Western Irr. Co. v. Reeves County Land Co.

233 S.W.2d 599
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 2, 1950
Docket4733
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 233 S.W.2d 599 (Western Irr. Co. v. Reeves County Land Co.) 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
Western Irr. Co. v. Reeves County Land Co., 233 S.W.2d 599 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

McGILL, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court of Reeves County, 109th Judicial District, overruling a plea of privilege filed by defendant Western Irrigation Company, Inc., to be sued in Lubbock County, the county of its residence.

The suit was instituted by Reeves County Land Company, a Texas corporation having its principal office and place of business in Pecos, Reeves County, and O. I. Cox, E. C. Thomas and E. G. Pinkston, residents of Plidalgo County, against Western Irrigation Company.

Plaintiffs alleged that Reeves County Land Company was the owner of “the N. ½ of the S. E. ¼, and the E. ½ of the *600 S. W. ¾ of Section 14, Block C-Nine (C-9), Public School Lands, Reeves County, Texas” ; that the land was purchased by Reeves County Land Company in December, 1947, and was broken, cleared, levelled and prepared for planting cotton thereon for the year 1948; that the land was leased to plaintiffs Cox, Thomas and Pinkston, operating as a co¡-partnership under the name Mestenas Farms for the crop year of 1948, for and in consideration of one-fourth of all cotton and cotton seed raised thereon during the term of the lease; that in December 1947 plaintiffs, acting through their duly authorized representatives, entered into an oral contract with defendant Western Irrigation Company, acting by and through W. F. Oliver, its duly authorized representative, whereby defendant agreed to drill three water wells upon said tract of land for irrigation, at a cost of $5 per foot for drilling, $5 per foot for casing, and $1 per foot for perforation of casing; that defendant expressly agreed toi complete said wells as a turnkey job including the installation of necessary pumps and power units and contracted that all three wells would 'be completed and pumping water by March 15, 1948; that defendant knew that the wells were to be used for irrigation purposes for the cotton crop for the year 1948, and knew that time was of the essence of the contract; that the contract was made and fully performed in Reeves County; that the plaintiffs Cox, Thomas and Pinkston, relying upon defendant’s representations that the wells would be completed by March 15, 1948, prepared to commence planting on that date or shortly thereafter and were willing and anxious to commence cultivating the land for the cotton crop for the year 1948; that defendant wholly failed to drill and equip said wells by March 15, 1948; that the first well was not completed until May 5, 1948, the second well until May 8, 1948, and the third well until May 12, 1948; that plaintiffs had paid defendant the agreed consideration owing to it under the terms of the contract; that by reason of defendant’s delay in completing the wells plaintiffs Cox, Thomas and Pinkston were delayed in planting the cotton crop for the year 1948 and 100 acres of the crop was destroyed by a fall freeze and the balance thereof, 445 ■acres, produced less cotton because of delay in planting due to lack of water because of defendant’s failure to complete the wells according to the terms of the contract. Plaintiffs sought to recover their proportionate damages for the alleged loss of cotton. In due course defendant filed its plea of privilege to be sued in Lubbock County. This plea conformed in all respects with Rule 86, Texas R.C.P. By their controverting plea plaintiffs alleged all the facts substantially as set forth in their petition as above outlined, and sought to sustain venue in Reeves County under Subsection 23 of Article 1995, R.C.S., Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 1995, subd. 23.

Appellant’s points are briefly summarized: The court erred in overruling defendant’s plea of privilege because (1) plaintiff wholly failed to make any proof that W. F. Oliver was the agent or representative of the defendant corporation in making the alleged oral contract; (2) plaintiff failed to prove that W. F. Oliver, if 'he was an agent or representative of defendant had any authority to act for and bind defendant corporation in making the alleged oral contract; (3) insofar as the plaintiffs Cox, Thomas and Pinkston are concerned all the evidence shows that the alleged oral contract was between Reeves County Land Company, a corporation, and defendant Western Irrigation Company, and that Cox, Thomas and Pinkston were mere tenants on the land and they are not entitled to recover for any breach of the alleged contract; (4) the court erred in admitting over defendant’s objection testimony concerning a pre-corporation agreement whereby the land was to be acquired by the corporation Reeves County Land Company and contracts to drill water wells were made in its behalf where plaintiffs had plead that the land was owned by the corporation and the contract in question was made by it.

Mr. W. K. Bonham, a witness for plaintiffs, testified that he was a stockholder of the Reeves County Land Company; that the Reeves County Land Company was *601 the owner of two sections of land in Reeves County, being Section 14 in Block C-9, Public School Lands, and Section 194, H. & G. N. Ry. Co., it having purchased said land in November 1947; that when the company purchased the land it was contemplated that 400 acres of Section 194 should be farmed by two sons of H. A. George and 200 acres thereof by Mestenas Farms, a partnership composed of Pink-ston and Thomas, and that Mestenas Farms was to farm Section 14; that tenancy agreements were made in accordance with this plan immediately after the purchase of the two sections by the Reeves County Land Company in November 1947; that witness and H. A. George (another stockholder of the Reeves County Land Company) made arrangements for drilling and equipping six water wells, three on Section 14 and three on Section 194; that this arrangement was made about December 10, 1947, with W. F. Oliver, who was rep1resenting Western Irrigation Company; that the agreement insofar as it covered the three wells on Section 14 was an oral agreement and was substantially as alleged; that he, Bonham, and George were representing the owners of the two sections as well as the tenants in making the agreement; that the agreement was made at a conference in the Brandon Hotel in Pecos at which witness, George and Oliver were present; that when he, Bonham, returned on April 5, 1948 and found that the wells were incomplete he contacted the Western Irrigation Company numerous times by telephone and believed that he had gone up there; he talked to Oliver and sometimes to Ivey over the phone and in explanation of the delay they told him the pumps and equipment were in El Paso, were on the road, and would probably be there “in the morning”; that he had mentioned to Ivey the fact that through Thomas they could buy pumps in Houston, and Ivey had said “Listen, if you want to buy a Chevrolet and you can’t get delivery, do you think you’d go buy a Ford in place of it? We are selling Western pumps, and we are not going off and buy any off breed of any other make”; that plaintiffs had paid the Western Irrigation Company around $65,-000 for the drilling and completing of the six wells. E. C. Thomas, Secretary-Treasurer of Reeves County Land Company testified:

“Q. With reference to the Section 194 wells, the wells on that section, Mr. Thomas, and following the conference you had in Orville Cox’s office in McAllen in the Middle of the summer of 1948, did yon subsequently have a telephone conversation with W. L. Ivey, President of Western Irrigation Company about the payment of some money? A. Yes, sir.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W.2d 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-irr-co-v-reeves-county-land-co-texapp-1950.