Veselka v. Forres

283 S.W. 303, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1061
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 1926
DocketNo. 6977.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 303 (Veselka v. Forres) 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
Veselka v. Forres, 283 S.W. 303, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1061 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

Appellee, Charles Forres, sued appeliants, Louis, Joe and Emily Veselka, to recover $1,000' as liquidated damages alleged to be due as the result of a breach of a written contract whereby appellants agreed to sell and to convey to him, on and about January 1, 1924, by “warranty deed with clear title,” the 112 acres of land described in the contract. Appellee attached and made the contract a part of his pleading, alleging that he stood ready, willing, and able to receive “warranty deed with clear title," and to pay the consideration and carry out his part of the contract on or about January 1,1924, but that appellants failed and refused and still refuse to execute such a deed, whereby they became liable and bound to pay him the sum of.$1,000 as liquidated damages provided in the contract. Appellee also filed certain alternative pleadings, but they become immaterial since the trial court construed the contract to provide for liquidated damages in the event of its breach.

Appellants answered by a general demurrer, several special exceptions to the pleadings, and a general denial, and further specially pleaded that appellee fraudulently procured the contract of purchase and sale; that he got appellants, Louis and Joe Vesel-ka, drunk, and overreached them, and caused them to execute the contract while drunk and not knowing the contents .thereof, and that he caused the said Emily Veselka to execute the contract under duress; that the contract was executed in violation of the Bulk Sales Law, and that appellee himself breached the contract because he refused to accept a warranty deed conveying whatever title appellants had in the land as a compliance with the contract ; and alleged generally that appellee continually failed and refused to do the things incumbent upon him, and therefore breached the contract, and is estopped to now claim a breach by appellants.

The trial was to the court without a jury, and jiudgment was rendered for appellee against appellants for $1,000 as liquidated damages, with interest at 6 per cent, from date of judgment. The appeal is duly perfected from this judgment.

By the contract appellants agreed to sell and convey to appellee, by “warranty deed with clear title,” on or about January 4, 1924, 112 acres of land in two tracts at an agreed and fixe^d price of $55 per acre. In return for the land they were purchasing the cold drink business of appellee, situated' in the town of La Grange, the fixtures being specifically described in the contract, item by item, and for which appellants were to allow on the purchase price of the land $2,500; that the stock in the business was to be inventoried when the transaction • was consummated, and for which appellee was to be allowed as cash the cost value of the stock, and he was to pay the balance remaining over and above these items in cash.

Appellants give the following as their sole reason for not carrying out the contract.

Appellant Louis Veselka testified:

“As to what it was we wanted to deed — he wanted to give him a deed — he wanted clear deed. We had two tracts. We wanted to give him a deed to the two tracts. We did not want to give him a clear deed until the minor reached his age. One tract we could give him a clear deed, and the other we could not. The one in which we could not give him a dear deed was *305 the one in -which Joe Maretka, the minor, was interested. * * * The only reason why we didn’t deed that land to Mr. Forres was on account of the minor owning- an interest and not signing. If it had not been for that, my brother and sister and I would have carried out our written agreement with Mr. Forres. * * * The only reason why this contract was not closed is because we could not get Joe Maretka to agree to have his disabilities removed. There is no other reason that caused us not to carry out. this contract. * * * That was the time when I, as well as Mr. Forres, was advised that Joe Maretka had an interest, and we had to have -his disabilities removed. That is the reason Charlie Forres did not take the land, because we could not give good clear title. * * * The only reason we did not comply with the agreement was on account of this minor, Joe Maretka, having an interest in the land. * * M My brother and sister and I bought out all the balance of them except Joe Maretka, and he still owns an interest in this land described in this agreement. He refused to. have his disabilities removed. We can’t deliver the deed that we contracted to give.”

A letter from Louis Veselka, dated January 7, 1924, reads in part:

“That was Mr. Forres’ mistake, not ours, he had right to overlook the deeds what kind-homestead is in deeds. Now he don’t have to complained us against anything. But af he want have trouble, let him sue us. We take care of ours lawyer. And another thing, we are not responsible for that minor which he is not satisfied to signet disability, we can’t help that.”

Appellant Emily Veselka testified in part:

“Joe and Louis and I knew that Joe had an interest in that land. My brothers Joe and Louis both knew that Joe Maretka had an interest in this land that we were trying to sell. After we had all made this contract here, and finally did not sell the land, the reason we didn’t give Mr. Forres the deed was that he didn’t want to take such title as we wanted to give him. He did. not want to take such a title. We signed the contract and agreed to sell the land. Mr. Forres did not want to take the kind of deed we all offered him. My two brothers and I wanted him to take a deed just from us three. If he had taken that deed, we would have sold him the farm. * * + I did not sign any deed conveying this land to Charlie Forres. I claim that Charlie Forres backed out; I don’t know if he claims it, but I claim it. I claim it because he wouldn’t take a deed from us three. * * * Joe and Louis, my two brothers, and I were ready to give a deed, just signed by us three. Joe Maretka wasn’t signing any deed with us, but he promised to. He was a minor— he would sign it.' As to whether he was over nineteen years of age, I don’t know how old he was; I think about nineteen.”

Appellant Joe Veselka testified in part:

“Louis Veselka, my sister and I, wanted to give him a deed to this land, ourselves. Mr. Forres wanted a deed from us three and also Joe Maretka. That is the reason the deal did not go through, we could not deliver that deed. * * * Anyway, we could not get Joe Maret-ka’s disabilities removed, or get his interest in the place, and that was the reason the trade didn’t-go through.”

In viéw of this testimony we think the defenses of fraud, overreaching, and duress pleaded by appellants went out of the case. That is, since appellants admit that the only reason for their failure to carry out the contract was because appellee would not take their deed conveying whatever interest they may have had in the land, the other defenses became immaterial; and they are limited to the following .defenses which represent the issues on this appeal:

First. Did the offer by appellants to deliver their warranty deed to the 112 acres of land conveying whatever interest they had sufficiently comply with the terms of the contract to convey the land by “warranty deed with clear title”?

Second.

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Bluebook (online)
283 S.W. 303, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veselka-v-forres-texapp-1926.