Tyson v. Jackson Bros.

90 S.W. 930, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 128, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 32
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 90 S.W. 930 (Tyson v. Jackson Bros.) 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
Tyson v. Jackson Bros., 90 S.W. 930, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 128, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 32 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

STEPHBHS, Associate Justice.

The court erred in sustaining the third, fourth, fifth, seventh, eighth and ninth special exceptions of plaintiffs below to the defendant’s pleadings. The cause of action set up in the answer, at least insofar as it was alleged that the plaintiffs had undertaken to keep on hand and furnish extras, was not, as asserted in the third exception, against the Avery Manufacturing Company, for whom they acted in selling the machinery for which the note declared on was given, but against the plaintiffs themselves.

*129 The commission on the sale was a sufficient consideration for this individual promise on the part of the plaintiffs, which, as alleged, was not made in behalf of the manufacturing company, but by the plaintiffs personally or individually, and for this reason the fourth exception should not have been sustained.

A pleading -which alleges a promise to answer for the debt, default or miscarriage of another, is not subject to demurrer merely because it fails to show that such promise was made in writing, and for this reason the fifth exception should not have been sustained.

The plaintiffs wrere not relieved of their undertaking to furnish extras merely because the breaking of the several pieces of the machinery mentioned in the defendant’s answer may not have been due to negligence or innate defects. Their promise had no such qualification. For this reason the seventh and eighth exceptions should not have been sustained.

The ninth should have been overruled, because the counter-claim pleaded by defendant arose out of the same transaction in which the note declared on had been executed, and appellant’s answer was not subject to the criticism that it attempted to set off against a liquidated demand a claim for uncertain or unliquidated damages.

Reversed and remanded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 S.W. 930, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 128, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyson-v-jackson-bros-texapp-1905.