Boyett v. City of College Station

465 S.W.2d 203, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2965
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 1971
DocketNo. 15742
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 465 S.W.2d 203 (Boyett v. City of College Station) 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
Boyett v. City of College Station, 465 S.W.2d 203, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2965 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

PEDEN, Justice.

This is an appeal from the granting of a declaratory judgment by the District Court of Brazos County in a class action. After a non-jury trial the court held, among other things, that the employees of Texas A. & M. University are eligible to hold nonsalaried positions with the City of College Station, Texas and to receive their salaries from the University while doing so.

It is uncontroverted that on June 19, 1970, more than a month prior to the filing of this suit in Brazos County, a similar suit was filed in Travis County by A. P. Boyett, Sr., and others. In that suit the parties defendant were Robert S. Calvert, Comptroller of Public Accounts of the State of Texas, and six members of the City Council of the City of College Station. The plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment as to whether the State Comptroller is prohibited by Article XVI, Section 33; of the Texas Constitution, Vernon’s Ann.St. from paying warrants upon the State in favor of persons serving concurrently as members of the faculty or staff of Texas A. & M. University and as members of the City Council of the City of College Station. The plaintiffs also asked that the Comptroller be enjoined from paying warrants to such persons. All parties defendant answered. On July 21, 1970, the City of College Station filed an intervention in the Travis County suit raising certain other issues, and the case was set for trial. On July 30, 1970, the instant cause was filed in Brazos County.

Section 33 of Article XVI of the Texas Constitution, as amended November 11, 1967, provides:

“The Accounting Officers of this State shall neither draw nor pay a warrant upon the Treasury in favor of any person for salary or compensation as agent, officer or appointee, who holds at the same time any other office or position of honor, trust, or profit, under this State, except as prescribed in this Constitution. Provided, that this restriction as to the drawing and paying of warrants upon the Treasury shall not apply to officers of the National Guard or Air National Guard of Texas, the National Guard Reserve, the Air National Guard Reserve, the Air Force Reserve, the Officers Reserve Corps of the United States, nor to enlisted men of the National Guard, the Air National Guard, the National Guard Reserve, the Air National Guard Reserve, the Air Force Reserve, and the Organized Reserve of the United States, nor to retired officers of the United States Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps, and retired warrant officers and retired enlisted men of the United States Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps. It is further provided, until September 1, 1969, and thereafter only if authorized by the Legislature by general law under such restrictions and limitations as the Legislature may prescribe, that a non-elective State officer or employee may hold other non-elective offices or positions of honor, trust, or profit under this State or the United States, if the other offices or positions are of benefit to the State of Texas or are required by State or federal law, and there is no conflict with the original office or position for which he receives salary or compensation. No member of the Legislature of this State may hold any other office or position of profit under this state, or the United States.”

The first point of error raised by appellant, A. P. Boyett, Sr., was that the trial court erred as a matter of law in overruling the pleas in abatement which 'he and the Attorney General of Texas filed in this case because there was a prior suit pending in court of coordinate jurisdiction, the District Court of Travis County, involving substantially the same parties and almost precisely the same subject matter as the suit here on appeal. The first point of error of the Attorney General also asserted that the [205]*205trial court erred in overruling his plea in abatement.

We sustain the first point of error filed by both appellants.

“Abatement on the ground of a former suit pending is predicated on comity, convenience, and orderly procedure in the trial of contested issues. The inherent bases for the plea have given rise to the modern rule of liberal construction, and to a gradual departure from the earlier doctrine that did not favor the plea and that required the pleader to bring himself strictly within the law. Accordingly, in passing on the merits of the plea, courts are not now controlled by technical rules and definitions of legal terms, such as ‘causes of action,’ but rather by the practical results to be obtained, dictated by a consideration of the inherent interrelation of the subject-matter of the two suits.
“The doctrine of comity grows out of the manifest propriety, if not necessity, that the court first obtaining jurisdiction should retain exclusive cognizance of the suit for the determination of all issues involved. The doctrine is applicable to all courts of concurrent jurisdiction, including appellate tribunals.”

1 Tex.Jur.2d 42, Abatement and Revival § 21.

It is stated at 2 McDonald, Texas Civil Practice (1970) 185, § 7.10:

“ * * * ‘When the [court in which the second suit is filed] abates, as it should, the second suit on a timely filed plea, it is not done so much on the grounds of a lack of jurisdiction as on the grounds of comity, vexatious litigation or [the avoidance of] a multiplicity of suits.’
“The test usually stated is whether the judgment in the first action would dispose of all issues in the second. Certainly, when the two actions involve the same ‘cause of action,’ either because the plaintiff has split his claim or because the parties have filed competitive suits, the second action cannot be maintained against the challenge of a plea in abatement. Even if the actions do not involve precisely the same cause of action, because the controlling issues of one go beyond those of the other, yet if the crucial, determinative issues are identical the second action must abate.”

Cleveland v. Ward, 116 Tex. 1, 285 S.W. 1063 (1926), states the general rules for determining whether the later suit should be abated because of the pendency of the former suit between the same parties. It was there held that when the first suit was filed in the district court, that court’s jurisdiction attached, “with power to permit the pleadings to be amended and amplified, new parties to be made, to determine all essential questions, and to do any and all things with reference thereto authorized by the Constitution and statutes, or permitted district courts under established principles of law.” Jurisdiction having attached upon filing of the first suit, that jurisdiction cannot be taken away or arrested by subsequent proceedings in another court.

And it was pointed out in McCurdy v. Gage, 123 Tex. 558, 69 S.W.2d 56 (1934):

“The rule is well settled that, where two actions involving the same subject-matter are brought in different courts having coordinate jurisdiction, the court which first acquires jurisdiction, its power being adequate to administer full justice to the rights of all concerned, should retain such jurisdiction, undisturbed by the interference of any other court, and dispose of the whole controversy.”

In Chem-Gas Engineers, Inc. v. Texas Asphalt & Refining Co., 398 S.W.2d 143

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Bluebook (online)
465 S.W.2d 203, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyett-v-city-of-college-station-texapp-1971.