Fortney v. Olivetti Underwood Corporation
Decision Date | 06 January 1966 |
Docket Number | No. 14684,14684 |
Citation | 398 S.W.2d 178 |
Parties | Gerald H. FORTNEY, Appellant, v. OLIVETTI UNDERWOOD CORPORATION, Appellee. |
Court | Texas Court of Appeals |
Flowers & McManus, Ervin Flowers, Channelview, for appellant.
Parrish & Webb, Don S. Webb, Houston, for appellee.
This case originated as a suit on a sworn account. In response to appellant's answer setting up the applicable statutes of limitation as a defense, appellee filed an amended petition in which it alleged a written acknowledgment of indebtedness. The principal question to be determined is whether or not appellee alleged and proved compliance with the condition attached to the promise to pay contained in the letter.
Plaintiff's original petition was filed August 4, 1964. The first amended petition, filed February 19, 1965, on which appellee proceeded to trial, sought to recover the purchase price of two typewriters, one purchased November 30, 1959, and the other September 9, 1960, together with repair charges in the sum of $34.50 allegedly incurred between February 10, 1960 and June 23, 1960, making the total recovery sought the sum of $977.90 plus interest and attorney's fees. Paragraph V of this petition reads:
Exhibit B reads as follows:
GERALD H. FORTNEY
Lawyer
111 East Texas Avenue
Baytown, Texas
January 16, 1962
Stanley K. Oldden, Inc.
36 West 46th Street
New York 36, New York
Attn: Mr. Stanley K. Oldden
Re: Underwood Account
Dear Mr. Oldden:
I am enclosing my check to Underwood Corporation for $200.00, constituting partial payment on the above referenced account. You will note that on the back the endorsement provides that it acknowledges the full balance remaining unpaid to Underwood is $352.10.
As I told you on your collect telephone call, I have been out of my office for several months, and out of town the majority of the time for almost a year, and have admittedly neglected my correspondence. Since your call, however, I have checked into this matter, and find the following facts with reference to this claim:
At the time this equipment was bought from the Underwood Corporation, a check in the amount of $117.70 was given as down payment. For some reason, unknown to me, this check wasn't sent to my bank for a period of approximately six months; and according to my bank, was then returned to the Underwood Corporation. Prior to this time, and prior to the time the first payment was due, we wrote the Underwood Corporation, asking about disposition of this check and the payment schedule. We have not received a reply from Underwood to either of these requests; nor have we ever received any correspondence or requests for payment until December, 1961, at which time their request for payment was for a sum almost double the purchase price.
If you accept the enclosed check in accordance with these terms, the remaining balance will be paid on or before February 15, 1962.
If you have any further questions in this matter, please feel free to call on me at any time.
During the course of the trial appellee abandoned his suit as to the original account and relied solely on the letter and check. The check referred to in Exhibit B was held by appellee for several months, but was deposited by appellee. It was returned by appellant's bank. It bears the notation 'Insufficient funds.' Appellant testified that he received a letter from appellee refusing to reduce the account and then stopped payment on the check. There is testimony that the check was sent through the bank several times and that it was never paid.
When appellee first offered the letter and check into evidence, the trial court refused to admit it, stating as his reason that
After the attorney for appellee stated to the court that he was 'contending that the plaintiff is due the sum of $552.10, and I am basing my case on this letter,' the letter and check were re-offered. The court then stated:
The letter which appellant testified he received from appellee refusing his compromise offer was marked as an exhibit, but was never received into evidence.
The rule of law applicable to this case was announced by the Supreme Court in Coles v. Kelsey, 2 Tex. 541, 542 (headnote), as follows:
'If a cause of action appears on its face to be barred by the statute of limitations at the commencement of a suit, and the plaintiff relies on a subsequent promise to remove the bar, he must allege that promise in his petition as the foundation of his action, and set out the original cause of action, only as the consideration for the subsequent promise.
In White v. Stewart, Tex.Civ.App., 19 S.W.2d 795, err. ref., the court, after quoting from Coles v. Kelsey, supra, and citing other cases, said:
'Under the above authorities, appellee Stewart was required, if he relied upon the new promise, to have alleged that primise in plain and emphatic terms, as the basis of his cause of action; this he failed to do, as is demonstrated, not only by his petition, but by his interpretation thereof, * * *.
'* * * The statute of limitation put in motion against a judgment cannot be suspended or in any respect prolonged by the making of a new promise; for the making of a new promise to pay a claim, either before or after the completion of the bar of such claim, creates a cause of action upon the new promise, and the statute of limitation applicable to such new promise can only be invoked, which, in the instant case, is four years, and was put in motion on the date of the making of the alleged new promise, as no date was fixed therein for its performance.'
White v. Stewart, supra, was cited as authoritative by the Commission of Appeals of Texas in General Missionary Soc. etc. v. Real Estate Land Title & Trust Co., 134 Tex. 564, 136 S.W.2d 599, opinion adopted.
The cause of action alleged in appellee's amended petition, with an exception to be noted, was on the original debt. He alleged that by reason of the new promise the account, or, in the alternative, $552.10 thereof, was not barred by the statute of limitation. This was not a pleading of...
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