Appellee the First National Bank of Victoria, a banking corporation with its office and place of business at Victoria, in Victoria county, brought suit against appellant, the Kenedy Town & Improvement Company, a private corporation having its office and place of business in Nueces county, and appellee the Bailey Mills Company, a firm composed of Ira P. Bailey, alone, a resident of Victoria county, and for grounds of recovery appellee First National Bank of Victoria alleges in its petition, in substance and effect, that .on September 11, 1907, the Bailey Mills Company made a written contract with the Kenedy Town & Improvement Company wherein it agreed to erect for said improvement company a hotel building at Sarita, in Cameron county, and to “well and perfectly erect, finish, and deliver” the building on or before December 26, 1907, the improvement company agreeing to pay the mills company for the .completion of said building the sum of $15,800. The bank further alleges in its petition that the mills company, in pursuance of the building contract made by him with appellant, hired carpenters and laborers, and sent them to the town of Sarita “to prosecute said work,”
The defendant the Bailey Mills Company for answer admitted the truth of the allegations in plaintiff’s petition, and joined in the prayer for judgment for plaintiff as in the petition prayed for. The defendant Kennedy Town & Improvement Company filed a plea of privilege to be sued in Nueces county, the county of its residence, pleaded a general demurrer and several special exceptions, a general denial, and filed a special plea setting up special matters in defense.
In its plea of privilege to be sued in the county of Nueces, appellant alleges that the assignment of the building contract between it and its codefendant, Ira P. Bailey, to the appellee bank, and the guaranty thereof by the said Bailey, as alleged in the petition, were not made in good faith, but same are only pretended and simulated, and are not based on a valuable consideration, and the same were made for the fraudulent purpose of defeating the right of appellant to be sued on said building contract in Nueces county, the county of its residence, and of enabling the plaintiff bank to sue appellant in Victoria county, and for no other purpose, and said assignment and guaranty are a fraud on the jurisdiction of the trial court.
A trial before the court without a jury resulted in a judgment for plaintiff against defendant Kenedy Town & Improvement Company as principal, and against the defendant Bailey Mills Company as guarantor, for $3,-000, being the amount claimed by plaintiff in its petition, and from this judgment the defendant Kenedy Town & Improvement Company has prosecuted this appeal.
Appellant by its first assignment of error complains of the action of the court in overruling its exception to plaintiff’s petition, which, in effect, is that the petition shows that the district court of Victoria county did not have jurisdiction of the case as to appellant, because it appeared from the allegations of the petition that the venue of this case, as to appellant, is in Nueces county, and that the suit as against appellant should have been filed in Nueces county. The proposition following this assignment is as follows: “It affirmatively appears from the allegations of the petition that the assigned contract on which the suit is brought in Victoria county was, according to its provisions, to have been performed in Cameron county, and the appellant, who is one of the two parties in the contract, and is the only real defendant in the suit brought thereon, is a resident of Nueces county, and it further appears from the petition that no consideration was paid by appellee bank for the assignment of the contract, and the assignment is only simulated, and therefore the district court of Victoria county did not have jurisdiction of this cause as to appellant.”
By its eighth assignment appellant contends that the court erred in overruling in the final judgment appellant’s plea of privilege to be sued in Nueces county; the grounds of error, as stated in subjoined proposition, being that the evidence shows the assignment of the building contract by the Bailey Mills Company to appellee was without consideration, and was a pretended assignment, and that it was made for the sole and ex-
The evidence upon which appellant relies as sustaining its contention is, first, that the Bailey Mills Company as its co defendant joined forces with the appellee in the trial, admitted the truth of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition in its answer, and joined in the prayer of the petition for judgment against itself and its codefendant, and presented the identical exceptions that were urged by plaintiff to the answer and supplemental answer of appellant; and, second, the testimony of M. Ucovitch, who testified to a conversation between himself and S. M. Bailey, the brother and. agent of Ira P. Bailey, in regard to the hotel building at Sarita. This witness testified; “He [S. M. Bailey] told me that Mr. Kenedy told him, wrote him, and telephoned him not to come on the ground. And I said: ‘That’s funny, why don’t you do it?’ And he then said: ‘You can’t fool with that kind of fellow.’ He said that he was going to bring them to Victoria, but I didn’t know what he meant. He said: T will fix him. I will fix him.’ He was raving about Mr. Kenedy. He used foul language. Mr. Kenedy was not there at the time.” On cross-examination this witness said: “I had a conversation with Mr. Bailey about shipping gravel to Sarita about September 26,1907. Mr. Bailey told me that the gravel that was to go to Sarita would be shippeu back to Corpus; that his attorneys advised him to make his claim. Told me that he was going to ship it to Sarita to make his claim good; but that he was going to reship it to Corpus Christi to be used in our building. I understood that it had already been snipped to Sarita, and that he was preparing at that time to reship it to Corpus Christi. He did not tell me two weeks before that time that he was going to sue Mr. Kenedy. He told me that at the same time. He told me about two weeks before that that the contract had been broken. He told me in that conversation that he was going to bring Mr. Kenedy to Victoria and sue him on or after that date.” S. M. Bailey in his testimony denied that portion of the testimony of the witness Uco-vitch in which Ucovitch testified that he, S. M. Bailey, said that he was going to bring Kenedy to Victoria to sue him and that he would “fix” him.
