Zavala Land & Water Co. v. Tolbert

184 S.W. 523, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 291
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 19, 1916
DocketNo. 7425. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 523 (Zavala Land & Water Co. v. Tolbert) 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
Zavala Land & Water Co. v. Tolbert, 184 S.W. 523, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 291 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This is the second appeal in this case. See 165 S. W. 28. Appellant, about the year 1909, acquired about 100,000 acres of land in Zavala county, Tex., and had 50,000 acres of the same seetionized and surveyed and test wells bored at the corners of the sections for the purpose of ascertaining whether water could be found by sinking wells. Appellant also subdivided each section and placed said lands on the market. On the 17th day of January, 1912, a contract was written and signed in behalf of the appellant by E. C. Hughes, one of its agents, and by the appellee, whereby the appellant bound itself to sell and convey to appellee, and appellee bound himself to receive and pay for 40 acres, a quarter of a quarter of a section of said land. After the said contract was written and before it was signed, the appellant’s said agent wrote into said contract as a part thereof the following:

“It is agreed to bore on land above described 10%-in. casing, guaranteeing water, and draw on R. L. Tolbert for total cost of well when completed.”

This contract was executed in triplicate, the appellee receiving one copy thereof, and the appellant’s agent Hughes retaining the other copies. At the time the contract was thus signed and delivered, appellee drew and delivered to the-said Hughes, as the cash or first payment to be made for the land agreed to be conveyed, his check on a bank in the city of Greenville, Tex., for the sum of $866.66, and it was then agreed, verbally, that said contract was not to become a “completed contract,” and the said check was not to be presented for payment and collected until said contract was further signed on behalf of the appellant by its agent W. H. Parish, who was then absent, when he returned to the said city of Greenville. In a few days after the signing of the contract by E. O. Hughes and the appellee, Tolbert, W. H. Parish returned to Greenville, and when first called upon to sign the contract he refused to do so, but later and on the 29th day of January, 1912, as agent of appellant, he signed it. His name was signed under the word “witness” printed in said contract, and in the opinion on the former appeal it is stated that the contract was “witnessed by W. H. Parish,” and it so appeared from the record then before this court; but on the subsequent trial it was shown that Mr. Parish signed as appellant’s agent, and not as a witness. At and prior to the time the contract was made, the defendant had printed and was circulating as advertising matter a pamphlet purporting to give picture views of its lands in Zavala county, and of farms on those lands, and of wells being pumped for irrigation purposes. These printed pamphlets stated, in substance, that the' lands mentioned were irrigable by pumping water from wells; that tracts of land were being irrigated from wells; that sufficient water was being secured, and could be secured, from wells to irrigate the said lands. A copy of the pamphlet above mentioned came into plaintiff’s hands before he signed the contract. This suit was filed March 23, 1912, and on October 5, 1914, after the former appeal, hereinbefore referred to, appel-lee filed his second amended petition on *525 which, the last trial of the case was had. This. amended petition alleges the ownership of the lands in Zavala county by the appellant, and that appellant was offering and selling the same as irrigable lands; the execution of the contract mentioned; that by the terms of said contract appellant agreed to sell and cause to be conveyed to appellee the 40 acres of land described therein, by a good and sufficient warranty deed in consideration of the sum of $2,600, to be paid by appellee; that $866.66 was to be paid in cash, and the remainder to be paid in three promissory notes at different dates; that appellant was to sink a well on said 40 acres of land of the dimensions stipulated in the contract and to draw on the appellee for the cost of the well; that the water clause written in the contract meant, and was intended to mean, that the well to be sunk should furnish water sufficient to irrigate the said 40 acres of land.

Said petition further alleges, in substance: That appellant agreed to furnish appellee an abstract of title showing good title in appellant to the said land, and a warranty deed thereto, within a reasonable time. That at the time of the execution of said contract appellee informed appellant’s agents that he expected to go at once upon said land and begin work with the view of growing crops thereon during the year 1912; that he would move his family from Greenville, and that he and his minor son, with two teams, would begin work immediately upon said land, but to do this appellee must first have a deed to the land, with abstract of title; and that a well must be sunk thereon. That said agents assured appellee that said requirements would be faithfully met, but that appellant failed and refused to deliver to appellee a sufficient deed to said land until March 15, 1912, when it was too late to prepare said land and make a crop thereon. That appellant failed and refused to sink the well, provided for in the contract, upon said land until on or about May 15, 1912, and that the well then provided was not in accordance with the contract. That appellant’s agents, Hughes and Parish, prior to and at the time of the making of the contract for the purchase of said land, stated to appellee that there was an abundance of water underlying said land, and that the same could be irrigated by sinking a well thereon and pumping the water. That said representations were false. That appellee knew nothing of the water supply underlying the said land outside the representations of appellant’s said agents. That he only visited the locality once prior to the making of the said contract and spent less than two days there at that time. That the settlements wore then all new and few in number. That appellee at the time went over a large section of country hurriedly in an automobile. That the land he afterwards bought was only pointed out to him as being for sale as he passed by the same. It was then unimproved, had no well thereon. That appellee did not make, and at the time and under the circumstances could not have made, any investigation as to the water supply underlying said 40 acres of land, but he relied wholly upon the representations made to him by appellant’s agents. That immediately upon receiving a proper deed and abstract of title to said 40 acres of land on March 15, 1912, appellee prepared to go upon the same, and so, within two days thereafter, he left Greenville for La Pryor, and arrived at the latter place on or about March 20, 1912. That appellant had not then begun the well contracted for, and did not begin the same until on or about May 10, 1912. That upon being notified of the completion of the said well appellee requested appellant to provide proper persons and suitable machinery to test same, but the latter persistently refused appellee’s said request. That it thus became necessary for appellee to make such provision, and to make the said test. That upon a full and fair test made of the water supply as found in the said well, it proved to be wholly insufficient for pur-, poses of irrigation. That the water found therein was not only insufficient to irrigate 40 acres of land, but was insufficient to irrigate even one acre. That appellant’s agents knew at the time said contract was made that there was not sufficient water underlying said land for purposes of irrigation.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W. 523, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zavala-land-water-co-v-tolbert-texapp-1916.