Conn v. Campbell

24 S.W.2d 813, 119 Tex. 82, 1930 Tex. LEXIS 103
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1930
DocketNo. 5447.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 813 (Conn v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conn v. Campbell, 24 S.W.2d 813, 119 Tex. 82, 1930 Tex. LEXIS 103 (Tex. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Judge CRITZ

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This is an original mandamus proceeding primarily involving a conflict of jurisdiction between the District Court of Orange County, Texas, and the District Court of Harris County, Texas. The record, including the pleadings in this court, and the exhibits filed herein comprises several hundred pages, and we cannot state all of the pleadings and proceedings had in the two. district courts and the pleadings and exhibits here without making this opinion unduly extended: We shall therefore content ourselves with a sufficient statement to make clear our holding.

On July 29, 1926, John B. Warren filed a suit in the District Court of Harris County, Texas, against Gulf Production Company and Gulf Pipe Line Company, both corporations, to recover judgment against said corporation defendants fixing and establishing his rights and title to certain oil royalties, for damages, interest and costs of suit. The suit in Harris County was styled John B. Warren, No. 125,458 v. Gulf Production Company et al. Warren’s right to recover in the Harris County suit was predicated primarily on two alleged written irrevocable powers of attorney, coupled with an interest, alleged to have been executed and delivered to him by certain parties whom wé designate Granger heirs, dated December 4, 1920, and December 5, 1921, respectively. Later Warren filed his first amended petition; then later a second amended petition; and still later a third amended petition. On November 8, 1927, J. A. Conn intervened in the Harris County suit claiming an interest in the subject matter of the litigation, by reason of a written conveyance, and later Conn filed an amended petition. We do not think it necessary to further state the contents of the Conn petitions.

*85 The corporation defendants in the Harris County suit filed original, and several amended answers and bills of interpleader, and interpleaded the Granger heirs thereby making them parties to the Harris County suit. After the filing of the Harris County suit, and after the Granger heirs had been made parties thereto by the interpleaders of the two corporation defendants, and after other proceedings which we do not think necessary to mention they, the Granger heirs, filed a separate and independent suit in Orange County, Texas, styled Sarah Jane Granger, Guardian, et al. v. John B. Warren et al., No. 5870, wherein they sought to recover of the defendants in the latter suit, such defendants being plaintiff, intervener, and the corporation defendants in the Harris County suit, the identical moneys and royalties involved in the Harris County suit, predicating their right of recovery in the Orange County suit on the alleged invalidity of the two powers of attorney and conveyance, made the basis of the claims of plaintiff and intervener in the Harris County suit, and seeking to cancel and annul these powers of attorney and conveyances.

Later the plaintiffs in the Orange County suit filed their first amended petition basing their right to recover substantially upon the same grounds as in their original petition, and prayed for an injunction. On the plaintiff’s first amended petition in the Orange County suit, and the. answer and a cross bill by Mose Granger et al., in the latter cause, the District Judge of Orange County granted an injunction, and appointed a receiver. By this writ of injunction the relators were enjoined from prosecuting the Harris County suit, and a receiver was appointed to take charge of the subject matter of that cause. This injunction and order appointing a receiver was granted in vacation without notice and without a hearing. The relators here, who were plaintiff and intervener in the Harris County suit, appealed from the order granting the injunction, and appointing a receiver to the Court of Civil Appeals for the 9th. district at Beaumont. Also, on the return day of the Orange County District Court the relators here filed in the Orange County District Court their plea in abatement, setting up the pendency of the Harris County suit. This plea in abatement was overruled by the District Court of Orange County. Relators appealed from the order of the District Court of Orange County granting an injunction and appointing a receiver but the judgment of the Orange County District Court was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals at Beaumont *86 without an opinion, and thereafter said court overruled relators’ motion for rehearing.

The Harris County suit, No. 125,458, was set down for trial on its merits April 16, 1928, but the Court of Civil Appeals at Beaumont, issued a writ of prohibition and injunction, enjoining and prohibiting the relators and the Honorable Roy F. Campbell; District Judge of Hams County from further proceedings in the Harris County suit. All of the proceedings in the Harris County suit were then suspended until it was set for trial on its merits for February 26, 1929. Also. the plaintiff and intervener in the Harris County suit, who are relators here, filed in that suit their petition for an injunction to enjoin further prosecution of the Orange County suit. The alleged grounds of this application for injunction were that the plaintiffs and cross plaintiffs in the Orange County suit had been duly interpleaded in the Harris County suit, and that the subject matter of the two suits were substantially the same, and inasmuch as the District Court of Harris County had prior jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter relators were entitled to an injunction to prohibit the plaintiffs and cross plaintiffs, and the Gulf Production Company, Gulf Pipe Line Company and also the Humble Oil & Refining Company from prosecuting the Orange County suit. The Judge of the District Court of Harris County, 55th judicial district, to whom this petition was presented, entered an order against the - parties to said Orange County suit, requiring them to show cause on a date named, why the injunction should not be granted. The Court of Civil Appeals at Beaumont then issued a writ of prohibition and injunction enjoining the relators, and the District Judge of Harris County from proceeding further in the Harris County suit. It will thus be seen that notwithstanding the fact that the District Court of Harris County had first obtained jurisdiction of the subject matter of the litigation in the two suits, and substantially all the parties, the plaintiff and intervener, and the corporation defendants, in the Harris County suit, together with the district judges of Harris County are prevented by the several injunctions and prohibitory writs from proceeding in any way with the Harris County suit.

As above stated there are many instruments and proceedings filed with the. record here which we have not mentioned, but we think we have made a sufficient statement to show the controlling issues involved in the instant proceeding.

Also we think it proper to state that we gather from the record that the Court of Civil Appeals at Beaumont filed no written opinion *87 in the case involving the appeal from the District Court of Orange County, Texas, and we are therefore not informed as to what theory that court acted on in affirming the orders and decrees of the District Court of Orange County.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 813, 119 Tex. 82, 1930 Tex. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conn-v-campbell-tex-1930.