Young v. Harvison

283 S.W. 687, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 855
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 11, 1926
DocketNo. 326.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 687 (Young v. Harvison) 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
Young v. Harvison, 283 S.W. 687, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 855 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

Suit by appellee and against appellant on two notes, dated September 6, 1920, one for $575 due September 1, 1921, the other for $600 due September 1, 1922, both notes providing for interest and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees. Both shid notes were given for a part of the purchase price of the hereafter mentioned machinery:’ Each of said notes contained the following clause:

“I have deposited or pledged with H. J. Har-vison as collateral security for the payment of this note one Rumley Ideal separator, 28-inch cylinder; also one 16 horse power Compound Advance steam tractor; also one water tank and truck; also one cook shack and truck, the market value of which is' now $1,675. Now, in the event of the nonpayment of this note at maturity, the,holders hereof are hereby invested with full authority to use,' transfer, hypothe-cate, sell or copvey the said property, or any palt thereof, or cause same to be done at public or private sale, with or without notice or demand of any sort, at such place and on such terms as the said holders hereof may deem best, * * * and to apply the proceeds of such sale to the payment of said notes,” etc.

Appellant also executed a chattel mortgage on all of said, property to secure the payment of said notes. Appellee sought judgment for the amount due on said notes and a foreclosure of his mortgage. Appellant, for answer, pleaded' failure of consideration, al *688 leging, in substance, that appellee had warranted said machinery, and that same was defective, setting out various defects in the different parts of said machinery, alleging he had paid appellee $1,000 on said machinery, and that what he had paid was more than said machinery was worth, and that there was an entire failure of the consideration for said notes, etc.

The court submitted the case on special issues. In answer to .the first three special issues submitting appellee’s theory of the case, the jury found as follows:

“(1) The plaintiff, H. J. Uarvison, did sell and deliver to the defendant said threshing out,fit in question. v
“(2) The trade was finally closed and the threshing outfit in question accepted at the time it was delivered to the defendant, Guy M. Young, in its then condition.
“(3) The said defendant has paid on said notes the sum of $400.”

Immediately following the above three issues, the first and second of which the jury answered in the affirmative, the court instructed as follows:

“If you have answered ‘yes’ to special issues Nos. 1 and 2, and in answer to special issue No. 3 you have found the sum that the defendant has paid on said notes in question, then you will not answer, the following special issues nor consider this case any further.”

Then follow special issues 4 to 11, inclusive, presenting appellant’s theory of the case, none of which were answered, pro-' pounding in substance the following:

“(4) At the time of the execution and delivery of said notes, did the plaintiff represent and guarantee that said threshing outfit was in a condition to do first-class work?
“(5) Was said threshing outfit in good running order as represented and guaranteed by plaintiff, if he did do so, when turned over to defendant, and in a condition to do first-class work?
“(6) At the time of the execution and delivery of the notes, did the defendant rely upon any representations made by the plaintiff, if any, that if said threshing machine did not do first-class work that he would repair the same?
“(7) At the time payments were made on the notes, did defendant rely upon representations, if any, that plaintiff would repair the threshing outfit and make any changes from its original condition when received, if same had been .received and accepted?
“(8) Was the failure of the threshing outfit to doi first-class work, if you believe such to be the case, on account of the way it was operated by the defendant and his employees?”
“If you have answered that the plaintiff guaranteed said threshing outfit to be in good condition and do first-class work, as alleged against him by the defendant, then you will make answer to the following issue:
“(9') Would the defendant, Young, have made said purchase and have executed said notes in question had said representations, if any, not been made?
“(10) What was the reasonable value of said ' threshing outfit in the condition in which it was at the time same was delivered to defendant by plaintiff?
“(11) What sum, if any, is defendant indebted to plaintiff, H. J. Harvison?”

The court entered judgment for appellee for the amount of the two notes sued upon, less the credit of $400, and foreclosed the mortgage lien on the threshing outfit.

Opinion.

Under appellant’s first assignment, he contends that the above charge of the court as a whole was- erroneous and was equivalent to a peremptory instruction for appellee. The record discloses that the thresher outfit was a secondhand one, which had been used by appellee; that in June, 1920, he agreed to sell same to appellant for $1,675. As to the terms of the sale, appellee testified:

“I sold Guy that machine with a guarantee that it was to run. I was to overhaul it, and I agreed to take it out and start it, and if it run in the first crop he was to receive it or not receive it; he was the judge. * * * He came down to my house then, and we talked it over, and I was to overhaul it and take it out and try it on any crop in the valley, and if it run all right, then it was his machine, and if it didn’t, it wasn’t no trade. He said that was fair enough.”

. The wife of appellee testified substantially as her husband to the above agreement. When the threshing season opened, after appellee had overhauled said threshing outfit, it was moved out to the first crop to be threshed about the last of June or first of July, and appellee-and E. O. Harrell started it up, and after it had run for some time, but before said crop was finished, both ap-pellee and Harrell testified that appellant said it was all right, and that appellant then and there accepted said threshing machinery, and that they returned to town. The record discloses that appellant continued to run said thresher during the threshing season of 1920, and about the close of said season, September 16, 1920, he executed the two notes sued upon for the balance of the purchase price, having in the meantime made the down payment of some $500, and that appellant continued to use said thresher for the years 1921, 1922, and 1923, making four years he used same, without, any complaint of any real defect in said machinery; and while in his answer pleading failure of considera-, tion, he pleaded several respects in which he claimed said machinery was defective, yet he produced no evidence of any defect, but in his direct evidence complained only because appellee had not taken and sold said machinery under the power conferred upon him in the chattel mortgage and pledge agreement, and testifying as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
283 S.W. 687, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-harvison-texapp-1926.