Breed v. Higginbotham Bros Co.

141 S.W. 164, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 391
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 11, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 141 S.W. 164 (Breed v. Higginbotham Bros 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
Breed v. Higginbotham Bros Co., 141 S.W. 164, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 391 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

On January 17, 1910, Higginbotham Bros. & Co. filed their original petition in the district court of Comanche county against Geo. W. Hill, alleging that the said Hill resided in Pecos county, Tex., and declaring upon a personal account for $23.70, and also upon a promissory note charged to have been executed by Hill for the sum of $3,961.25 made payable in Comanche county, Tex. Afterwards, on November 2, 1910, the plaintiffs in the suit filed their second amended original petition “in lieu of and as a substitute for its first amended petition filed on March 15th, 1910,” suing *165 as before upon tbe promissory note referred to, and further alleging that certain named defendants, including appellant, Mrs. W. N. Breed, and all of whom were alleged to be residents of counties other than Oomanche, were asserting rights to certain property in the petition described, and upon which it was alleged the said Hill had executed mortgage liens for the purpose of securing the note declared upon. It is unnecessary to make further reference to property claimed by defendants other than Mrs. Breed, inasmuch as they present no complaint of the result of the trial below. As to Mrs. Breed, however, it was charged that she was a resident of Brown county, and was claiming “17 acres of land in the eastern part of Zephyr, Brown county, Tex.,” referring to a certain deed -for a more minute description. The petition further recited that “the said Geo. W. Hili has since the filing of this suit and before service on him become a nonresident of the state of Texas and still is a nonresident of the state of Texas, against whom a personal judgment for a. debt named in said court cannot be obtained in the courts of this state,” and that the other defendants had “heretofore been duly cited and served herein.” Wherefore the plaintiffs prayed for a judgment establishing the debt, and for foreclosure of the asserted liens. The trial was before the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment against appellant on her demurrer and special plea of privilege to be sued in Brown county, and against all defendants establishing the plaintiffs’ debt and liens as prayed for, etc. Appellant alone has appealed.

[1] The material question presented on this appeal arises from the court’s action in overruling appellant’s exception to the plaintiffs’ petition and her special plea of privilege, both in due order asserting appellant’s right to be sued in Brown county. The general rule is declared by our statute to be that “no person, who is an inhabitant of this state, shall be sued out of the county in which he has his domicile.” See Revised Statutes 1895, art. 1194. The article quoted, however, makes numerous exceptions, among which it is provided that “where there are two or more defendants residing in different counties, in -which case the suit may be brought in any county where any one of the defendants resides.” There can be no pretense that appellant comes within any other exception of the statute, and this exception has no application for the reason that suit was neither instituted nor maintained in a county where any one of the defendants resided. See Behrens Drug Co. v. Hamilton, 92 Tex. 284, 48 S. W. 5, and St. L. & S. W. Ry. Co. v. McKnight, 99 Tex. 289, 89 S. W. 755.

[2] Indeed, the court’s action is only defended on the ground that appellant waived her privilege, but in this we cannot concur. The basis of the court’s ruling, as recited in the judgment, is that: “The defendant Mrs. W. N. Breed through her attorney, E. S. J. Whitehead, called to the attention of the court for the first time their respective pleas of privilege filed herein on the 15th day of November, A. D. 1910, and it appearing to the court that said defendants had been duly cited to answer at the April term, A. D. 1910, of this court, and had not and did not during said term file any answer or plea of privilege, and that said parties did not answer or file any plea of privilege on or before the appearance day of this term of this court, and did not at any time before this day in any way call the attention of the court to their said pleas of privilege, it is ordered by the court that their said pleas of privileges be in all things overruled.” Other than from this recital and a recital of the second amended original petition hereinbefore quoted, it does not appear when appellees’ first amended original petition making Mrs. Breed a party was filed or when she was cited, as neither said first amended original petition, nor the citation and return, is to be found in the record. But, conceding that the rules provided for an earlier answer, we know of no penalty for the delay other than that appellant thereby subjected herself to the hazard of a judgment against her by default as provided by article 1282, Rev. St. For some reason, however, not explained in the record, no such judgment was taken by appellees, and the undisputed fact is that appellant filed no answer of any kind until before the case was called on the day of trial November 15, 1910. The attention of the court, therefore, could not, strictly speaking, have been earlier called to the demurrer or plea of privilege. Rule 24 (67 S. W. xxii), regulating the practice in the district court provides, that: “All dilatory pleas, and all motions and exceptions relating to a suit pending, which do not go to the merits of the case, shall be tried at the first term to which the attention of the court shall be called to the same, unless passed by agreement of parties with the consent of the court; and all such pleas and motions shall be first called and disposed of before the main issue on the merits is tried.” Article 1291 of the Revised Statutes reads: “When a case is called for trial, the issues of law arising on the pleadings, and all pleas in abatement, and other dilatory pleas remaining undisposed of, shall be determined, and it shall be no cause for the postponement of a trial of the issues of law that a party is not prepared to try the issues of fact.” We are of the opinion, therefore, that the court should have heard and determined appellant’s plea of privilege, and that he erred in holding that the same had been waived. The question of whether a right has been waived is generally one of fact, and, while a number of cases might be cited to the effect that where a plea of privilege, or other plea in abatement of any kind, has been filed, and the court thereafter has been permitted to take action inconsistent with a want of juris *166 diction without having its attention called to the plea, the plea will be deemed to have been waived, but such result should not be ascribed to mere inaction — a simple failure to file an answer at the earliest possible moment — not shown to be prejudicial nor to have in any way influenced the course of the appellees.

[3] Moreover, while there were some non-objecting parties in the suit, the difficulty, in so far as appellant was affected, is emphasized by the fact that the principal defendant, Geo. W. Hill, has never been cited or made a party in any of the modes provided by law. No one of the defendants before the court was a resident of the county of the trial or a party to the note or obligation which was the foundation of the action, nor, as alleged, was any of the property upon which appellees sought to establish a lien situated in the county of the trial or by attachment or otherwise brought under the court’s jurisdiction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 S.W. 164, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breed-v-higginbotham-bros-co-texapp-1911.