Angelo v. Holland Texas Hypotheek Bank of Amsterdam

52 S.W.2d 785, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 777
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 6, 1932
DocketNo. 2308.
StatusPublished

This text of 52 S.W.2d 785 (Angelo v. Holland Texas Hypotheek Bank of Amsterdam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angelo v. Holland Texas Hypotheek Bank of Amsterdam, 52 S.W.2d 785, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 777 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LAWHON, J.

The Holland Texas Hypotheek Bank of Amsterdam, Holland, recovered judgment in, the district court of the sixtieth judicial district of Jefferson county, Tex., on the 20th day of April, 1931, against Charles Angelo in the sum of $4,023.63, with interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, and in the judgment foreclosure of a mechanic’s, materialman’s, builder’s, and contractor’s lien against lot 12, block 19 of the Jirou addition to the city of Beaumont was ordered as against the defendants Mary B. Angelo, Charles Angelo, Mary Ackery Angelo, L. Top-litz, E. N. Bosby, and Annie Bosby. In the same judgment L. Toplitz was given judgment against Charles Angelo and E. N. Bosby for *786 the sum of $1,210 and a vendor’s lien was ordered foreclosed as against the same lot, to wit, lot No. 12, block 19 of the Jirón addition to the city of Beaumont, as against the said Charles Angelo and Mary Ackery Angelo, Mary B. Angelo, E. N. Bosby, and Annie Bosby. It was decreed in this judgment that the lien ot L. Toplitz was secondary to that of the lien of Holland Texas Hy-potheek Bank. Charles Angelo and Mary B. Angelo excepted to the judgment and gave notice of appeal.

On the 10th day of August, 1931, Charles Angelo and Mary B. Angelo filed in the district coixrt of' the sixtieth judicial district of Jefferson county their petition for a writ of error to the Court of Civil Appeals, and, on the same day, filed their writ of error bond in something more than double the amount of the judgment in favor of Holland Texas Hypotheek Bank, and the judgment in favor of L. Toplitz and the estimated amount of costs. Jas. V. Polk and J. W. Angelo were sureties on this bond. On the date of filing the petition and bond, citation in error was issued by the district clerk of Jefferson county, and was on that date served on the Holland Texas Hypotheek Bank and L. Toplitz. On the 1st day of June, 1932, L. Toplitz, filed in this court a certificate, together with a petition that this court affirm the judgment in his favor on certificate. This court granted his motion on the 23d day of June, 1932. Jas. V. Polk, one of the sureties on the writ of error bond, and E. N. Bosby, one of the defendants, have filed a motion to set aside the judgment of this court' affirming the cause on certificate, and on July 8, 1932, the same parties presented a transcript with a motion that they be allowed to file the same and that the case be heard on its merits. We have both these 'motions before us.

In the motion to set aside the order affirming this cause, it is urged that the sixtieth district court of Jefferson county, Tex., was without jurisdiction of either the sub-' ject-matter of the suit or of the defendants Charles Angelo and E'. N. Bosby, because L. Toplitz had brought suit in the fifty-eighth district court of Jefferson county, Tex., by a separate suit from that filed by the Holland Texas Hypotheek Bank in the sixtieth' district court and that the suits were never consolidated and there was no order consolidating the causes and that no pleading had been filed in the sixtieth district court against Charles Angelo and his wife, Mary Angelo, his mother Mary Ackery Angelo, nor against E. N. Bosby and wife which would justify the judgment rendered. In the certificate filed by L. Toplitz there is shown a copy of the plaintiff’s original petition filed by Holland Texas Hypotheek Bank, seeking judgment on a note and a foreclosure of a mechanics’, materialman’s, contractor’s, and builder’s lien on the lots hereinabove mentioned. This showed sufficient pleading to authorize the judgment rendered in favor of this plaintiff. There is also shown a petition filed by L. Toplitz against E. N. Bosby and wife, Annie Bosby, Charles Angelo and wife, Mary Angelo, and the Holland Texas Hy-potheek Bank. This petition was sufficient pleading to authorize the court to render the judgment in favor of E. Toplitz. The caption, of this petition shows that it was in the fifty-eighth district court of Jefferson county, Tex. There is a nunc pro tunc order by the district court of the fifty-eighth judicial district rec-iting that the causé of B. Top-litz against E. N. Bosby et al., had been consolidated by agreement of the parties with the case of Holland Texas Hypotheek Bank v. Charles Angelo et al., pending in the sixtieth district court, and that said order was made on the 14th day of March, 1931, but had not been entered of record, and this order provided that such order of consolidation should be entered as of the date of March 14, 1931. It appears that the nunc pro tunc order was entered on the 2.6th day of May, 1932. The motion for rehearing and to set aside the order of affirmance contends that this order was a nullity and that the fifty-eighth judicial district court had no authority to consolidate a cause in that court with a cause pending in the sixtieth district court, and that the only order the fifty-eighth district court could enter was to transfer the suit in that court to the other court, and that the consolidation should be made by the judge of the sixtieth judicial district court.

In proceedings for affirmance on certificate, it is not necessary to bring up to this court the pleadings of the parties, and this court has no authority to inquire into the jurisdiction of the trial court. In Dandridge v. Masterson, 105 Tex. 511, 152 S. W. 166, 107, the Supreme Court, in answering certified questions, uses this language: “The things to be shown by the certificate are (1) that a final judgment has been entered by the trial court for a given sum; (2) .that an appeal has been taken or writ of error sued out; and (3) that the transcript has not been filed in the Court of Civil Appeals as required, which gives jurisdiction to the Court of Civil Appeals. The jurisdiction of the trial court is not an issue in this proceeding.”

In Brown v. Hooks, 117 Tex. 155, 299 S. W. 228, 229, Judge Harvey of the Commission of Appeals said: “That jurisdiction in a proceeding under this statute does not depend upon a showing of the trial court's jurisdiction in the case is definitely settled by the decision in the case of Dandridge v. *787 Mastorson, 105 Tex. 513, 152 S. W. 166.” See, also, Radford v. Radford (Tex. Civ. App.) 42 ,S.W.(2d) 1004.

We think, however, that the transcript showed that the district court of the sixtieth judicial district had jurisdiction to render the judgment. Article 199, Vernon’s Annotated Civil ’Statutes (as amended by the Forty-first-Legislature, 1929, c. 84), provides that the fifty-eighth and sixtieth judicial districts shall have and exercise concurrent jurisdiction coextensive with the limits of Jefferson county in all civil cases, proceedings, and -matters of which the district courts are given jurisdiction by the Constitution and laws of this state. Article 2092, § 21, Vernon’s Annotated Civil Statutes, provides that judges of civil district courts in counties having two or more district courts with civil jurisdiction only, and whose terms continue for three months or longer, may try and determine any ease or proceeding pending in another conrt of such county without having the case transferred. Therefore, the judge of the sixtieth judicial district court had the power to try both cases without having one of the causes transferred.

The parties filing this motion have sent up a supplemental transcript which contains a motion to have the order of consolidation nunc pro tunc entered. This motion states that it is signed by all the attorneys of record, including the attorney for E. N.

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Related

Brown v. Hooks
299 S.W. 228 (Texas Supreme Court, 1927)
Dandridge v. Masterson
152 S.W. 166 (Texas Supreme Court, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.W.2d 785, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angelo-v-holland-texas-hypotheek-bank-of-amsterdam-texapp-1932.