Wetzel v. Anderson & Lundberg
Decision Date | 13 June 1928 |
Docket Number | (No. 8026.) |
Citation | 8 S.W.2d 687 |
Parties | WETZEL v. ANDERSON & LUNDBERG. |
Court | Texas Court of Appeals |
Appeal from District Court, Willacy County; A. M. Kent, Judge.
Action by Anderson & Lundberg against Nat Wetzel. Judgment for plaintiffs, and defendant appeals. Reversed and rendered.
Lewis Wood, of Houston, for appellant.
A. B. Crane, of Raymondville, and G. R. Whitley, of San Benito, for appellees.
This is a suit to recover the sum of $1,725.35, alleged by appellees, as plaintiffs, to be due them for board and lodging by appellant. The latter set up limitation of two years, both through an exception and by plea. The cause was submitted to a jury on special issues, and judgment was rendered in favor of appellees for $2,126.77, as principal and interest of the debt, and an attachment lien was foreclosed on 63 acres of land in Cameron county; the jury having found that appellant was indebted to appellees in that sum.
This suit was filed on September 24, 1926, and declared on an open account for board and lodging due for October, November, and December, 1920, the whole of the years 1921, 1922, and 1923, and for the months of January and February, 1924. The original petition showed on its face that the account was barred by two years' limitation. The record does not disclose that the court passed on any exceptions to the original, amended, or supplemental petitions, and, of course, this court cannot consider any objections to actions of the court not indicated by the record. Neither is this court in a position to consider the admission or rejection of any evidence, the record not containing a single bill of exceptions. The rulings of the court on the questions of which complaint is made do not appear otherwise in the record.
The question of limitations is, we think, raised by the brief of appellant. The account as declared on being barred by limitation of two years, on the face of the petition, appellees sought to avoid the force and effect of the plea of limitations by setting up a promise in writing to pay the debt evidenced by the account. To sustain that allegation they introduced in evidence the following letter written by appellant:
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...why the demand should not be enforced." Howard & Hume v. Windom, 86 Tex. 560, 567, 26 S.W. 483, 485. Also see Wetzel v. Anderson & Lundberg, Tex.Civ.App., 8 S.W.2d 687, 688; Tolleson v. McAlister, Tex.Civ.App., 33 S. W.2d 573, 575; Thompson v. Texas Land & Cattle Co., Tex.Civ.App., 24 S.W. ......