Blankenship v. Little Motor Kar Co.

224 S.W. 210, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 855
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 4, 1920
DocketNo. 7735.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 210 (Blankenship v. Little Motor Kar Co.) 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
Blankenship v. Little Motor Kar Co., 224 S.W. 210, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 855 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HAMILTON, J.

Relators seek a writ of mandamus to be directed against the judge of the Sixty-Eighth district court of Texas, requiring him to fix the amount of a super-sedeas bond on appeal from an interlocutory order of said court, entered June 10, 1920, upon an application .theretofore made by re-lators for the termination of a receivership and the discharge of Everett S. Owens as receiver in cause No. 34508, styled “A. R. Blankenship ét al. v. Little Motor Kar Co. et al.,” then pending in said court. It appears that the receiver was appointed on April 8, 1920, at the instance of the plaintiffs in the case and that the appointment was not resisted by any party to the suit, nor was any appeal taken from the order of appointment.

After the period of 20 days from the date of the appointment of the receiver, within which the statutes of Texas provide such appeals may be perfected, the relators came into the case in the lower court by petition in intervention. They thereupon filed a motion to discharge the receiver and terminate the receivership. Not only had the statutory period allowed for appeal from the order appointing the receiver expired before the intervention, the sole purpose of which seems to have been to make an end of the receivership and have the possession and control of the property put into the interveners; but the record presented in this court in connection with the application for the writ discloses that the receiver is actively engaged in administering the property under the court’s orders.

Respondent has appeared for the purpose of contesting relator’s application, and first of all files a motion to abate the application, contending that numerous parties to the suit out of which the controversy before us arises are necessary and proper parties to the proceeding involved in the determination of the application for writ of mandamus.

*211 We do not concur in this position, and accordingly overrule the motion to abate, preliminary to expressing our views upon the application itself. We are unable to perceive any soundness in respondent’s contention, embodied in the motion to abate, because the application presents only the question of ascertaining whether or not the judge of the district court has refused to do an official act involving only official power and duty arbitrarily laid upon him by law, and the performance of which, if it be so required, could in no way comprehend the impairment of any legal right, which might be asserted to circumvent such legal requirement. Where application for a writ of mandamus is sought to compel a trial judge to do what is alleged to be a duty mandatorily enjoined upon him by law, and as to which, if it thus exists, he could have no discretion, a case of that nature, which has been held to require parties litigant adverse to the relator to be brought into the proceeding, is not presented.

The proceeding here invokes only a question of absolute and rigid inherent duty of the judge to follow an unalterably fixed and prescribed official course, excluding the exercise of discretion, and the writ, if granted, could run only against him. The writ is sought only on the ground that he is under the clear legal requirement, incidental to the appeal, to fix the amount of the supersedeas bond, so that relators may exercise a defined legal right, also incidental to the appeal, by executing such bond, regardless of the merits of the appeal itself and of the rights of the parties in relation to the subject-matter of the controversy. The proper parties, we think, are before the court.

Since there appear to be no decisions disposing of the exact question raised, which is statutory, we are unable to declare the rights of the parties upon the basis of any adjudicated authority disposing of the precise situation presented, or upon any such authority which incidentally considers the one question offered for determination, which is this: Have relators the clear right, by giving a supersedeas bond on appeal, to suspend and temporarily terminate the receivership, pending the appeal from the interlocutory order of the district judge refusing to terminate it? If they have this right, it is an abstract statutory one, existing under the terms of article 2079a, providing for appeals from interlocutory orders refusing to vacate receiverships, and article 2101, providing for supersedeas bonds on appeal; and if such right exists it is absolute, and in no wise dependent upon the discretion of the court or upon the merits of the appeal. Accordingly, if the relators possess such right, it follows that the district judge is under the duty to designate such amount of the super-sedeas bond as his sound discretion may dictate, so that relators, in the lawful pursuit of that right, may come into the exercise of it by executing and filing the supersedeas bond so fixed.

Article 2079a of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas provides for appeals from interlocutory orders of district judges refusing to vacate receiverships upon application of interested parties. That article reads as follows:

“An appeal shall lie from an interlocutory order of the district court oyerruling a motion to vacate an order appointing a receiver or trustee in any case, provided such appeal be taken within twenty days from the entry of such order appealed from. An appeal in such cases shall take precedence in the appellate court; but the proceedings in other respects in the court shall not be stayed during the pendency of the appeal, unless otherwise ordered by the appellate court.”

The appeal from the order of the district judge refusing to terminate the receivership is based upon the authority of this provision of the statutes, and the assertion of the right to supersede the order of the trial court and suspend the receivership by executing a super-sedeas bond arises from application of article 2101 of the Revised Civil Statutes, and construction of article 2079a in the light of the significance of article 2101. It is contended by relators that the decisions of our courts holding that on appeal from an order appointing a receiver the supersedeas bond provided for by' article 2101 may be filed and the order of appointment suspended during the appeal are applicable and controlling in the matter here, presented, and that accordingly we are bound to extend and apply the effect of those decisions to the instant case.

In considering the application we proceed on the assumption that the appeal is from an order overruling a motion to vacate the order appointing the receiver. We deem it unnecessary to a disposition of the application to give any consideration to respondent’s contention that the order appealed from is not an order overruling a motion to vacate the order appointing the receiver, but is rather an order overruling a motion to discharge a receiver and terminate a receivership. While it is settled by the decisions of this state that on appeal under the provisions of article 2079 of the Revised Civil Statutes a supersedeas bond may be filed, and the order of appointment thereby rendered inoperative pending appeal, and while article 2079a providing for appeals from interlocutory orders of district courts overruling motions to vacate receiverships is embodied in the same language as article 2079, we think article 2079a does not contemplate' the suspension of the receivership, and in effect the removal of the receiver, pending the appeal, which is the result sought to be obtained by relators in this proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 210, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blankenship-v-little-motor-kar-co-texapp-1920.