[1] We think the assignments fail to point out any reversible error. It is well settled by the decisions of the courts of this state that where the holder of an indebtedness makes a bona fide assignment of such indebtedness to a third person, and guarantees the payment thereof, in whole or in part, the assignee has the clear right to sue both the principal debtor and the guarantor in the same suit in the county of the residence of the guarantor. Leahy v. Ortiz, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 314, 85 S. W. 824; Pearce v. Wallis, 124 S. W. 496; Turner v. Brooks, 2 Tex. Civ. App. 451, 21 S. W. 404; Christie v. Gunter, 26 Tex. 700; Anderson v. Bank, 86 Tex. 618, 28 S. W. 344. Bergstrom v. Burns, 24 S. W. 1098; Lyons v. Daugherty, 26 S. W. 146; Cleveland v. Campbell, 38 S. W. 219; Allen v. Edrington, 125 S. W. 362; Vaugh v. Bank, 126 S. W. 690.
[2] The petition alleges, and the proof is undisputed, that Ira P. Bailey, who composed the Bailey Mills Company, was a resident of Victoria county, and it is clearly alleged that appellant was indebted to the Bailey Mills Company, and that said company made a valid, bona fide assignment of the indebt edness to appellee, and guaranteed the payment of the same. The proof adduced under this issue was sufficient to establish the allegations of the petition. The fact that no consideration was paid by the appellee bank tor the assignment cannot avail. As held in Pearce v. Wallis, supra: “If there was an actual bona fide assignment of the claim, then the plaintiff acquired title, even though he may have paid no consideration. The failure to pay a consideration might constitute an important circumstance bearing upon the good faith of the transaction, but it would not necessarily and as a matter of law have controlling effect.”
[3] Nor do we think that the fact that the Bailey Mills Company and appellee made a common fight to recover the judgment sought by plaintiff against appellant a circumstance that is entitled to any serious weight. Bailey, by transferring the claim and guaranteeing its payment, had procured a credit upon a debt he owed the bank. If the claim was paid he was relieved of so much of the debt as the claim would discharge. If not, then he would be held under his guaranty. It was manifestly to his interest that the assigned claim be paid, and it cannot be said under such circumstances that his activity in behalf of appellee was a circumstance tending to show a want of good faith. We think the assignments are not well taken, and they are overruled.
The seventh assignment of error is as follows: “The court erred in denying this de
[4] Under these facts, did the court err in. refusing appellant the right of trial by a jury? We think so. Section 15 of article 1,. Constitution of 1876, declares that the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, and that1 the Legislature shall pass such laws as. may be needed to regulate the same and. maintain its purity and efficiency. In obedience to this behest, the Legislature prescribed certain regulations, among which was. the enactment brought forward in Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1897, as article 31S9, which provides that a party to a civil suit desiring, a jury trial shall make proper' application therefor on the first day of the term of court at which the suit is to be tried, unless the same be an appearance case, in which event the application shall be made on default day. It has been held that this article is not-mandatory. Gallagher v. Goldfrank, 63 Tex... 474. In the case cited it is said that “a right expressly guaranteed by the Constitution ought not to be disallowed, even in cases in which the Legislature is empowered* to enact laws to regulate its exercise, be?. cause the act was not done within the time-, prescribed, unless the law, so made, clearly evidences the legislative intention that the-, thing required to be done before the right.can be exercised shall be done within a given time or not at all.” In Allen v. Plummer, 71 Tex. 546, 9 S. W. 672, it is held that-the articles of the statute which direct that the demanfl. for a jury shall be made and* the jury fee paid upon the first day of the ’• term are not strictly mandatory, and the-
If appellant’s delay in demanding a jury was not excusable, we think under the facts stated it was not culpably negligent in not making the demand sooner. Both appellant and its attorney resided in a distant county from that in which the court was held. Appellant’s attorney relied upon the attorneys of appellee to arrange the setting of not only this but another case wherein the litigants, attorneys, and witnesses were nonresidents of the county in which the eases were pending. They had the right, we think, to rely upon the setting being made at such time as to allow the parties, their attorneys, and witnesses to reach the court in such time as to avail themselves of all the rights accorded them by law, including a trial by jury. There was no agreement that the case should be set for Wednesday of the first week. Yet the setting was not made, or at least the appellant was not notified of it, until Tuesday, the day before the case was to be tried; and on that day the jury for the week was discharged. Appellant’s attorney thereafter reached Victoria as soon as he could, at once made demand for a jury, and paid the jury fee. The regular judge on account of sickness could not proceed with the business of the court, and, so far as the record shows, no court business was transacted until Friday, when a special judge was elected by the local bar, and this case was