Davidson v. Jones, Sullivan & Jones

196 S.W. 571, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 701
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 1917
DocketNo. 220.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 571 (Davidson v. Jones, Sullivan & Jones) 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
Davidson v. Jones, Sullivan & Jones, 196 S.W. 571, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 701 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This suit was filed- by appellees, Jones, Sullivan & Jones, a partner *572 ship composed of Mary E. Jones, E. P. Sullivan, and T. E. Jones, in one of the justice’s courts of Nacogdoches county, against John ' P. Davidson, wherein appellees sought to recover a money judgment against appellant for the sum of $399.99, as actual damages. The record discloses that on the 12th day of January, 1910, appellant, by written contract of that date, leased and rented to the partnership of Jones, Sullivan & Jones, for a period of three years from, that date, the lower story of a certain brick building in the town of Nacogdoches, owned by appellant, and which had theretofore been used as a re&-taurant, this portion of the 'building consisting of several rooms. The consideration for this lease, as specified in the contract, was $60 per month, to he paid monthly in advance for the entire period of three years. The record further shows that appellees paid the rent under this contract up to March 12, 1916, there being a receipt in the record from appellant to appellees showing that fact. At the time this written contract of lease was executed, said partnership also purchased of appellant the restaurant furniture, cooking utensils, etc., and all of the groceries then on hand in said restaurant, and paid appellant therefor. It was the intention of this partnership to nse and occupy this building, and carry on the business of a restaurant, which it commenced to do immediately upon taking possession. Appellees, in. their complaint in the justice court, alleged that appellant, about the last of February, 1916, over the protest and objection of appellees, and in violation of his contract of lease, entered upon said leased premises, and forcibly took possession ■of same, and refused to permit appellees to longer occupy said leaséd premises, therefore breaching his contract with appellees, to their damage in the sum of $61.53, and ap-pellees’ complaint further alleged that at the same time appellant forcibly took and converted certain articles of personal property then owned by them, and situate in said restaurant, which, at the time of such conversion was of the value of $138.46, to the damage of appellees in said amount, which two amounts aggregate $199.99. Appellant’s answer, as best we can gather from the transcript, consisted of exceptions and plea to the jurisdiction of the justice’s court to entertain ap-pellees’ suit, on the ground that the aggregate amount sued for by appellees was in excess of the jurisdiction of said court, and, further, by general denial, and also a special plea to the effect that appellees voluntarily turned back said leased premises to appellant, and the personal property therein claimed by appellees, in consideration for appellant’s releasing appellees from further liability under said lease contract. Upon trial in the justice’s court, without a jury, the court rendered judgment in favor of appellant. Appellees, in proper time, carried the case by appeal to the county court of Nacogdoches county, and upon trial in the last-named court, which was with a jury, verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of appellees for the sum of $100, with legal interest on that amount fro-m date of judgment, and appellant, in proper manner, has brought the ease, by appeal, to this court

It seems that when the case reached the county court, appellant ruled appellees for costs, and in response Mary E. Jones, one of the members of the partnership, filed a pauper’s oath, in which she stated that she and E. F. Sullivan and T. E. Jones, composing said partnership, were unable to pay the costs of court, or to- give security therefor. But there was no affidavit made by either of the other members of the firm, and therefore appellant contends that since neither of the other members of the firm filed an affidavit of inability to pay costs or give security therefor, the court erred in not sustaining his motion to dismiss the ease, which motion appellant duly made, and which the court overruled. The proposition under this assignment is as follows:

“When the defendant is required to give a bond to secure costs, and it appears from the pleadings that defendants consist of several persons, affidavit should be made by each of the defendants.”

In disposing of this assignment, we might say that the court might ignore it altogether, for the reason that the proposition thereunder is in no manner germane to the assignment; appellees were not defendants below, but were plaintiffs, and the proposition of law under this assignment is that defendants in a suit, when required to give a cost bond, and claimed inability to do so, each of such defendants should make an affidavit to that effect. We might dispose of this assignment by saying that we know of no rule of law that requires defendants in any court to give a cost bond, or to make affidavit of inability to pay costs. We presume that appellant means by this proposition that appellees should have each filed an affidavit of their inability to pay the costs, or to give security therefor.

If, in any case where several persons sue jointly as plaintiffs, each one can be required to make affidavit for himself of inability to pay costs or give security therefor, and an affidavit made by one of the plaintiffs in such a case for all of them would not be sufficient, still, we think that in this case, where the plaintiffs constitute a partnership, and sue as such, an affidavit by either of the members of the firm, to the effect that they are unable to pay the costs or give security therefor, is sufficient to entitle such plaintiffs to prosecute the cause as upon pauper’s oath under the statute; there being no contest of such oath.

We understand it to be the law that any member of a partnership in thi,s state can make an affidavit for Hie- firm in all matters and suits where an affidavit is required, and that is, in effect, what was done in this case. There seems to have been no contest *573 made by appellant of the affidavit made by Mary E. Jones.

If, however, we should be mistaken in this view, still we say that the action of the court in refusing to sustain appellant’s motion to dismiss for the want of proper affidavit of inability to pay costs or give security therefor by each of the members of said partnership, still such error on the part of the court was harmless, and has not resulted in any injury to appellant, for the reason that appellees recovered a judgment against appellant, which carried with it a judgment for costs in their favor. The assignment is overruled.

The second assignment is to the effect that the court erred in refusing to sustain appellant’s motion and exception to dismiss the suit, because the individual names of the persons composing the partnership of Jones, Sullivan & Jones, plaintiffs below, were not stated in the complaint of appellees, nor in the citation issued on such complaint. Such a motion was made by appellant below, both in the justice’s court and in the county court, and was overruled in both instances.

The proposition under this assignment is that the individual names of partners must be stated in the pleadings. Since this suit was commenced in a justice’s court, the strict rules of pleading required in courts of record were not applicable, and it was not required that the complaint of appellees in the justice’s court should be as specific in all particulars as would be required in a pleading filed in the county or district court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 571, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-jones-sullivan-jones-texapp-1917.