Court Opinion

ID: 3982252
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:38:56.525216+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:53:42.270746
License: Public Domain

Appellee sued John Newman, Earl Talley, A. E. Arnold, J. O. *Page 658 
McKinney, C. Vollmert, and M. S. Arnold in Harris county on certain promissory notes alleging that they resided in Gray county, Tex.; that the notes were jointly and severally executed by appellant; and that a chattel mortgage on certain property was given by them to secure the payment of the notes. Appellants pleaded their privilege to be sued in Gray county. The court rendered judgment for appellee for the amount of the promissory notes and foreclosed the mortgage lien on the personal property.
Appellants admitted in their testimony the execution of the three notes, in each of which notes it was provided that it should be paid in Gray county, but, "if this note is not paid at maturity, then it shall become due and payable at the office of the Buffalo Pitts Company at Houston, Harris county, Tex." The notes were not paid at maturity. The venue was properly laid in Harris county, and the court correctly overruled the plea of privilege.
Appellants are in no condition to claim fraud, accident, or mistake, because they filed no pleadings upon which to base such claim. Their only pleading was their plea of privilege, and they should not have been permitted to introduce any testimony whatever, except in support of that plea.
The case of Stacy v. Ross, 27 Tex. 3, 84 Am.Dec. 604, does not sustain the contention of appellants that, under a statutory plea of privilege, fraud in obtaining the execution of the instrument upon which the suit is founded can be proved. Fraud, accident, or mistake is not mentioned in their plea of privilege. In the case cited there was a distinct allegation that fraud and misrepresentation were used to obtain the execution of the note. Fraud cannot be proved or considered unless it is charged in the pleadings. No case can be produced in which fraud in obtaining the execution of a note was allowed to be shown under a plea of privilege. The assignments of error raise no other questions, and they are overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.
                          On Motion for Rehearing.
We are of the opinion that the court erred in admitting the evidence of fraud and misrepresentation but properly refused to allow it to influence his judgment. The evidence, if it had been admissible under the pleas of privilege, which it was not, was not sufficient to indicate any fraud upon the part of the agent of appellee. If he stated that the notes were payable in Pampa, Tex., he stated a fact, and there was no effort on his part to conceal the fact that the penalty for a failure to pay at maturity was that the notes should then be payable at Houston, Tex. The evidence does not show fraud upon the part of appellee but indicates gross carelessness, if their testimony be true, upon the part of appellants. They should not be permitted to evade their contract by showing their carelessness.
There being no plea of fraud or misrepresentation, evidence of such fraud or misrepresentation cannot form the basis for a decision by the trial court or this court. The allegations must be broad enough to permit proof, and evidence not based upon allegations cannot sustain a judgment. This rule is uniform and has been given strict adherence. Young v. Lewis, 9 Tex. 77; Denison v. League, 16 Tex. 400; Loving v. Dixon,56 Tex. 75; Laredo v. Russell, 56 Tex. 398; Railway v. Anderson,76 Tex. 244, 13 S.W. 196; Farenthold v. Tell, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 110,113 S.W. 635. So it does not matter whether appellee is properly in this court on its cross-assignment of error or not.
The motion for rehearing is overruled.