then called for trial by him. The' amended pleadings were filed next day, Saturday, and the issues of law were heard and determined by him on that day, and appellant was required to proceed to trial before him, notwithstanding its request that the case go over till Monday in order to obtain a jury trial; it then being too late to get a jury that afternoon. Would any of the rights of appellee have been prejudiced by the postponement? The judge in the bill of exceptions says that it appeared to the court that a continuance would necessarily have resulted had the case been passed as requested. The record indicates the contrary. It must have been apparent to the court that the case could not be tried on the facts on Saturday after the issues of law arising on the pleadings had been determined. The record shows that the trial was not in fact concluded until the following Wednesday. A jury was summoned for Monday of the second week, and for aught that appears to the contrary was in attendance from that day during the balance of th'e time occupied in. trying this case before the court. A postponement of a few hours on Saturday would have resulted in carrying-the case over until Monday, when a jury-would have been in attendance, and the issues of fact could probably have been tried with a jury within practically the same time-that was consumed in the trial before the-judge. As it was the jury was preforce idle-while the trial proceeded. We think in view of all this that appellee would not have been prejudiced by the postponement, and that in the circumstances a denial to appellant of the right of a trial by a jury was erroneous, and that for this error the judgment of the court below must be reversed.
By its second assignment appellant complains of the action of the court in overruling its fifth special exception to plaintiff’s petition, which, in effect, is that the allegations of the petition relative to the amount of damages sustained by plainñff are too general, vague, and indefinite to form the basis of proving the profits that might have resulted but for defendant’s alleged breach of the contract, and do not advise defendant of the character and extent of such profits.
[5] We think the allegations of the petition in so far as they relate to the items of freight charges on the tools and gravel, and the railroad fare and board of the laborers sent by the Bailey Mills Company -to Sarita to start the work, are sufficiently specific. [6] But we think that the allegations as to the profits that would have been derived from the execution of the contract should have been more specific: In reaching a conclusion as to what such profits would be, the contractor must necessarily have calculated the cost of the lumber, brick, hardware, glass, and other material necessary to be used in constructing the building as well as the cost of labor in placing the materials into the building, and we see no good reason why the cost of these items should not have been stated in the petition.
Appellant alleged in the answer that the contract of the Bailey Mills Company to complete the building at the time agreed upon, viz., December 26, 1907, was of the essence of the contract. This was excepted to by appellee on the grounds that said allegation is purely a question of the contract sued on, and, further, because said allegation is an attempt to vary the terms of the written contract. • ;
[7] The contract, which is attached to and made a part of the pleadings of plaintiff, contained the stipulation that the- building should be completed by December 26, 1907;
The defendant in its answer alleged that it made a parol agreement with the Bailey Mills Company at the time of the execution of the contract that the building in question should be actually begun on or before, and not later than, September 23, 1907, which agreement, it is alleged, was a consideration inducing the signing of the contract by appellant. This was excepted to on the grounds that the allegation was an attempt to vary the terms of the written contract by parol, and that such agreement was without consideration. The exceptions were sustained. Appellant in its proposition under the assignment presenting the point contends that the allegation excepted to,' taken in connection with the further allegation that the Bailey Mills Company did not begin the construction on September 23, 1907, the date agreed upon, presented a valid defense to plaintiff’s suit.
[8] The assignment must be overruled. The failure of the contractor to begin the construction of the building at the time agreed upon could not justify the owner in refusing to permit him to begin at a later date, unless it should appear that the time fixed for the beginning was of the essence of the contract, and this could be shown only by proving that the building could not be finished at the time agreed upon for its completion unless the work should start at the date agreed upon, and defendant’s answer contained no such allegation. Hence the proposition which asserts that the allegation excepted to, taken in connection with the further allegation that the construction did not begin on the date agreed upon presented a valid defense to plaintiff’s suit, is not sound.
As the judgment of the court below must be reversed for the errors indicated, the necessity of passing upon the assignment that the judgment is not supported by the law and the evidence and the assignments based upon the exceptions to the court’s findings of fact and failure to make additional findings upon the request of appellee is obviated.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.