Waco-Tex Materials Co. v. Lee

210 S.W.2d 886, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1189
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1948
DocketNo. 2785.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 210 S.W.2d 886 (Waco-Tex Materials Co. v. Lee) 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
Waco-Tex Materials Co. v. Lee, 210 S.W.2d 886, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1189 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

TIREY, Justice.

This is a suit to recover compensation alleged to be due W. E. Lee for his services in pointing out to appellants certain lands containing deposits of sand and gravel in commercial quantities available for leasing. Defendants seasonably filed motion for peremptory instruction and also motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict of the jury, which motions were overruled. The plaintiffs filed motion for judgment on the verdict of the jury, which the court granted, and defendants have appealed.

Plaintiffs grounded their cause of action on an oral contract and alleged substantially that defendants were informed that W. E. Lee, one of the plaintiffs, had knowledge of tracts of land in the vicinity of LaGrange that contained commercial deposits of sand and gravel. Defendants sought such information of Lee and agreed that if Lee would point out such tract or tracts of land, defendants would make the usual and ordinary tests and if said, land contained sand and gravel in the quantities and quality desired by defendants and if defendants were successful in obtaining a gravel lease upon such tract that was satisfactory to them, the defendants would pay plaintiffs “a bonus or royalty or compensation for such information as follows: 1. The sum of two cents per cubic yard for all screened or washed gravel. 2. The sum of two cents per cubic yard for pitrun gravel. 3. The sum of four and one-half cents per cubic yard for sand. 4. The sum of one cent per cubic yard for all sand or gravel moved over a proposed railway track to be erected along the west line of the property leased.” That after Lee agreed with defendants upon said compensation he pointed out two tracts of land to defendants’ duly authorized agent; that defendants made such tests as were satisfactory to them; that defendants were successful in obtaining the kind and character of leases on each of said tracts satisfactory to them; that one tract was the Richards tract and the other the Ehlers tract, and that said tracts adjoined each other, and that said gravel deposit was a continuation from one tract to the other. It was alleged that defendants paid, according to the contract, the sum due Lee for the sand and gravel mined from the Richards tract, but failed and refused to pay plaintiffs for the sum due according to the terms of the contract for the sand and gravel mined from the Ehlers tract and the one cent per cubic yard for the sand and gravel moved over the spur track. Defendants seasonably raised by exception the points that the plaintiffs’ pleading contravened our statute of frauds because it was an oral contract relating to an interest in land and was therefore within the terms of that statute, and that plaintiffs were seeking to recover compensation for Lee’s acts alleged to have been performed in negotiating a lease on real estate, and that such acts constituted W. E. Lee a real estate dealer or salesman, and that since defendants did not allege that Lee was a duly licensed real estate dealer or salesman at the time or at the accrual of his alleged cause of action plaintiffs could not recover as a matter of law by virtue of the provisions of Art. 3995, and Art. 6573a, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.Stats.

The jury found substantially that (1) defendants agreed to pay plaintiffs two cents per cubic yard for gravel and four and one-half cents per cubic yard for all sand removed by defendants from any gravel or sand deposits pointed out to defendants by plaintiff W. E. Lee; (2) that defendants had the railroad switch constructed on the Ehlers tract to avoid paying plaintiff one cent per cubic yard for all gravel and sand moved over sai,d switch track; (3) that the oral agreement between plaintiffs and defendants could have been performed 'within one year. The court in its judgment further found in effect that the quantities of sand and gravel removed by plaintiffs from the Ehlers tract was without dispute and (under the verdict of the jury) plaintiffs were entitled to recover for such sand and *888 gravel removed from the Ehlers tract the sum . of $2857.10, and that the quantities of sand and gravel moved over the railroad switch constructed on the Ehlers tract was without dispute and that plaintiffs were entitled to recover the further sum of $3052.52, and entered judgment in behalf of plaintiffs for the sum of $5909.62, with interest and costs. The above calculations are not assailed.

Points 3, 4, 5 and 6 assail the judgment substantially on the theory that since the contract of plaintiffs was verbal only and sought to burden the land leased with an overriding royalty for the service rendered by W. E. Lee in pointing out sand and gravel deposits to defendants contravened our statute of frauds, Art. 3995, Vernon’s 'Ann.Civ.Stats., and since plaintiffs did not allege that W. E. Lee was a duly licensed real estate dealer ór salesman (and the proof was without dispute that he was-not) and had complied with Art. 6573a, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.Stats., he could not recover for services rendered because of his failure to show a compliance with the foregoing statutes.

The first major question in this case is: Does the plaintiffs’ alleged cause of action . for compensation for the sand and gravel removed from, the Ehlers tract come within our statute of frauds? We think not.

, In Dashko v. Friedman, Tex.Civ.App., 59 S.W.2d 203, 204, the exact question was before the court, except that the subject matter of. the suit was oil and gas to be severed from the land instead of gravel. The court in passing upon the question as to whether or not the statute of frauds was applicable said: “The question presented by this appeal for determination is whether or not the subject-matter of the contract, alleged in plaintiff’s petition as entered into between plaintiff and defendant, is personal property or real estate. If it was the intention of the plaintiff and defendant, as evidenced by the terms of the oral contract between them, to provide for a conveyance by the defendant to plaintiff of an interest in the mineral in place, then the contract would be within .the statute of..frauds. If it was their intention to stipulate for an assignment thereof, and if terms of the contract so dealt with the minerals only, after they were produced, then the contract would not be prohibited by the statute of frauds. We are of the opinion that the oral contract as alleged in plaintiff’s petition whereby it is alleged that defendant agreed’ to transfer and assign to plaintiff ‘ ¾6 of the oil and gas produced and saved from said land, as, if, and when produced, and in that event only,’ clearly evidences the .intention of the parties to, and that they thereby did, contract with relation to the • oil and after it should be -produced and saved, and, in that event only, .and not as a mineral interest in the land. The fact that the oil and gas to -be received by appellant under the contract is designated as an ‘overruling royalty’ does not make it real estate, or prohibit it from being personal property. It merely denotes its freedom from the burden of production expenses. The contract alleged between the plaintiff and defendant did not undertake .to deal with the mineral in fee; but undertook . to deal with it, 'as, if, and when (after) produced (taken out of and severed from the land), and in that event only; that is, after it became personal property, and is not within the statute of frauds.”

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W.2d 886, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waco-tex-materials-co-v-lee-texapp-1948.