Thibodeaux v. Boyt

55 S.W.2d 117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 1932
DocketNo. 2292.
StatusPublished

This text of 55 S.W.2d 117 (Thibodeaux v. Boyt) 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
Thibodeaux v. Boyt, 55 S.W.2d 117 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

WALKER, C. J.

We take the following statement of the nature and result of this suit from appellants’ brief:

“Felix Thibodeaux and Constant Thibo-deaux, as plaintiffs, filed their suit in the District Court of Jefferson County, Texas, against Elmer Boyt and J.' M. Rich, as defendants, and alleged that o*n or about the 15th day of January, 1930, the defendants rented to the plaintiffs 320 acres of land.in Chambers County, to be cultivated by the plaintiffs in rice and for the purpose of growing a rice crop thereon during said year, and that the defendants agreed to furnish to the plaintiffs the land, the seed rice and the water ¡necessary to properly irrigate the said rice crop, and that the defendants also agreed to furnish one-half of the necessary fertilizer,. one-half of the sacks for sacking the rice that might be grown, and to pay one-half of the expense of threshing such crop of rice and hauling the same to market, and that the plaintiffs agreed to prepare the land and cultivate, water and harvest the rice; and they alleged that it was the agreement between the plaintiffs and defendants that the plaintiffs should have one-half of the crop of rice that should be grown by them on the land for said year and that the defendants should have the other half of the rice so grown.
“The plaintiffs further alleged that they timely and properly prepared the land for the rice crop, and in due season planted the crop with the seed furnished by the defendants for that purpose, and they alleged that they did and performed at the proper time and in the proper manner all of the things that they should have done to properly produce and save the rice crop on the rented premises; but that the defendants failed to furnish water according to their agreement so to do for the purpose of irrigating the said rice-crop and bringing up the rice, and that on account of the failure of the defendants to furnish and supply the water for irrigation as they had agreed and promised to do, although they furnished some water, the plaintiffs did not make a full crop of rice, and that on account of such failure to furnish the water they had sustained damages in the sum of $7,055.00, which would have been the value of their one-half interest in the rice crop which they would have grown had the water been furnished as it should have been by the defendants, less the cost and expense of harvesting, threshing, sacking and hauling to market the rice that would have been grown, which they alleged would not have been more than 45‡ per sack.
“The plaintiffs also alleged that the rice that was actually grown was taken possession of by the defendants and had been sold and the entire proceeds retained by the defend *118 ants, and that the defendants had never accounted to the plaintiffs for the sale of the rice and had wholly failed and refused to do so.
■ “Tlie case was tried to a jury and the plaintiffs introduced proof of the terms of the rental contract alleged by them, and that they had timely and properly prepared the land for the rice crop and that they had done the various things that they should have done in connection with the rice crop in a farmerlike manner, and they introduced proof of the amount of rice that was actually grown and that the land would have yielded if the rice had received sufficient water at the time the same was needed, and they introduced proof that the defendants had wholly failed to furnish the water at the time and in the amount that was necessary to irrigate and to produce a rice crop, and they showed the effect of the failure to furnish the water; and in support of all of the issues made by their pleadings the plaintiffs introduced proof upon the trial.
“The defendants pleaded the general denial and specially alleged that the plaintiffs did not prepare and cultivate the land in a farmerlike manner and that any failure in the rice crop was due to that, and they alleged that it was the plaintiffs’ agreement that they should build and maintain the proper laterals and levees for the irrigation of the rice and holding the water thereon, and that they should pump the water furnished by the defendants at the intake and turn on and off the water at proper times and distribute it over their crops so that they might be economically irrigated, but that they failed to do these things or to perform their contract in these respects, and that on account of these failures on the part of the plaintiffs in connection with their rice crop the same did not make a full crop of rice, and that by reason of these things the crop made 3600 sacks of rice less than it should have made, of the net value of $3.20 per sack, and that one-half of such crop that should have been grown by the plaintiffs would have belonged to the defendants and that therefore they had been damaged in the sum of $5,760.00.
“Defendants alleged also that they had made advancements for labor, supplies, etc., to the plaintiffs, and they attached to their answer what purported to be a verified account setting out the goods, wares, merchandise, labor, money, etc., that they had advanced to plaintiffs, and showing the amount of the credits which the plaintiffs were entitled to receive, and showing and alleging that after the plaintiffs had received credit for all of the rice that they had harvested and sold and for all other things for which they were entitled to credit, the plaintiffs still were indebted to the defendants in-the sum of $2,-577.02.
“Upon the trial, the verified account was introduced in evidence by the defendants over the objections of the plaintiffs, and the defendants introduced evidence tending to establish the issues made by their pleadings.”

The issues of fact raised by the pleadings and evidence were submitted to the jury as follows, answered as indicated:

“Special Issue No. 1. Did the defendants reasonably and substantially comply with the terms of the contract between them and plaintiffs to furnish at the intake and dam at proper times under said contract sufficient water to irrigate plaintiffs’ crop of rice? Answer ‘yes’ or ‘no,’ as you may find the facts tobe.”

The jury answered special issue No. 1, “No.”

“Special Issue No. 2. Did the defendants’ failure ,to furnish said water at the time and place inquired about in Special Issue No. 1 cause any loss in the amount of yield of said rice crop? Answer ‘yes’ or ‘no,’ as you may find the facts to be.”

The jury answered special issue No. 2, “Tes.”

“Special Issue No. 3. How much was the yield of said rice crop reduced, if any, by such failure, if there was such a failure?' Answer by giving the number of barrels, if any, said rice crop was so diminished.”

The jury answered special issue No. 3, “5,~ 100 barrels, entire yield.”

“Special Issue No. 4: What would have been the reasonable market value of said rice per barrel at the time and place that it could and would have been marketed? Answer by stating the amount in dollars and cents.”

The jury answered special issue No. 4, “$2.65 per barrel or total $13,515.00.”

“Special Issue No.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thibodeaux-v-boyt-texapp-1932.