Collins v. Herd

295 S.W. 216, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 358
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 1927
DocketNo. 519.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 216 (Collins v. Herd) 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
Collins v. Herd, 295 S.W. 216, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 358 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

This suit was filed October 16,1926, in the district court of Hill county, by appellee against Collins, Dupree & Crenshaw, alleged to be residents of Hill county, Tex., and Pat M. Neff, alleged to reside in McLennan county, Tex. For cause of action appellee alleged, in substance, that the said Collins, Dupree & Crenshaw had in their possession the sum of $3,966.56 which belonged to and was the property of appellee, but that said Collins, Dupree & Crenshaw were refusing to deliver said money to her on account of a claim to an interest in same asserted by the said Pat M. Neff. Appellee prayed for judgment against the claim of the defendant Neff, decreeing that he had no *217 interest in said fund, and for an order directing the said Collins, Dupree & Crenshaw to pay same to her, and for general and special relief.

Collins, Dupree & Crenshaw answered by general denial, but admitted they did hold in their possession the sum of $3,966.64 which belonged to plaintiff, Mrs. Herd, or her attorney, Pat M. Neff; that they had no interest in same; and that they there and then tendered into court said sum of money, same being placed in the hands of W. W. DeShazo, district clerk of Hill county, Tex., the same to await the orders and judgment of the court as to the ownership of same, and prayed that they be permitted to go hence without day and recover their costs, and that the court in its final judgment release said defendants from any liability to plaintiff or td the defendant Neff, and that said plaintiff and defendant Neff be required to execute a proper release to said defendants by reason of the payment of said sum of money above referred to.

The cause was returnable to the November term of court, which was November 2, 1926, and on October 30, 1926, the defendant Neff filed his plea of privilege, which was in due form, to be sued in McLennan county, the county of his residence. On the call of the case on the appearance docket on November 3, 1926, it was made known to the court that defendant Neff had filed a plea of privilege to be sued in McLennan county, whereupon •one of the attorneys for appellee, Mrs. Herd, expressed an intention to controvert said plea, and the court entered on his appearance docket, “passed for orders.” No controverting affidavit was ever filed. On November 6, 1926, on motion of appellee, Mrs. Herd, therefor, the court dismissed the defendant Neff as a party to said suit. On November •8,1926, the case was called and tried, and the court entered his judgment decreeing that the sum of $3,966.64 held by the defendants Collins, Dupree & Crenshaw “is the money and property of the plaintiff, Mrs. M. IT. Herd,” and directing the clerk of the court to pay over said sum of money to the plaintiff, Mrs. Herd, which was paid over to her ■on the same day. On November 10, 1926, the defendant Neff presented his plea of privilege and same was overruled by the court, and on the same day the defendant Neff filed his motion to set aside the order of the court dismissing him from the suit as a party defendant, and on the same day, November 10, 1926, the defendant Neff filed his motion for a new trial. On December 13, 1926, the court, after hearing all the evidence introduced in support of and in opposition to the motion to set aside the order dismissing defendant Neff from the suit, overruled same, to which the defendant excepted, and the court on the same day overruled the motion of the defendant Neff for a new trial, to which action the defendant Neff duly excepted and gave notice of appeal. The defendant Neff alone has appealed and as sole appellant presents the record here for review, and will hereafter be referred to as appellant.

Under several propositions appellant contends the filing of a plea of privilege in due time sufficient on its face by appellant deprived the court of jurisdiction to enter any other judgment than one transferring the case, as no controverting affidavit was filed as provided by statute, and therefore the trial court was without jurisdiction to enter the order dismissing said cause as to defendant Neff, and the trial court was without jurisdiction to render judgment for plaintiff, and the court was without jurisdiction to order the clerk to pay the money in 'question to Mrs. Herd, and all such orders by the trial court were null and void. The record' discloses that on November 6,1926, appellee filed a motion making known to the court that she did not longer desire to prosecute this suit as to appellant Neff, but wished to dismiss as to him as a party defendant herein and further prosecute this suit ohly against the other defendants herein. This motion was on the same day granted, and defendant Neff dismissed from said suit as a party defendant and plaintiff permitted to further prosecute this suit against the other defendants, etc. At the time this order of dismissal was entered, appellant Neff had filed no answer or any pleading of any kind except his plea of privilege, which had not been and was never controverted.

In a very recent decision by the Commission of Appeals, Section B, approved by the Supreme Court, not yet officially reported, in the case of H. H. Watson v. Cobb Grain Co. et al., it is held that where a plea of privilege has not even been controverted and on the hearing of said uncontroverted plea plaintiff has the right at any time before the trial court announces his decision on such plea, to take a nonsuit, which is the same as dismissing his suit as to all the defendants; and if he has the right to dismiss as to all the defendants, it necessarily follows he has the right to dismiss as to a part of them and to proceed with the case as to the others, in so far as the plea of privilege may affect the question. Jurisdiction is of two kinds, jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the suit and jurisdiction of the person of the defendant. There can be no contention in this case that the court did not have jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the suit, or that the court ever lost such jurisdiction. When citation was served on defendant Neff, the court acquired jurisdiction of his person, and the effect of the plea of privilege filed by him was to deprive the court of jurisdiction of his person, in the absence of a controverting affidavit and a hearing on the issues thus made, *218 and' deprived the court of jurisdiction to enter any judgment or decree binding upon him, but did not deprive the court of jurisdiction to dismiss said cause as to said defendant. It is not necessary for a court to have jurisdiction of the person of a defendant in order to dismiss as to such defendant. Neither do we think the judgment and orders entered after the case was dismissed as to appellant were void, as contended by appellant, upon the ground that the pendency of an un-.controverted plea of privilege deprived the court of jurisdiction to enter any order except one transferring said cause, but were void upon other grounds hereafter discussed. Said judgment and orders are binding, if upon any one, only as between the remaining parties to said suit and do not purport to be binding’ upon appellant. On the authority of the case cited above, we overrule all assignments and propositions raising the questions here discussed.

Under other assignments and propositions appellant contends that he had an interest in the subject-matter of this suit and was a necessary party, and it was therefore error for the trial court to dismiss him as a party litigant herein.

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 216, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-herd-texapp-1927.