Colburn v. Ward

40 S.W.2d 878, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1224
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 24, 1931
DocketNo. 3629.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 40 S.W.2d 878 (Colburn v. Ward) 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
Colburn v. Ward, 40 S.W.2d 878, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1224 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

*879 II ADD, C. J.

The appellant Colburn was the owner of several judgments which- had been rendered against one of the appellees, J. D. Ward, in Oklahoma, and of one judgment which had been rendered against Ward in Potter county, Tex., in favor of one Davis. On December 30, 1927, Colburn filed this .suit against Ward, R. E. Snell, Jr., the Invader Drilling Company, R. J. W. Oil Company, First National Oil Company, National Bank of Commerce, Kay County tías Company, Phillips Petroleum Company, and Humble Oil & Refining Company, to recover property alleged to have been conveyed to his codefendants by Ward in fraud of creditors; further alleging that Ward had conspired with his codefendants to conceal his property from his creditors.

After the filing of this suit, Ward was adjudicated a bankrupt on September 28, 1928, and on the 15th day of December, 1928, E. D. Hammond was appointed and qualified as trustee of Ward’s estate. As such trustee, he was ordered by the bankrupt court on October 24, 1929, to intervene in this case, and to have himself substituted as party plaintiff in lieu of Colburn, and to prosecute the suit as the trustee of the estate of Ward, and was further ordered not to abandon or disclaim any interest in the property for which Colburn had sued. Hammond, as trustee, was permitted to intervene herein by an order of- the district court of Hutchinson county, made and entered April 2, 1930.

The appellees Ward and his codefendants alleged that by the adjudication of Ward as a bankrupt and the appointment and qualification of Hammond as trustee, the latter became vested by operation' of law with the title and interest that Ward previously' held in •the property involved. That Colburn then had no specific lien on any of said property, in that he had filed claims in the bankrupt court against Ward for the amount of his several judgments, proved said claims as unsecured debts, specifically stating that he held no securities for any of said debts. That said claims were filed subsequent to the institution of this suit, and before the election of I-Iammond as trustee August 31, 1928, and Colburn had thereby waived any lien which he might have had by virtue of any of said judgments and any lien resulting, if any, from the filing of his creditor’s bill. That Colburn had participated in the election of Hammond as trustee, voting to the extent of his claims, thereby waiving any lien he might have had, and is estopped by all of said facts to contest the trustee’s absolute right to maintain this cause of action instead of Colburn.

The right of Hammond to be substituted as plaintiff! herein in lieu of Colburn was heard on the 20th day of October 1930, and resulted in an order reciting that the matters of fact therein set forth were true, and dismissing Colburn as plaintiff from the case without prejudice to the right of the trustee to maintain the suit as plaintiff on his plea of intervention.

On the 23d day of October, 1930, the court entered another order which recited the proceedings in the order of October 20, 1930, which further states that other evidence was introduced by Colburn, and upon the hearing the court; by said order, “confirms and ratifies the order heretofore entered on the 20th day of October, 1930, and here and now orders, adjudges, and decrees that the said suit of J. O. Colburn vs. the said R. E. Snell, Jr., J. D. Ward, Invader Drilling Co., R. J. W. Oil Co., et al. be and the same is hereby dismissed with prejudice -as to the said J. O. Colburn and he is now ordered not to prosecute this suit further.” Colburn excepted to this order, but gave no notice of appeal.

On the 25th of October, 1930, he filed his motion to set aside the last-mentioned order, and assigned as further grounds that the court erred in entering its order of April 3, 1930, permitting Hammond to intervene in the case, and to displace him as plaintiff. He attached to his motion an agreement which his attorney Dewberry hád made withHjh^tfcu torney -of Hammond in w^jch it is supumed that the order entered on April 3,1930, should be modified by striking therefrom the words “and is substituted as party plaintiff herein in lieu of said original plaintiff J. O. Colburn.” This motion was considered by the court, and on December 1, 1930, an order was entered which recites that the suit of Colburn against Snell et al. “be and the same is hereby dismissed with prejudice to the said J. O. Col-burn and he is now ordered not to prosecute same further.” Said order further provides that it shall be without prejudice to the rights of the trustee. Colburn excepted to this order of December 1st and gave notice of appeal, And thereafter, on the 19th day of December, filed his appeal bond which describes the order of December 1, 1930.

The so-called order of December 1,1930, is, in our opinion, the final judgment in the case, as it disposes of all the parties to the action. As to the trustee Hammond, it sustains exceptions to his plea of intervention and strikes out his “Amended Answer,” because it was not filed in accordance with an order of court made on the 20th of October, or in conformity with the agreement contained in certain letters. This amended pleading was filed November 12, 1930, and there appears in the record a letter from the trial judge, addressed to the attorney of the trustee, which states: “I have extended the time in this matter until November 17, 1930.”

On account of the imperfect and confusing condition in which we find the transcript in this case, we have been greatly hampered and delayed in the consideration of the *880 questions presented. District & County Court Rule No. S5 requires that, in making a transcript, the proceedings shall be entered in the order of time in which they occurred. This rule has been utterly disregarded in the preparation of this transcript. We find" the pages numbered from 1 to 38. After page 38,, the pages are numbered from 29 to 122, and in briefing, the references to the record are made without regard to this improper and double paging. A transcript should be paged in accordance with District & County Court Rule 89. The index to the transcript is not in accordance with rule 92. There appears to have been five “orders” made in the case, and they are entered without regard to their respective dates, and, with two exceptions, the index does not inform us of the nature of the order or its date. There has been incorporated in the transcript the statement of facts, which includes the evidence introduced on what we presume to be the hearing of the plea in abatement. This statement of facts has no place in the transcript. It is not a part' of a bill of exceptions, and should have been made a part of the statement of facts. A transcript prepared in such disregard of the plain rules of procedure is not entitled to consideration, and, in considering it, we are not to be understood as setting a precedent and precluding a dismissal upon the court’s own motion of appeals, based upon such defective records which may be filed here in the future.

The first contention we will consider is the action of the court in dismissing the trustee Hammond from the case. On October 29, 1930, Keffer, the attorney for Hammond, wrote the district judge as follows:

“In re: Colburn v. Ward et al.
“Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 S.W.2d 878, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colburn-v-ward-texapp-1931.