Court Opinion

ID: 9831070
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 20:46:35.429117+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:30.218779
License: Public Domain

HENDRICKS, J.
This suit was filed by the appellee, John W. Campfield, against John J. Ellerd, the appellant, to recover in the trial court on two vendor’s lien notes amounting to $1,150 each; also, for the usual attorney's fees and foreclosure of the vendor’s lien upon the land and for which the notes were partly given. The appellant, El-lerd, admitted the execution of the notes in question, but specifically alleged that the notes had not matured at the time the suit was instituted, for the reason that an agreement had been made between him and one E. E. Winn, the alleged authorized agent of Campfield, to extend the time of payment of the notes in question until February 9, 1913, and the suit having been instituted prior to that time was premature and should be abated. The court, at the request of the appel-lee, submitted the case to the jury on special issues, and the first issue tendered by the court was as follows: “Was there an agreement between E. E. Winn and the defendant, John J. Ellerd, by which it was agreed that the payment of the notes in controversy was extended from February 9, 1912, until February 9, 1913” — the court further instructing the jury that, if they gave an affirmative answer to this question, the jury would proceed to answer further questions submitted by him; but, if they answered the first question in the negative, it would not be necessary to answer any subsequent questions embodied in the charge.
The appellant claims that this cause and the issues involved therein should not have been submitted to the jury on special issues, “because the issues of fact and of law involved in this case were not such as could be fairly and legally presented to the jury upon special issues” submitting a proposition that “the charge of the court should be submitted on special issues only when the pleadings contain several combinations of fact, each of which constitutes a cause of action or ground of defense, and is sufficiently supported by the evidence to require a charge upon which an issue has been formed.”
Appellant is attempting to apply rule 61, quoted as above, and promulgated by the Supreme Court of the state for the district and county courts, with reference to charges and instructions by those courts to juries. This rule is not intended as a limitation upon the power of the trial court and a definition of the character of case which should be submitted to the jury upon special issues. It is very plain from our statute that, upon request of any party to the suit, and at the present time, without any request, the court, upon its own motion, may submit the cause in such a manner. The appellant has not suggested in the slightest in what manner he was. injured by a submission of this cause upon special issues. In reading the brief proffered in this court for a reversal of the cause, we are unable to find any statement of the evidence of any witness that an agreement of extension in accordance with the defendant’s pleadings was ever made; and, again, the court has quite a plenary power in this respect, and, to say the least of it, it would certainly be incumbent upon appellant, in a matter of this kind, to show some deprivation of a legal right or some abuse of discretion, when, under the statute, either party requests such a submission, and the jury is so instructed; and, as a concrete proposition, we take it would be hard to show injury.
Appellant assigns as error the action of the court in submitting to the jury special issue No. 1, which we quoted above, for the reason, as indicated in his proposition, that “it is the province of the court to charge the jury on questions of law involved in the case, and all legal propositions should be defined.” And in his argument under this assignment he further says that the court does not undertake to give a legal definition of “agreement,” but leaves this question of law entirely to the jury; and that “it is well settled that questions of law, with only a few exceptions, are for the court, and all legal phrases and terms, such as ‘agreement,’ ‘negligence,’ etc., should be defined by the court in its charge, and a failure of the court to define legal phrases is error.”
Appellant has a misconception of the law upon this subject as applicable to the particular question involved, the authorities cited are not in point, and a failure of the trial court to define legal phrases or give definitions is ordinarily not error unless the party who is objecting in the appellate court to the *394omission of the trial court in this respect has himself requested a charge of the lower court desiring a definition of the terms used in the general charge. We thinlc this is well illustrated by the following cases: Arkansas Construction Co. v. Eugene, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 601, 50 S. W. 736; Lagow v. Grover, 77 Tex. 448, 14 S. W. 141; Texas Midland R. Co. v. Ritchey, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 409, 108 S. W. 732; Texas & Pacific R. Co. v. O’Donnell, 58 Tex. 27. The omission of the trial court to define the term “ordinary care” is not affirmative error and cannot be complained of where a special instruction defining them has not been requested. Western Union Telegraph Co. v. James, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 503, 73 S. W. 79, writ of error refused in 97 Tex. 651, 73 S. W. 79, no opinion.
The appellant in this case failed to request any definition of the trial court as to the meaning of the term “agreement,” and hence we believe is not in an attitude to complain under the decisions.
The appellant submits other assignments upon other alleged errors of the trial court, which we deem to be entirely immaterial on this appeal for the reason that when the jury specifically answered that there was not any ágreement entered into between the agent Winn and the defendant Ellerd, as to the extension of the notes, necessarily the whole defense of the appellant failed.
The succeeding questions, as to whether or not the agent had .the authority, or whether it was within the apparent scope of Winn’s authority to make the agreement, or whether the court committed error in other portions of the charge, or whether special charges submitted and refused by the trial court upon such questions were error, are clearly unavailing, for if the agreement was not made the predicate of appellant’s defense is gone. We are unable to ascertain from appellant’s brief, or from the record, that the alleged failure upon the part of the trial court to do certain things complained of, or in doing other things charged as error, affected in any respect the action of the jury in finding that an agreement was not made between Ellerd and the agent Winn; and, again, appellant’s assignments, with the statements thereunder, with reference to such other errors charged against the trial court, are quite abstract in their presentation with insufficient statements, and, as stated above, without even a presentation to this court of any testimony of any witness with reference to any part of the record that any agreement for extension of the particular indebtedness was ever made.
The appellee suggests in this case that the appeal is one for delay and requests an af-firmance of the cause with 10 per cent, damages under the statute. We have gone to the record and statement of facts in this case, upon the matter of the sincerity of this appeal, and have concluded, to affirm the ease without- the 10 per cent, damages requested.
We find no error in this record, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.