Arvedson v. Luby

498 S.W.2d 253, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2739
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 8, 1973
Docket12050
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 498 S.W.2d 253 (Arvedson v. Luby) 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
Arvedson v. Luby, 498 S.W.2d 253, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2739 (Tex. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

Appellees, Hazel K. Luby and Jeanne Luby Taylor, filed suit in district court of Tom Green County, seeking to dissolve a partnership with appellant, Rosanna Luby Arvedson, in the operation of a cafeteria business located in the Village Shopping Center of San Angelo.

The business originally was established by M. S. Luby, now deceased, and for more than fifteen years was conducted as “Luby’s Cafeterias,” with Hazel K. Luby, widow of deceased, and Jeanne Luby Taylor and Rosanna Luby Arvedson, daughters of deceased, the sole remaining partners. Through devise and bequest, and as a result of transfer of interests by sale, plaintiffs below owned eighty-five percent of the partnership and appellant, defendant below, owned the remaining fifteen percent of the business.

Petition for dissolution of the partnership was filed on April 3, 1972, and was timely answered by defendant. Thereafter, on August 21, 1972, defendant filed her first motion for continuance. The transcript on file in this Court does not disclose the trial court’s action on the motion, but does show that on November 15, 1972, defendant filed “her second Application for Continuance,” and also filed on the same day a motion for discovery which, after hearing, was denied by the trial court that day.

It appears from the trial court’s judgment later entered that the cause had been set for trial in August and, by reason of the first motion for continuance, the case was reset for trial on November 21, 1972. The hearing on the second motion for continuance appears to have been at a call of the docket on November 15, in anticipation of trial on November 21.

Defendant appeared in court on November 21 and advised the court she was not ready for trial and stated that she no longer had an attorney. When asked by the court, “Did he quit and walk out or did you fire him?” the defendant replied, “I fired him.” Defendant had fired her attorney on November 16, after the court on the previous day denied the second motion for continuance and refused to postpone trial of the cause beyond November 21.

Defendant’s former attorney, whom she had fired on November 16, was present in court the morning of trial and stated to the court he was willing to represent defendant, knowing defendant was without a lawyer and that he had represented her in all proceedings in the controversy since its beginning in April.

It is undisputed that defendant, after discharging her attorney on November 16, undertook on November 18 by long distance telephone to employ another attorney, not resident in that county, to represent her. On November 21, the day set for trial, the newly employed attorney sought postponement, both by telephone and by telegram, on the basis that the attorney was not sufficiently acquainted with the case and was too ill to appear in person. No written motion for continuance in compliance with Rule 251, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, was presented to the trial court.

From the bench, the court stated, “I don’t like to have an attorney fired just before trial, and I don’t consider that that in itself furnishes a ground for denial of trial at this time.”

The cause went to trial, with defendant present but continuing to refuse the services of counsel she had discharged five days earlier. After trial had proceeded more than fifty percent of its duration, defendant’s former counsel who was still present in court orally requested permission to withdraw, which the court granted.

*255 After trial before the court on the merits, the court on December 1, 1972, entered judgment dissolving the partnership and ordering plaintiffs to deliver into the registry of the court, for the account of defendant, the sum of $28,289.21.

Defendant perfected her appeal and brings six points of error. All points are directed to failure of the trial court to grant defendant’s motions for continuance and none is upon the merits of the case.

We will overrule all points of error and affirm judgment of the trial court.

Under her points of error appellant contends, in brief, that the trial court erred (1) in not granting the second motion for continuance presented by appellant’s attorney on November 15 and (2) in not granting the request for continuance presented orally and by telegram on November 21.

In the first motion for continuance, presented on August 21, appellant alleged that an accounting firm had been engaged, “with the express consent of the Plaintiffs . to make an audit of the books” of the partnership’s downtown cafeteria, an operation of the partnership that had been closed, and she could not safely go to trial without bank statements and checks from the downtown cafeteria. Appellant prayed for continuance “until Plaintiffs have furnished the partnership books or copies thereof and until your Defendant has had an opportunity to have said books audited.”

The trial court reset the case for November 21, allowing three months for the audit. An audit was made, at the behest of appellees, by a certified public accountant who had prepared audits and reports for the partnership since 1960.

In her second motion for continuance, filed November 15, appellant stated that certain records of the partnership had been furnished her attorney by plaintiffs, but that janitors cleaning the attorney’s offices had improvidently removed the records and thrown them away. Appellant represented to the trial court that she believed plaintiffs had not furnished “full and complete information and books concerning and affecting the partnership business.”

At the hearing on the second motion for continuance counsel for appellant was advised that the certified public accountant, who had made the recent audit and who had audited the partnership accounts for the past twelve years, would be present at the trial, and that, to accommodate appellant and her counsel, trial would be delayed for an afternoon, or until the following day, to afford them opportunity to interview the accountant and examine his audit before going to trial.

The granting or denial of an application for continuance rests within the sound discretion of the trial judge. Hernandez v. Heldenfels, 374 S.W.2d 196, 202 (Tex.Sup.1963). In August, three months prior to the hearing on the second application for continuance, the trial court had accorded appellant additional time in which to examine records and books of the business. Certain of the records had been delivered to appellant’s attorney by appellees, and by accident the records were thrown away. In May of 1972, when appellant’s deposition was taken, counsel for appellees advised appellant and her attorney that the accountant having records, from which reports had been furnished all partners, including appellant, for the past ten to twelve years, was available, as were the books of the business.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
498 S.W.2d 253, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arvedson-v-luby-texapp-1973.