CONNER, C. J.
This suit was instituted in a justice court against I. L. Griffith and W. A. Kelley upon a promissory note in the-principal sum of $110, with the usual stipulation for attorney’s fees. The note was -signed by I. L. Griffith alone, but it was al-. leged, in substance, that several years pre- . vious the lodge had loaned I. L. Griffith $100 -
in money, taking his note therefor, with a mortgage upon certain personal property; that later Griffith, desiring to have the personal property released, renewed the note with W. A. Kelley as personal security thereon; that, upon the maturity of this renewal note, it was surrendered to Griffith upon the promise of Griffith and Kelley that a new note should be given, with Kelley thereon as security as before, but that Kelley had fraudulently failed and refused to sign the note as he had agreed to do. After a trial and judgment in the justice court, which it is not necessary to particularize, the cause was appealed to the county court and tried upon substantially the issues presented in the justice court. The trial in the county court resulted in a judgment in favor of the lodge for the full amount sued for against both I. L. Griffith and W. A. Kelley, and W. A. Kelley alone has appealed.
[1,2]
Appellant insists that his general demurrer to the plaintiff’s pleading should have been sustained, and that the verdict and judgment against him are not supported by the law and the evidence, and we think these contentions are supported by the record. It is not pretended that appellant signed or otherwise became a party to the particular note made the foundation of this suit. As that note, it is only alleged that he had promised to sign it and fraudulently failed to do so. Plaintiff’s cause of action, therefore, as against W. A. Kelley, as alleged, was not upon a contract to pay a specified sum of money, as evidenced by the note, but for the breach of a contract or promise to sign the note, and it is neither alleged nor shown that this promise was in writing. If, in any event, a cause of action can be predicated upon such a breach, it was neither alleged nor proved in the present ease. While it was alleged that the preceding note, upon which W. A. Kelley’s name did appear, had been surrendered to I. L. Griffith, it was neither alleged nor shown that its surrender to Griffith prejudically affected the Audra Lodge. It was not alleged that Griffith was insolvent, or that, by means of the surrender of the old note, the debt had been lost. So that in no phase of the case, as presented by the present record, can it be said that the judg'ment below should be affirmed.
[3]
The pleadings are probably broad enough to support a judgment against appellant upon the note actually signed by him, and which it was alleged was surrendered to Griffith. But the case was not tried below upon any such theory, and, had this note been made the foundation of the .suit rather than that specifically declared upon, this court would have been without appellate jurisdiction, inasmuch as the record now before us indicates that that notice was but for the sum of $100, without any evidence that it contained any stipulation for the recovery of attorney’s fees. See Vernon’s Sayles’ Tex. Civil Statutes, art. 1589, cl. 3, which confines our appellate jurisdiction over judgments of the county court to amounts exceeding $100, exclusive of interest and costs.
In view of the conclusions above announced, other assignments need not be considered.
For the errors indicated, however, it is ordered that the judgment be reversed, and the cause remanded as to appellant; the judgment against I. L. Griffith not being disturbed.
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