catalogue, but that knowing that his son was a chronic sufferer from asthma, he concluded that he would go to Terrell and see if he couldn’t make some special arrangement by which his son could enter the college, and that if his health would not permit him to remain there, could withdraw without costing appellee a full session’s tuition and board. Appellee testified in very (emphatic terms that he did make such special arrangement and contract with appellant’s president, and that he declined to enter his boy under the terms of the written contract, as contained in appellant’s catalogue.

On the other hand, appellant’s president testified in terms equally as emphatic that he had no special contract with appellee, but that his son entered the college under the written contract contained in appellant’s cat-alogue, circulars,'etc. It was and is conceded by counsel for appellee that if appellee’s son entered the college under the contract as contained in appellant’s catalogue, that then appellant was entitled to recover the full amount of the notes sued on, and that the trial court would have been in error in holding otherwise. But counsel for appellee further contends that appellant had the right, if it wanted to^ do so, to let appellee’s son enter under the special contract on account of his infirm condition, and that having done so, as contended by appellee, that appellant was as much bound by the special verbal contract as appellee would' have been by the written contract, as contained in the catalogue had he entered under that contract. One of appellee’s eounterpropositions is, in substance, that the controlling question in the case was whether appellee’s son entered under the special verbal contract, as claimed by appellee, or whether he entered under the contract and rules, regulations, etc., as contained in appellant’s catalogue.

In answer .to a proper special issue, the jury found that appellee’s ’ son entered appellant college under the claimed special contract, and without discussing that issue further, we hold that the evidence was abundantly sufficient to warrant that finding by the jury, and that such contract was binding upon appellant. We

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 1089, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-military-college-v-taylor-texapp-1925.