Wortman v. Young

221 S.W. 660, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 475
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 1920
DocketNo. 6352.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 660 (Wortman v. Young) 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
Wortman v. Young, 221 S.W. 660, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 475 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

This suit was brought in the district court of Cameron county by plaintiff in error, praying for judgment and foreclo- *661 ure of those certain vendor’s lien notes executed by defendant in error for the purchase price of land conveyed to him by the Southern Land Company, certain subdivisions of this land being blocks 87, 92, 93, and 94 in subdivision No. 25, to defendant in error J. D. Young by four separate deeds of date May 15, 1914, but which deeds were not delivered until after the 29th of May, 1914, and in part payment for each of said blocks defendant in error executed to the Southern Land Company five notes for $265 each of even date with said deeds, aggregating against each block, exclusive of interest and attorney’s fees, the sum of $1,325 and a total aggregate of $5,300.

The Southern Land Company immediately after the execution' and delivery of these notes indorsed and delivered them to plaintiff in error, in consideration' of which plaintiff in error surrendered to the Southern Land Company and released his vendor’s lien for a like amount of the notes he had originally taken from it in payment for said land; there being a release clause so providing in his deed to said company.

The defendant in error J. D. Young answered by general demurrer, general denial, and specially pleaded a failure of consideration. The case was tried before a jury on special issues from June 23 to 30, inclusive, 1919, on which findings the court,, over objection of plaintiff in error, rendered judgment for defendant in error Young.

The statement of facts contains about 259 pages and the transcript 195 pages.

The first assignment of error embraces several different matters, and the consideration thereof is objected to by defendant in error; but, as the proposition thereunder limits it to one question, we assume all others are waived, and we shall so treat it. At any rate, a discussion, of the question involved in the proposition requires a discussion of the whole case. The proposition is:

“The court erred in failing and refusing to give to the jury at the conclusion of all the evidence herein, as requested by the plaintiff, an instruction to return a verdict for him.”

The facts proven in the case are:

In 1909, the plaintiff in error, J. L. Wort-man, owned a tract of land in Cameron county, Tex., containing approximately 861 acres, and on the 24th day of April of that year he, together with the La Feria Land & Irrigation Company, W. V. Fifield, Pierre Wilson, and Frank W. ICibbe, who owned land adjoining his, entered into a contract with the La Feria Mutual Canal Company, the purpose of which was to procure water for the irrigation of the several tracts so owned.

After making the contract, J. L. Wortman, on or about the 30th day of September, 1913, entered into negotiations with C. S. Hunn for the sale of his tract of land. These negotiations resulted in the making of a contract for the sale of the tract of land to a corporation styled Southern Land Company; a deed was prepared, reciting the sale of 753.2 acres of land to the Southern Land Company for a consideration of $58,373, $1,-000 of which was paid in cash, the balance to be represented by a series of notes. This deed is dated September 30, 1913, acknowledged by J. L. Wortman on the 9th day of December, 1913, filed for record at 4:30 p. m. February 9, 1914.

The grantee in the deed, the Southern Land Company, was chartered September 26, 1913. At the time of the execution of ,.the deed to the Southern Land Company, the plaintiff in error entered into a contract with the Southern Land Company, dated September 30, 1913, which recites the sale of the tract of land for $58,373; that $1,000 had been paid in cash, and the balance to be evidenced by vendor’s lien promissory notes attached to the contract. It further provided that the contract should be placed with the Merchants’ National Bank at Brownsville, in Cameron county, Tex.; that John Gregg should be appointed trustee for both parties; that $2,000 was to be paid on the 1st day of October, 1913, and eight vendor’s lien notes were to be executed by the Southern Land Company, in which event John Gregg was to deliver the deed which was to be executed to the Southern Land Company, or its agent, and was to deliver .to J. L. Wortman the money paid and the notes executed. The contract also provided that if the money was not paid, then the whole transaction was to be void, the $1,000 already paid to be forfeited to J. L. Wortman as liquidated damages. The' payment provided in the contract was not made, but by another agreement verbally made, the deed was to be left in escrow, and' cash payment made before its delivery amounting to $10,000. The payment of a sum sufficient to warrant the delivery of the deed was not paid until the 9th day of February, 1914, at which time the deed was finally delivered.

Immediately after this contract was made, the Southern Land Company began to contract sales of this land to various parties, and from November 30, 1913, to February 1, 1914, had sold the greater part of the land. In .almost every trip made by these land agents, Dr. Wortman, the plaintiff in error, would meet the excursion trains and aid in the sale of the lands, and also stated that he was endeavoring to get money that was owing to him, and that $20 per acre in cash and $80 per acre in vendor’s lien notes out of every sale that was made was to be delivered to him. On December 20, 1913, the defendant Young was a prospective purchaser on one of the excursions, and on that occasion, *662 Dr. Wortman was personally present and made a public address in aid of the sales of tliis land.

It is also shown by the testimony of J. D. Young, the defendant in error, that Dr. Wortman stated to him that the deed to the land contracted to he .purchased would come from him, Wortman; and, further, that Wortman and Witzell represented to him that the land sold was cheap at $150 per acre, while dry land of the same character would be worth only $10 to $15 per acre.

The canal system was wholly inadequate to furnish water to properly irrigate the lands of Mr. Young, the defendant in error, and that no sufficient quantity of water has ever been furnished to properly irrigate the land. It is also shown Young paid $115 per acre in cash on his land purchase, and executed notes for the remainder. The issue of fact as to whether or not the canal system was adequate to irrigate the land under contract was submitted to the jury, and the jury found that it was not. The jury also found, that the land purchased by Young was of the reasonable market value of $115 per acre with such facilities as it had for watering, and that he paid $115 per acre, and contracted to pay $150. The jury also found that the Southern Land Company was the agent of J. L. Wortman in the sale of these lands.

The testimony further shows that the said J. D. Young moved to the land in question in the spring of 1914; that although he had improved the land and undertaken to farm it, it was never irrigated; that the plaintiff in error received in cash $20 per acre, and accepted the notes in question, which were executed by the defendant in error and payable to the Southern Land Company, and by it transferred to J. L.

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221 S.W. 660, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wortman-v-young-texapp-1920.