Buchanan v. Crow

241 S.W. 563, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 876
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1922
DocketNo. 6581.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 241 S.W. 563 (Buchanan v. Crow) 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
Buchanan v. Crow, 241 S.W. 563, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 876 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

JENKINS, J.

On the night of October 1, 1921, appellant herein was sheriff of McLen-nan county. At that time he undertook to stop a parade of members of the Ku Klux Klan, in the town of Lorena, McLennan county. In the melée that ensued, O. L. Crow, who was not shown to be a member of the Klan, but a bystander, was killed. His widow, Mrs. Inez L. Crow, filed suit in the district court of McLennan county against Buchanan and the sureties on his official bond, alleging that, in attempting to stop the parade referred to, and assuming to act therein in his official capacity as sheriff, he unlawfully inflicted injuries upon- her husband resulting in his death.

When the case was called for trial, February 23, 1922, all parties announced ready for trial, but the court, upon its own motion, changed the venue of this cause to Bell county; to which action of the court the appellants herein excepted, upon the ground that the court was without .authority to change the venue in the cause upon its own motion. Appellants filed a motion for rehearing as to said judgment of the court, which was overruled; to which appellants also excepted. Thereafter appellants filed their petition for a temporary injunction to prevent the clerk of the district court from transmitting the papers in this cause to the district court of Bell county. The court refused to grant such injunction; from which action of the court the appellants gave’ notice of appeal, and have perfected such appeal.

Appellants’ .bill of exceptions and the court’s qualifications thereof will show the grounds of their objection to the action of the court, and the reason of the court for such action. Said bill of exceptions shows that the court changed the venue herein on its own motion from McLennan county to Bell county, and that both parties to this suit excepted to such action of the court; also, that the court found that the courthouse in Belton, Bell county, Tex., is 43 miles from the courthouse in Waco, McLennan county, Tex.; that the courthouse in Hills-boro, Hill county, Tex., an adjoining county to McLennan county, Tex., is 34 miles from the courthouse in Waco, McLennan county, Tex.; that the courthouse in Marlin, Falls county, Tex., an adjoining county to McLen-nan county, Tex., is 26 miles from the courthouse in Waco, McLennan county, Tex.

Appellants herein, in addition to excepting to the action of the court upon various grounds, the substance of which is that the court had no authority to change the venue upon its own motion, filed a motion for rehearing, setting out substantially the same grounds..

The court’s qualifications to the bill of exceptions are as follows:

“First. This cause was called for trial February 23, 1922, and the court proceeded with the selection of a jury panel of 24 men for the period of 10 days; some 600 jurors were summoned, and after that number were exhausted there were 17 men who had not disqualified for cause, and among these'17 there were men whom the court was unwilling to accept as jurors; that the public sentiment and factional strife incurred by the facts in issue in this cause are without precedent in McLennan county, Tex.; that the court was the recipient of anonymous letters, reflecting upon the motives of some of the 17 men who had not disqualified from the tentative jury panel, and that it appeared to the court that it was practically impossible to secure a fair and impartial panel of 24 men in McLennan county, capable of trying said cause.
“Second. This cause was transferred to Bell county, Tex., for the reason that said county is the nearest county to McLennan county in *565 which a fair and impartial trial might he had; the cities of Marlin, Falls county, and Hills-boro, nill county, being so near to McLennan county, and the commercial interests so identified, that the court was of the opinion that the same reasons might defeat a fair trial in those counties as do in McLennan county.
“Third. That neither side would request a change of venue in this cause, and that the court decided that the ends of justice to both plaintiff and defendants required a change of venue, and the court, as a necessary means of providing a fair and impartial trial for the litigants herein, and under his general and equitable powers incident and requisite to the perpetuation, power and control of the court over itself and its subject-matter, so acted.
“This bill is approved and amended and qualified and is ordered filed accordingly this March 7, 1922. H. M. Richey, Judge Seventy-Fourth Dist. Court, McLennan County, Texas.”

The principal issue for our decision is: Was the order of the district court of Mc-Lennan county changing the venue herein, upon its own motion, void?

In Rogers v. Watrous, 8 Tex. 62. 5S Am. Dec. 100, the district court of Harris county changed the venue, upon application of defendant, to the district court of Galveston county, for the reason that the district judge of Harris county was disqualified to try the cause. Upon the case being called in Galveston county, the plaintiff moved to strike the same from the docket, for the reason that the change of venue was not for a cause authorized by statute. Formerly the law had authorized a change of venue for the reason that the judge of the court in which the cause was pending was disqualified, hut the court held that this ground for a change of venue had been repealed by omitting the same from the Act of May 11, 1846 (Acts 1st Leg. p. 200). The district court of Galveston county sustained this motion. Upon appeal, the Supreme Court, speaking through Judge Wheeler, said that the change of venue “having been granted for insufficient cause, the court at Galveston was justified in striking the case from its docket.” This, ¡of course, is true only upon the ground that the district court of Galveston county acquired no jurisdiction by the transfer of the case to that court upon a ground not authorized by statute, and that such order was therefore void.

In Dodson v. Bunton, 81 Tex. 655-657, 17 S. W. 507, the court granted a change of venue for a cause not within the provisions of the statute. The case was tried in the county to which it was transferred, and upon appeal it was held that such county was without jurisdiction to try the cause. To the same effect is Railway v. Ryan, 44 Tex. 426.

We quote from 40 C'yc. 144, as follows:

“In the absence of a statute, the court has no authority to order a change of venue on its own motion.”

In Shannon v. Smith, 31 Mich. 451, the court said:

“We have found no grounds for the assertion that any court has a general and inherent power to remove from itself to another court any cause pending in it. That power can only be given by statute, and the statute must be complied with.”

The statement of the law as shown by the quotation from Cyc. and the Supreme Court of Michigan, supra, is correct, for the reason that a change of venue was unknown to the common law; the power to make such change is purely statutory, and must be found in legislation, either in the Constitution or the statutes.

In Fisk v. Thorp, 51 Neb. 1, 70 N. W. 498, and in Lefferts v. Bell, 57 Neb. 248, 77 N. W. 680, it was said that—

“Unless the statute * * * expressly or impliedly empowered the court to make the change * *

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Bluebook (online)
241 S.W. 563, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchanan-v-crow-texapp-1922.