Vaden v. Buck
This text of 184 S.W. 318 (Vaden v. Buck) 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.
Opinion
By a cross-bill filed and presented in a suit brought by J. B. Berry against Bert G. Buck and Charles M. Buck to recover commissions alleged to be due him as agent in effecting a sale and exchange of lands between appellant and said Bert G. and Charles M. Buck, appellant, who was impleaded in said suit by the defendants Buck, sought to recover from said defendants and the plaintiff Berry the sum of $4,-000 actual damages, and from plaintiff Berry the further sum of $1,000 exemplary damages, for the alleged false and fraudulent representations of said Berry as agent of defendants Buck in effecting said sale and exchange of land, which false representations are alleged to have been willfully and maliciously made by the said Berry.
The pleading of appellant alleged, in substance, that on or about .the 7th day of November, 1913, he entered into a contract with the said Bucks as principals, acting by and through their agent, J. B. Berry, whereby he purchased certain lots or parcels of land in Navarro county, Tex., described in his petition, for the sum of $34,000; that on or about the 17th day of November, 1913, the defendants Charles M. Buck and Bert G. Buck conveyed by warranty deed the said property to said Yaden, and he paid the consideration specified in said contract. The intervener further alleged that prior to the purchase of said land by him and prior to the execution of the aforesaid deed and during the negotiations preliminary to said purchase and sale, the said J. B. Berry, acting for himself and his codefendants, represented as a matter of fact that said tract of land contained at least 500 acres of land that had previously been put in a first-class state of cultivation, when as a matter of fact there were only 317 acres of said land in a state of cultivation; that said representations as to the quantity of land in cultivation were material; that intervener relied upon same and did not discover that they were, false until after he had placed valuable improvements on the land.
In answer to this cross-action defendants Buck and plaintiff Berry, in addition to general and special denial, pleaded waiver and estoppel. Exceptions interposed by appellant to the pleas of waiver and estoppel were sustained by the trial court. The trial in the court below with a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff Berry against the defendants Buck for the sum claimed by him, and in favor of said defendants and plaintiff against appellant on his claim for damages. This verdict wa,s returned in obedience to peremptory instructions by the court.
The first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the trial court to grant appellant’s request, made before the commencement of the trial, to file an amended pleading. It appears from the bill of exceptions and the qualifications made thereto by the trial judge that the cause was set for trial on December 10,1914. The court was engaged until late in the evening of that day in the trial of another cause, and when this cause was finally reached it was too late to begin the trial before the morning of the 11th, but plaintiff and defendants announced ready. Thereupon appellant before announcing asked leave to file an amended pleading, which request was refused. On the next morning before the trial of the case began appellant renewed his request, and it was again refused. In explanation of his ruling refusing leave to file the amendment, the trial judge states that a year or more before the trial of this cause he had made an order which was entered upon the minutes of the court that required all amendments to pleadings to be filed at least five days before the day set for the trial of the case in which they were filed, and that this requirement had been frequently announced by the court and usually' adhered to by both the court and attorneys; that plaintiff’s counsel objected to the filing of the amended plead *320 ing offered by appellant on the gronnd that it came too late, an'd “much was said on both sides as to whether the pleading contained new matter, which the court does not fully remember. Plaintiff was contending that the new pleading set up a new cause of action. The objection was sustained and the amended pleading not permitted to be filed, but in-tervener (appellant) was permitted to file a trial amendment correctly pleading his measure of damage as the original pleading had failed to do.” During the trial appellant was also permitted to file a trial amendment to meet a variance between the allegations of his original pleading and the evidence offered by him.
dence tending to establish the allegations of fraud and false representations alleged in appellant’s pleading, and the trial court should not have limited this evidence to the question of the credibility of plaintiff.
For the error of the trial court in instructing the jury to return a verdict against appellant, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
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184 S.W. 318, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaden-v-buck-texapp-1916.