Tips v. Barneburg

276 S.W. 932
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1925
DocketNo. 7407. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 932 (Tips v. Barneburg) 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
Tips v. Barneburg, 276 S.W. 932 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

PLY, C. J.

This suit was instituted by appellant against Roy Barneburg, J. R. Kennedy, R. E. Kennedy, H. M. Maud, and Seguin Dairy Products Company, to recover $11,000, and for a foreclosure of a vendor’s lien on certain described property situated in the town of Seguin. Barneburg filed a cross-action against appellant, alleging that the notes sued on were executed by him in an exchange of property between him and appellant, wherein appellant and one Harborth conveyed to appellee Barneburg, who will be designated appellee herein, the property described in the petition, and appellant conveyed to appellee a certain farm in Guadalupe county; the town property being known as the ice house and creamery and the other property as the Guadalupe county farm; that appellee gave a note for $11,000 to appellant secured by a lien on the ice house and creamery and a note, for $7,500 secured by a lien on the farm. It was alleged that, in exchange for the property conveyed to him by appellant, appellee conveyed to appellant certain property in Bexar county, near Pratt, “embracing a store, garage, cotton gin, residence, dance hall, acreage, fixtures, and personal property, hereinafter referred to as the Pratt property,” and appellant assumed the payment of debts against said property in the sum of $11,000. It was alleged that the reasonable market value of the Pratt property was $35,000; the net value with the incum-brance of the debt being $24,000. It was alleged that the gross value of the farm in Guadalupe county was $11,000; the net value being $2,500. That the creamery property was of less value than the note for $11,000, given by appellee to appellant, and that in' exchange for his property worth $24,000 appel-lee received property of the value of $1,500. Appellee alleged fraud and misrepresentation upon the part of appellant in inducing ap-pellee to make the exchange of the properties ; the fraud being specified as follows:

“That the ice house and creamery would pay its running expenses through the winter, and make defendant a living as well; that plaintiff had been unable to supply the demand for ice from the output of said ice house in the summer of 1922, and had been compelled for that reason to ship in several carloads of ice; that there was another ice house in Seguin, but that there was a sufficient demand for all the ice both plants manufactured; that the ice house would make 10 tons of ice per day and run the creamery as well; that the value of the creamery was between $8,000 and $10,000; that the value of the ice house and creamery was $30,-000; that the machinery in the ice house was in first-class condition; that the value of a disconnected boiler in the yard was $1,000; that the value of the farm, comprising 210 acres, was $80 per acre; that the farm was one of the best in Guadalupe county, being all good, tillable land; that about 28 acres of the farm on the southeast side of the Lavernia road was as good as the rest of the farm.
“In connection with the foregoing representations relating to the-ice house and creamery, defendant would show that the business it had produced and would produce, and profit there *933 from, was an important factor influencing defendant to make said exchange.
“Defendant would further show that he had had no previous experience in such business, and was not able to determine himself the value of either the physical properties of the ice house and creamery or its business.
“Defendant would further show that each of the foregoing representations were material, and that defendant relied upon each of them and believed the same to be true.
“Defendant would further show that he was a stranger in the town of Seguin; that he was not familiar with the conditions there existing in the ice and creamery business; that at the time of said exchange of property defendant was not provided with funds to carry a business through a winter; and that the plaintiff knew such fact, and knew all the facts set up in the three preceding paragraphs, and with such knowledge he led defendant to believe that he could rely implicitly upon his statements. Plaintiff was on said date and still is a banker and capitalist of Seguin, appeared to be a man of importance, and solid worth in his community, and his position, banking connections, and manner and language influenced this defendant to effect said exchange of property upon said representations without independent investigation.
“Defendant would further allege that plaintiff showed him over the best part of the farm, and led him to believe it was unnecessary for him to go over all the farm, and thereby prevented this defendant from discovering the true worth of said farm before the exchange of property was effected. The greater part of the farm was not in fact as good as the part snown this defendant, and the land on the southeast side of the Lavernia road was not in fact as good as the rest of the farm, but was of poorer quality.
“Defendant would further show that the plaintiff made the representations complained of as facts bearing upon the value of the property this defendant was getting in said exchange of property; that in reality the plaintiff knew at the time he made said representations that they were each and all false; that, if he did not actually know their falsity, he made said representations in reckless disregard of their truth or falsity.”

The cause was submitted to a jury on the following special issues:

“Special Issue No. 1. Do you find from 'the evidence that the plaintiff, Charles E. Tips, committed fraud in the exchange of properties with the defendant Roy Barneburg in any of the particulars alleged in said defendant’s cross-action? You will answer this question ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ as you find from the evidence the fact to be. If you have answered ‘Yes’ to the foregoing question, and only in such event, then you will answer the following:
“Special Issue No. 2. What was the value of the property which said defendant Roy Barneburg parted with, in said exchange, at the time the exchange was made ? ' You will answer this question by stating the amount of such value as you find from the evidence the fact to be.
“Special Issue No. 3. What was the value of the property received by said defendant Roy Barneburg, in said exchange at the time the exchange was made ? ”

To the first issue the jury answered in the affirmative, and in answer to the other issues found the property received by appellant was of the value of $36,500 and that received by appellee was of the value of $32,000, and the couxd rendered judgment in favor of appelle'e for $12,000.

The evidence of appellee showed that the Eratt property was of the reasonable market value of about $40,000. He gave the value of the 9% acres of land conveyed by him at $500 an acre, or $4,750, his residence at $3,500, the dance hall at $4,000, storehouse and fixtures at $5,'000, the gin and building at $18,-000, the well $1,000, the garage $1,000, gasoline pump $350, air tank $85, blacksmith shop $600, light plant $500, butcher shop $200. There was also a valuable seedhouse. Tips swore that it was agreed between him and ap-pellee that the value of the respective properties was $40,000; that the ice plant cost over $30,000, and the farm sold for $15,000, which would be at least $45,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tips-v-barneburg-texapp-1925.