Wortham v. Cameron
Wortham v. Cameron
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
§ 113. Failure of consideration; facts held insufficient to establish; case stated. Suit by appellees against appellants, B. F. and Robert Wortham, to recover the amount of two promissory notes, each for the sum of $375. Appellants pleaded specially, under oath, as follows: “That at the time of the execution of said notes defendant B. F. Wortham and one W. F. Montgomery were in partnership in the retail grocery business in Waco, Texas, and that said firm was indebted to plaintiffs in about the sum of $1,500; that, being unable to pay said debt in cash, and being desirous of settling the same, they proposed to plaintiffs that they would sell to them the stock then on hand, and. pay the remainder of their said debt as soon as possible. This proposition plaintiffs declined, urging as a reason therefor that if defendants sold out and quit business they (defendants) would lose their outstanding accounts, then worth about $1,500, and plaintiffs urged defendants to continue in business. Plaintiffs then and there proposed to him and his said partner that if they would secure to plaintiffs the amount then due them, each partner securing his one-half of said debt,
We think the court did not err in sustaining the demurrers to the pleas. As alleged in said pleas, the facts show a breach of contract on the part of appellees — a mere refusal on their part to comply with their promise to supply Wortham & Montgomery with goods to replenish their stock. While these facts may furnish appellants ground upon which to claim and recover damages for injury they may have sustained by reason of such breach of contract, they do not show a failure of consideration of the notes sued on, nor do they show such fraud on the part of appellees in obtaining said notes as would invalidate them. It was not the promise
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.