Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Railway Co. v. Driskill

71 S.W. 997, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 200, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 14, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 71 S.W. 997 (Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Railway Co. v. Driskill) 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
Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Railway Co. v. Driskill, 71 S.W. 997, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 200, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 22 (Tex. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

STREETMAhT, Associate Justice.

L. W.Driskill brought this suit originally against the Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Railway Company, Hugh Burns, and J. G-. Baker, alleging in substance that said Burns made a contract to, do certain work in constructing said railway, and that said Baker was a subcontractor under Burns; that plaintiff *201 performed certain labor for said Baker on said road, and also became the owner of the claim of another laborer. He sued to recover the amount due on these claims, and to foreclose a lien on the road.

In the original petition, filed January 11, 1901, it was alleged that the defendant Baker residéd in Limestone County. On January 11, 1901, citation in proper form was issued to Limestone County for J. G. Baker, and a constable of that county immediately returned said citation not executed because said Baker was not in Limestone County, but in Navarro County.

On January 16, 1901, plaintiff filed what was styled “first supplemental petition,” which was in fact no more than a statement that said Baker had changed his residence from Limestone County to Navarro County, and requisted that citation issue to said county.

Citation was issued to Navarro County for said Baker on January 30, 1901, which directed the officer to deliver to him the “accompanying certified copy of plaintiff’s original and amended original petition.” The return on said writ states that it was executed “by delivering to J. G. Baker, the within named defendant, in person, a true copy of this citation, together with the accompanying certified copy of plaintiff’s original petition.”

Proper service was had upon the defendants Burns and the Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Railway Company.

On Hay 30, 1901, plaintiff filed his second, supplemental petition, making the International & Great Northern Railroad Company defendant, alleging that by virtue of a special act of the Legislature, since the institution of the suit, said company had purchased all of the property and franchises of the Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Railway Company, and was then in possession of the same and was liable for all of its obligations, and prayed for judgment against said International & Great Northern Railroad Company in the same manner as against the other defendants.

On June 10, 1901, the International & Great Northern Railroad Company filed an answer, consisting of a general demurrer and general denial.

On January 21, 1902, defendant Burns answered by a general denial and a special plea alleging that plaintiff and defendant Baker were partners, and as such, were subcontractors under him, and that he had fully settled with said partnership for all work performed.

Plaintiff filed a third supplemental petition, denying under oath the allegation of partnership.

No answer was filed by defendant Baker, nor the Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Bail way Company.

The case was called for trial on January 21, 1902, and the defendants Burns and the International & Great Northern Railroad Company appeared. Whereupon plaintiff dismissed his suit as to said defendants, and judgment by default was entered against defendants Baker and the Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Railway Company, jointly and severally, *202 for $110.83, with a foreclosure of the laborer’s lien upon the railroad constructed by said company.

On January 23, 1902, the defendant Baker filed a formal motion to set aside the judgment by default because he was never properly cited.

On February 27th he filed an amended motion, asking that the judgment be set aside for several reasons and alleging that he had a good defense. Attached to the motion are the depositions of said Baker, which seem to have been taken in the case at the instance of some of the other defendants, in which he testifies, in effect, that he and plaintiff were partners in the contract made with Burns, and that Burns had fully settled with them, and for that reason, none of the defendants were indebted to plaintiff.

On February 26, 1902, the International & Great Northern Railroad Company filed a motion to set aside the judgment dismissing it from the suit and the default judgment against its codefendant the Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Railway Company. In this motion, the proceedings by which said defendant was made a party are recited, and attached to it as exhibits are certified copies of the various resolutions conveyances, etc., by which the property and franchises of the Calvert, Waco & Brazos Valley Railway Company were transferred to the International & Great Northern Railroad Company, according to the provisions of a special act of the Twenty-seventh Legislature for that purpose. It was alleged that the International & Great Northern Railroad Company was the real party at interest; that it had prepared to defend said case, and that it was prevented from doing so by the judgment of dismissal, and that it will be responsible for the judgment, and accordingly asks that said judgment be set aside.

Plaintiff moved to strike out the motion of the International & Great Northern Railroad Company, because it was not filed within two days after the judgment, and it was by the court stricken out.

The amended motion of defendant Baker was heard on March 1, 1902, and overruled. The defendants Baker and the International & Great Northern Railroad Company have appealed.

The first assignment of error raises the question of the sufficiency of the service upon defendant Baker. It is claimed that the return of the sheriff, showing only the service of the original petition, after the first supplemental petition had been filed, was insufficient. The return was sufficient. The new pleading was, in effect, only an application to issue citation to a different county, and it was not necessary to serve a copy of this upon the defendant. Gilmour v. Ford, 19 S. W. Rep., 442 ; Rev. Stats., art. 1227.

The second assignment complains of the judgment by default against Baker, because it was not shown that the citation served upon him was returned to the court on the first day of the next term or before judgment was entered. The citation was issued January 30, 1901, returnable June 10, 1901. It was executed by the sheriff of Navarro County January 31, 1904, and it was his duty under the law to return it to the *203 first day oí the next term of court. It appears to have been acted upon by the court in rendering judgment, and we think that no error is shown by this assignment.

In the third assignment it is contended that the judgment should have been set aside, because the deputy district clerk who issued the citation to "defendant Baker was not authorized to act as such deputy. It appeared that Bartlett, the deputy, had been regularly appointed, and had subscribed the oath of office, but the same had no jurat attached to it and had not been recorded. It also appeared that he had been regularly performing the duties of such deputy and was recognized as such by the court. It is clear that he was at least a de facto officer.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 997, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 200, 1903 Tex. App. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calvert-waco-brazos-valley-railway-co-v-driskill-texapp-1903.