James v. Doss
James v. Doss
Opinion of the Court
The appellees, W. M. and A. S. Doss, sued appellants, W. H. James and *624 Luther Skelton, for two korses, one delivery-wagon, and a set of double harness. The appellants answered at length and appellees replied by supplemental petition at length. The property belongs to the appellees, if it did not pass by a certain contract of sale, and a bill of sale to the appellant James, of a certain grocery business and the furniture and fixtures of the office and store.
At the end of the testimony the trial court instructed the jury that the property sued for did not pass under the contract of sale and the bill of sale, and that they would find for the appellees; which the jury did, affixing the value of each article, and judgment was rendered accordingly. There is no assignment that the court erred in so instructing a verdict, or that there was an issue raised by the evidence for the jury to decide. The assignments presented by the brief of appellants relate to the refusal of the court to give certain requested instructions, and to his action in sustaining an exception to the appellants’ plea of abatement.
“Matters of consideration may be shown by parol testimony where such testimony shows that certain articles of property were a part of the consideration for a written contract. The person claiming said articles of property, as a part of the consideration for said contract, is entitled to have the jury instructed .to find in favor of his claim, provided they believed such. testimony.”
In this case the appellees owned a grocery store in the town of Clarendon, and through the assistance of one Moore, á contract of sale was effected with, appellant James. A contract was reduced to writing, which the parties signed on the 6th day of August, 1915. The clause bearing on the question at issue -is as follows:
“Doss Bros. sell, to W. H. James their store and office furniture and fixtures, now in their store building on lot 3, block 1, in Clarendon, Texas, for an agreed consideration of $1,350.00; also their stock of merchandise in same building at the inventory price of same, of all merchandise as invoiced to them recently by M. W. Headrick, and all other merchandise at the wholesale cost of same with freight and drayage added, and inventory of same will begin as soon after the signing of this contract as it is convenient to do so, to both parties hereto.
“Party of the second part agrees to accept said fixtures at the price named and the merchandise as invoiced in accordance with this contract, as soon as same is invoiced and the aggregate value thereof computed, and to pay for the same in accordance with agreement by and between parties,” etc.
On the day following a bill of sale was executed by appellees to James, which described the property as follows:
“All of the goods, wares and merchandise, as per the inventory made this date of same, also of the store and office furniture and fixtures, all while, in the one-story composition roofed brick building located on lot 3, block 1, in Clarendon, Texas, being the store building now occupied by us as a grocery store,” etc.
When James went to the store to look at it, he was shown, the Headrick invoice, which was in a book and which showed a complete inventory of the groceries. After totaling the amount of groceries and leaving some blank pages, following it on a page headed “Fixtures,” the items were entered showing the fixtures and total for fixtures, $1,585. A line was then drawn under this total. Following on the same page are the items, “One delivery wagon and harness, $158.35; two horses, $140.00.” These two last items, it is admitted by the parties hereto, are the property in question. James claims this property was to have gone to him under the $1,350 consideration for furniture and fixtures.
The appellees testify to the contrary. We do not think the propositions of appellants applicable to this character of contracts, and the facts of this case. The consideration in this case received for the $1,350 agreed to be paid was contractual in its nature. It was not, in its nature, a- receipt for money, which may be explained. The appellants sought to have the written contract with reference to the subject-matter therein conveyed shown to be other than the writing designated, and thereby contradict the writing by parol. This is not permissible. Matheson v. C-B Live Stock Co., 176 S. W. 734, in which this court, through Judge Hall, discussed this question and reviews various authorities. McCullough v. Bank, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 160, 123 S. W. 439; Rapid Transit Co. v. Smith, 98 Tex. 553, 86 S. W. 322; 17 Cyc. 659 (g).
The fourth, fifth, and seventh assignments urge that the trial court erred in refusing to charge the jury in effect if the verbal contract was that the property sued for was agreed to pass by tbe transfer, and that through the fraud of the appellees it was omitted from the writing, the jury should find for appellants.
The appellant James contends that the *625 property sued for was so to pass, while Moore, the agent who brought about the trade, and the appellees contend it was not to be in the trade. James contends that one Be-ville, who drafted the contract at the instance of Moore, left out this particular property. Mr. Beville testified that Mr. Moore came to him to draw the contract and told him to draw it just like the contract from Headrick to Doss Bros., when they purchased from him, except he said the wagon, team, and harness were not in the trade,- and should not be included in the contract, and also some land that figured in the Headrick contract. James testified:
That he and Doss went to Beville’s office to draw up the contract, and Beville said Moore had already told him to draw the contract, and he then said to come back in 30 minutes and he would have it ready, and that they went back and signed the contract. “Before we signed it, Beville handed me a copy and W. M. Doss a copy, and he kept a copy and read it all aloud to us, and I read it myself, and when he finished he said, ‘Now is that correct — is that your contract?’ I said it was and then signed up. the contract.”
He also testified, after Beville told him Moore had asked him to draw the contract:
“We (James and Doss) told him what to put in it, but I did not know then that he had been loaded.”
“To allow a party to lay the foundation for such parol evidence by oral testimony that only part of the agreement was reduced to writing, and then prove by parol the part omitted, would be to work in a circle, and to permit the very evil which the rule was designed to prevent.” Thompson v. Libby, 34 Minn. 374, 26 N. W. 1; Sunderland v. Hackney (Mo.) 181 S. W. 1192; Fuqua v. Pabst, etc., 36 S. W. 479.)
*626
“You are instructed that a fair and reasonable interpretation of the contract introduced in evidence shows that the property sued for by the plaintiff is included in the terms thereof, and that said written contract does cover and convey all the property listed on the original Headrick inventory. You are therefore charged 'that if you find and believe from the evidence that the property sued for by the plaintiff was included on the said Headrick inventory, then it will be your duty to find for the defendant and against the plaintiff.”
The horses, wagon, and harness cannot he said to fall under the description of “store and office furniture and fixtures, now in the one-story building on lot,” etc., for the consideration of $1,350. Certainly they were not included under the term “merchandise” in the grocery line. It will be noted that the Headrick invoice was not referred to except to get the price of the merchandise invoiced by Headrick. Furniture and fixtures were purchased in a lump sale and at an agreed price, $1,350. The Headrick invoice had nothing to do with that part of the contract. The property sued for did not fall under store and office fixtures then in the building. The court was correct in refusing the charge as requested. If there was ambiguity in the contract, which we do not find, as applied to the facts of this case, it may be that it should have been submitted as a question whether the property was included in the contract and whether it was intended that the Headrick inventory was intended to describe the property conveyed; but the court, under this contract as we view it, was not authorized to instruct that under the written contract the property sued for was conveyed, and that all property in the original Headrick invoice was covered by it. We believe the trial court took the correct view of this case and properly refused the charges requested. There is, as stated by us in the outset, no complaint that the trial court instructed a verdict for the ap-pellees, and we think the requested charges were properly refused. •
The case will be affirmed.
i&wkey;>Por other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and'lndexeh
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JAMES Et Al. v. DOSS Et Al.
- Cited By
- 8 cases
- Status
- Published