Weatherred v. Finley

121 S.W. 895, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 50, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 3, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 895 (Weatherred v. Finley) 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
Weatherred v. Finley, 121 S.W. 895, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 50, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 16 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

Appellants T. P. Weatherred, W. A. Meador and J. H. Porter have appealed from a judgment against them in appellee’s favor for the sum of twenty-nine hundred and ninety-four dollars. Appellants have severally presented briefs assigning various errors, most of which are common to all, but we think it sufficient to say in answer to the assignments of appellants Weatherred and Meador that the case made against them by both appellee’s pleading and evidence is that of a simple swindle, in which both alike acted in the accomplishment of a certain purpose to appellee’s damage.

Appellee alleged among other things in substance that she was a widow residing in Abilene, desirous of investing in western lands; that appellant Weatherred was engaged in the real estate business in the town of Midland, and that he agreed to act for her as her agent and to advise her in making investments and to procure for her lands at the lowest possible prices, giving her the benefit of his long experience and in all things else to faithfully represent her and protect her interests; that appellants Meador and Porter jointly and severally, and with full knowledge of the fact that said Weatherred was plaintiff’s trusted agent, induced Weatherred to disregard his duty to plaintiff and induced him to enter into an unlawful combination and conspiracy for the purpose of defrauding and swindling her; that the appellants jointly and severally represented to her that W. A. Meador was at the time the owner of a large body of land consisting of four sections in block thirty-nine, which he was extremely■ anxious to sell; that said defendants represented that Meador had purchased said land prior thereto for the sum of thirteen thousand dollars, since which *51 time real estate values in that portion of the State had advanced; that Meador was desiring to move to a different part of the State and engage in oilier business, and that his wife ivas in exceedingly bad health, and for this and other reasons he would sell said lands to plaintiff for the sum of fifteen thousand three hundred and sixty dollars; that Weatherred and Meador, with the connivance and consent of their co-conspirator, Porter, represented that said land at the price named, to wit, fifteen thousand three' hundred and sixty dollars, was a great bargain for plaintiff; that said price was the lowest possible price for which said land or other land of like character could be purchased, and that the same was really worth vastly more than the sum of fifteen thousand three hundred and sixty dollars. Plaintiff charged that said representations were false, but that nevertheless she, relying thereupon, agreed to purchase the lands, after which Meador and Weatherred bought the land from the real owner for the sum of five thousand one hundred and twenty dollars, which was not more than its real value, taking deed thereto in the name, of Meador, and then transferred the same to plaintiff for the sum of fifteen thousand three hundred and sixty dollars, which she paid in cash and notes in ignorance of the true facts.

Appellee’s testimony fully supported her allegations in respect to the representations and acts of appellants Weatherred and Meador, and, if believed by the jury, which was evidently done, it is immaterial whether Weatherred in representing and acting as he did was Meador’s agent or that of appellee. It is likewise immaterial that there was a conspiracy between Meador and Weatherred. Both by allegation and proof they jointly and severally made false representations and jointly and severally acted in the accomplishment of the SAvindle, and there was no error therefore in the court’s action in refusing special instructions to the effect that if Porter was not a party to the fraud, or had not conspired, or if Weatherred was not appellee’s agent, that the jury should find for appellants.

All appellants urge that the court erred in giving the following portion of paragraph three of the general charge to the jury, viz.: “The court has admitted before you evidence of facts and declarations of J. hT. Porter and W. A. Meador, only upon the theory that they Avere co-conspirators with T. P. Weatherred, but the action of the court in admitting this evidence means only that sufficient evidence of a conspiracy was offered to permit the evidence to go before you.” It is objected that this charge is upon the weight of the testimony and indicated to the jury that in the opinion of the' court the eAndenee on the issue of conspiracy was sufficient. We are of opinion, hoAAever, that no error was committed in this respect. Beading paragraph three as a whole, it clearly appears that the issue of conspiracy was left solely to the jury’s. determination. Immediately following the words quoted, Avitliout punctuation or break in the sense, the charge reads: “Because it is for you alone to determine upon the facts in evidence whether there was any conspiracy.” It was the evident purpose of the paragraph to merely explain the circumstances under which the jury might consider or not certain acts and declarations of named conspirators. In the case of Luttrell v. State, 31 Texas Crim., 493, a *52 judgment assessing the death penalty for murder was affirmed, and in that case objection was made to a charge almost identical with that above quoted, the only change being in words necessary to its adaptation in this case. It was there said that: “It was the duty of the judge to tell the jury that, though he had received the evidence (acts and declarations of conspiracy), yet they had the right to determine whether in fact a conspiracy had been established, and if not established not to consider as evidence against appellant the acts and declarations of Carlisle, Fogg and Poe. The duty was performed in plain and simple language, which could not have been misunderstood by the jury.” The assignment under consideration is overruled.

The appellant Porter assigns error to the court’s refusal to give the following.special instruction: “In this case the defendant Porter is charged in plaintiff’s pleadings with having conspired together with defendant Meadows and defendant Weatherred in selling to the plaintiff the four sections of land described in plaintiff’s pleadings. This transaction was completed when the deeds were made to the four sections of land to Mrs. Finley on July 10, 1907. Row, if you find from the evidence that the defendant Porter was during the time of the making and completing of said sale of said land at his ranch in Crane County, and that he was not present when said sale was made, and that he did not see or talk with the plaintiff Mrs. Fanny Finley, or defendant Meadows, or defendant Weatherred during the time when this trade was being made and consummated, and that he had nothing to do with said transaction, then you will find a verdict for the defendant Porter, and the fact that said defendant Porter after-wards purchased Mrs. Finley’s houses in Abilene from her or from her agent would in no wise make this defendant liable in this suit for anything whatever.”

While in the court’s general charge the jury were authorized to find a verdict against appellant Porter in event only of a finding that he had conspired together with Weatherred and Meador, there was no affirmative direction to find in Porter’s favor in event the jury found that he was not a party to the conspiracy. There is no objection, however, to such omission, and the assignment objecting to the special charge above quoted must be overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 895, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 50, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weatherred-v-finley-texapp-1909.