Yndo v. Antonio Rivas

180 S.W. 96, 107 Tex. 408, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 171
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1915
DocketNo. 2418.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 96 (Yndo v. Antonio Rivas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yndo v. Antonio Rivas, 180 S.W. 96, 107 Tex. 408, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 171 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

Mb. Justice YANTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Several questions are presented in the petition for writ of error, but it is only necessary for us to consider the one involving the statute of limitation, it appearing from the evidence, without material contradiction, that the cause of action alleged by the plaintiff in error is barred by the two year statute of limitation. Plaintiff in error sued P. A. Chapa personally, and as independent executor of the estate of Antonio P.' Rivas, deceased, and the other children and heirs of said Antonio P. Rivas, alleging he was a surety for Rivas on several notes, which were afterwards merged into one note, and made payable to A. B. Prank, which last note was signed by himself alone, and was executed and delivered by him to A. B. Frank, in lieu of Antonio Rivas’ said other notes, on the 18th day of February, 1904. This note was paid by plaintiff in error in August or September, 1907. He sues to have reimbursement in the sum of three thousand three hundred and eighty-nine dollars and *410 sixty-seven cents, which was the principal of said note, and also to recover the interest which he had paid thereon. In his said suit he also sought to have rescinded a deed from A. P. Rivas, deceased, to his wife, Maria Q. Rivas, now deceased, dated April 16, 1888, conveying to her lot No. 4, block No. —, city block No. 150, corner Laredo and Houston Streets, in the city of San Antonio, and to subject said property to the payment of said debt, on the ground, alleged, that said lot was his separate property, and that he conveyed it to his said wife as his agent, and it was to be held by her for his own use and benefit. If the debt on which suit was brought herein by the plaintiff in error is barred by limitation, as we think the evidence shows as a matter of law, it follows that it will be unnecessary to decide the several questions raised as to the ownership and disposition of said lot.

The original suit was filed on June 1, 1908. The note sued on was made February 18, 1904. The suit was filed more than four years after the payment of Rivas’ debt to Frank, if the execution and delivery of said note by Yndo to Frank is to be considered a payment of Rivas’ debt. The said note by Yndo was actually paid by Yndo to Frank in August or September, 1907. If the latter date should be considered the date of payment of Rivas’ debt, then limitation began to run on said date, and the debt would not be barred. If the date Yndo executed and delivered said note which took up all of Rivas’ notes should be considered the day of payment, then limitation began to run on said date, and had run for more than four years before any suit was filed, and in such case his suit for reimbursement would be barred whether the two year or four jrear statute applied, though we hold that the two year statute would have application, since in such circumstances the suit is on an implied contract for Rivas to refund the money which Yndo had paid for him, and is not upon the note or any written obligation. Faires v. Cockerell, 88 Texas, 437, 28 L. R. A., 528, 31 S. W., 190; Willis & Bro. v. Chowning, 90 Texas, 622, 59 Am. St., 842, 40 S. W., 395.

It is contended by the plaintiff in error that this execution of and delivery to Frank of the note sued on was not a payment or discharge of Rivas’ debt to Frank, but that Yndo signed said note, though alone, as surety for Rivas; or that at least there was sufficient evidence to require the submission of the issue to the jury, and that the peremptory instruction which was given in favor of defendants in error should not have been given. But a careful investigation has convinced us that there is no evidence of probative force, if indeed there is any at all, tending to establish that Frank did not accept Yndo’s note in full discharge of Rivas from any further liability. It appears that Rivas was willing to. continue on the note, but that he had renewed several times, and that for some reason presumably satisfactory to himself Frank did not want Rivas on the note any longer, and declined to permit him to sign it, but took a note by Yndo, the surety on the previous notes, alone, and required him to give, which he did, a mortgage on real estate to secure the payment.

*411 The honorable Court of Civil Appeals in its findings of fact quotes all the evidence in the record, so it certifies, tending to prove that Frank did not accept Tndo’s new note in satisfaction of Rivas’ liability on the obligations which he had owed to Frank. It is as follows:

“We present all the evidence introduced by plaintiff to avoid the plea of limitations. The first witness was Mr. Seelig Deutsehman, an attorney. who stated: Air. Rivas told Mr. Tndo, “I will never owe you a dollar as long as I have got a dollar, and if I die, after I am dead, my children will pay it, if I don’t have time before, and this is an honor debt. I was administrator for these children and I used this money and I want to get you to do me the favor to let me pay the Flores judgment out of this and I will pay you,” he says, “if you will let me pay, if you will allow me to pay with this money the Flores judgment, I will promise you that when I sell that corner out of the proceeds of that sale the money shall be paid to A. B. Frank, every dollar, or to you, or to you if you pay it for me.” . . . The next matter we had up with Mr. Rivas was in connection with the beginning of the widening of Houston Street.....Mr. Rivas said if the street was widened the property would come into the market and bring a good price, and he said, “When the street is widened and the property sold, I intend to pay the debt to A. B. Frank and interest Mr. Tndo paid for him.” . . . eighteen months, I guess, before he died, or maybe a little less. Why I wrote him a note one day to come to see me and try to arrange our matters in some shape. . . . He said he had gotten my letter, that he didn’t think he cared to put the property in any shape where its record would be encumbered in any wajq but that he was going to draw a will—a paper, in that paper provide what he intended to do, and intimated he wanted me to draw the paper, but gave me no positive instructions except he told me the way he wanted the paper drawn . . . and that in that will he would provide that the Tndo matter he settled, the Tndo-Franlc matter be settled. . . . The people were close friends. . . . The old fellow a short time afterwards became paralyzed.’ He was the attorney for Rivas to file the will for probate. The will did not provide for the payment of the debt. And F. A. Chapa qualified as the executor under said will on the 30th day of March, 1907.

“Again Mr. Deutsehman said: Air. Tndo asked Mr. Rivas to take care of at least a part of the Frank debt, and Mr. Rivas told him he could not possibly do it out of this money. A judgment had been obtained against him and was a debt of honor. Means used by him belonging to some minors and he must pay it “and want you to know that I am not going to heat you folks out of one single debt or one dollar’s interest you pay out for me, and I will pay the Frank debt if you pay it. I will see you get the money back,” and he said: “That comer is mine and. whenever that corner property is sold I am going to pay you that money.” I didn’t file suit because the relations between Tndo and Rivas were closer than brothers born and raised together and Tndo *412 worshipped the ground Rivas walked on, and would have laid down—■ given him the last dime/

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 96, 107 Tex. 408, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yndo-v-antonio-rivas-tex-1915.