Brown v. Gorman Home Refinery

276 S.W. 787, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 855
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 1925
DocketNo. 11167. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 787 (Brown v. Gorman Home Refinery) 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
Brown v. Gorman Home Refinery, 276 S.W. 787, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 855 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This is an appeal by A. C. Brown from a judgment against him in a suit by him as plaintiff against the Gorman Home Refinery and a number of persons alleged to be stockholders in such refinery for debt, as evidenced by a stated account rendered him by the Gorman Home Refinery, and for debt evidenced by a number of checks issued to him and to his sons by said refinery, but which were not paid when presented to the bank at Gorman. Certain of the checks issued to the sons of plaintiff had been assigned to him, and plaintiff below sued as the holder and owner of all of the cheeks, and for the debt which the checks represented.

The court instructed the jury to find for plaintiff upon the account stated in the sum of $4,473.23, with legal interest, which the jury did. But, it appearing from the testimony that the plaintiff had already recovered from certain parties mentioned in the original petition and subsequent petitions (the trial being upon the 8th amended petition), and said amounts having been credited on tho claim and all costs of suit, and it appearing •to the court that the amount so received by plaintiff from such stockholders as had been made parties defendant in the original petition and in subsequent amended petitions, such parties being thereafter dismissed from the suit, exceeded the amount still due on the stated account, and the trial court having held' ’that, inasmuch as the ma&ei’ of the checks had not been notified within two days after receipt of the checks of the failure of the bank to pay such checks, the maker was discharged thereby under the Negotiable Instruments Act, he rendered judgment for all of the 'defendants who were in court and had not been dismissed, or who had not had their pleas of privilege sustained and the cause ordered transferred to the respective counties of such defendants as had interposed their plea of privilege.

Louis Otto and A. J. and R. A. Fellers have filed, at a former term of this court, their motion to dismiss the appeal in so far as they are concerned. The ground of their motion is that the trial court sustained their pleas of privilege on May 10, 1924, and ordered the cause, in so far as the plaintiffs sought a recovery against Louis Otto, to be transferred to the district court of Gonzales county, and, in so far as plaintiff sought a recovery against *788 A. J. and R. A. Fellers, that it be transferred to Bosque county; that the judgment entered thereafter in no wise disposed of or even referred to such defendants, nor did the bond filed make these three defendants obligees, or even refer to them. The bond was filed on June 21, 1924. The judgment was entered June 2, 1924, and the motion for new trial was overruled on June ISth. Appellant has filed a motion for leave to file an amended bond, in which these three defendants are named as appellees. But these three parties have contested the right to file the amended bond. We will discuss the right of appellant to file such bond at this time, or at the time the motion to file the amended bond was made, which was on October 11, 1924.

Article 1903, Rev. Oiv. Statutes, 1918 Supp., provides for the filing of pleas of privilege to be sued in the county of one’s residence, and the rules with reference thereto, and further provides that either party may appeal from the judgment sustaining or overruling the plea of privilege, and, if the judgment is one sustaining .the plea of 'privilege, and an appeal- is taken, such appeal shall suspénd the transfer of the venue and a trial of the cause pending the final determination of such appeal.

An appeal is perfected by' giving notice of appeal in open court within two days after final judgment, or final order, which shall be noted on the docket and entered- of record, and by filing with the clerk an appeal bond or affidavit in lieu thereof within 20 days after the expiration of the term, or, if the term of court may by law continue more than 8 weeks, the bond or affidavit in lieu thereof shall be filed within 20 days after notice of appeal is given, if the party taking the appeal resides in the county, and within 30 days if he resides out of the county. Article 2084, Rev. Statutes.

Since the appeal bond was not filed within ,the required time after the trial court sustained the pleas of privilege of Louis Otto and A. J. and R. A. ITellers, appellant here cannot complain of such order. Nor can we permit appellant to file an amended bond showing such parties to be appellees. While the court in his findings of fact finds that he passed on the issue of the plea of privilege at the time of the hearing in the main suit, yet the judgment sustaining the pleas of privilege was entered some 23 days prior to the judgment in the main cause. We think, in case of conflict between the judgment entered and the findings of fact subsequently filed, that the judgment should control. For all practical purposes, the parties whose pleas of privilege hail been sustained were at the time the judgment was - entered on the merits out of the Eastland district court, and that court had no further control over their persons. It is true that in Hickman v. Swain, 106 Tex. 431, 167 S. W. 209, the Supreme Court held that on sustaining a plea of privilege the judgment changing the venue should transfer to the proper county the entire case and all parties thereto, including a cross action in that case filed by the defendants. See, also, Hinkle v. Thompson (Tex. Civ. App.) 195 S. W. 311, writ of error refused; Rutledge v. Evans (Tex. Civ. App.) 219 S. W. 218, writ of error dismissed. But at least a majority of us conclude that the continuation of the cause, concurred in by all of the parties except those whose pleas of privilege had been sustained, to a final judgment in the Eastland county district court amounted to an abandonment of the plaintiff’s cause of action against Otto and the two Fellers, and a dismissal of them from the suit. The writer hesitates to concur in this conclusion. If the majority are correct in this disposition of the case as to these three parties, such parties are no longer involved in the suit, and their motion to dismiss this appeal, because no final judgment was entered disposing of such three parties, should be overruled, and it is accordingly ordered.

The court instructed the jury that as to the checks introduced in evidence they would find for the defendants, and as to the open account sued on by plaintiff they would find for plaintiff in the sum of $4,473.23. But in the judgment the court found that plaintiff had collected and had received payments from parties who had been made defendants more than sufficient to pay off and extinguish the amount of said indebtedness, and rendered judgment for the defendants. Plaintiff has appealed.

We will now consider whether the court’s action in rendering judgment against plaintiff as to the checks was justified. In plaintiff’s eighth amended petition he pleaded that the defendant Gorman Home Refinery was a joint company or association, with named trustees, and he sued this association as well as a large number of the individual stockholders thereof. He alleged that the defendant refinery had purchased oil from him and his sons, and that the interest of his sons had been subsequently assigned to him. He alleged that the defendant refinery had on various dates issued to the plaintiff certain checks in the payment of oil purchased, but that, said cheeks were not paid when presented to the Farmers’ State Bank & Trust Company of Gorman, on which the checks were drawn, because said association hacj no funds therein.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 787, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-gorman-home-refinery-texapp-1925.