Dickerson v. Hopkins

288 S.W. 1103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 17, 1926
DocketNo. 7641.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 1103 (Dickerson v. Hopkins) 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
Dickerson v. Hopkins, 288 S.W. 1103 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This appeal is from an order ¿ranting a temporary injunctiqn restraining appellants and others similarly situated from’ instituting suits in Webb county or elsewhere upon causes, of action affecting the subject-matter of this suit, which consists of the proceeds from the sale of certain oil properties in the Miranda field in Webb county. The fund in controversy amounts to nearly 81,000;000, and ■ various interests therein are asserted by several different groups of persons: It is not'deemed necessary to set out in detail .the history of the transactions which' gave- rise to the several claims of interest. It is perhaps sufficient to say that the Crown Central Petroleum Corporation purchased certain' oil properties from Wheat-ley & Wheatley, a partnership, and the Wheatley Oil' Company and the Wheatley Petroleum Company, Corporations, for a consideration of $825,000, of which $100,000 has been 'paid over to the Wheatley interests; that all the parties concede the validity of that sale to the Crown Central Company, which thereby, obtained legal title and possession of the properties; that those in one group of claimants assert that they were defrauded in the early stages of the development of the properties and were entitled to share, in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale to the. Crown Central Company; that those in ■ another- group, consisting of shareholders in the Wheatley interests, conceding good faith throughout all the transaction, each asserts a certain interest in the proceeds of the sale; that the Wheatley interests claim a definite portion of the proceeds of the sale,; and that as the custodian of the whole of those proceeds they must account to the rightful owners of different interests therein. It will be observed from this very general statement, then, that the proceeds of the sale of said properties constitutes the subject-matter of the litigation. This appears to be the controlling fact of this appeal.

On March 29th of this year George Hopkins and two others filed this suit in the district court of the Seventy-Third judicial district of Bexar county, alleging that they were shareholders in the Wheatley corporations and partnerships; that said corporations and partnerships had been dissolved and had entirely ceased to function, and that the defendants C. A. Wheatley and others named in the petition were the last appointed ■and acting trustees and representatives of the Wheatley concerns; that the plaintiffs as shareholders in said concerns were entitled to share in the distribution of the proceeds of the sale of the oil properties to the Crown Central Company; that various other parties were asserting interests in said proceeds, which comprise the whole of the assets of said concerns; and that the defendants had failed and refused to account to plaintiffs or pay them their shares of said proceeds. The petitioners prayed for judgment for their said shares and for the appointment of a receiver to take over the assets of the Wheat-ley concerns and distributed the same to “those entitled to receive same in their due proportion.” "

Upon the filing of the suit the trial court ordered that notice be given the defendants to appear on April 15, 1926, and show cause why the receiver should not be dppointed as prayed for. Three days later, on April 1, the plaintiffs filed in the cause an application for injunction restraining A. R. Arndt and 63 others, together with t-heir attorneys, J. T. Dickerson and two others, from filing any suit in Webb county or elsewhere, “involving the subject-matter involved in' this suit, and* asking for the appointment of a réeeiver for said funds (being the proceeds from the sale hereinabove mentioned), or' for any other extraordinary relief affecting said funds or-the parties to this suit.” It was alleged in. the bill that)the defendants complained of' were threatening' and- intended to institute-suit in the district court of Webb county to' recover of the Wheatley interests and all others concerned the proceeds from said sale of said properties, and for the appointment of a master to audit the affairs of the Wheat-ley interests and ascertain the amount of said proceeds, and for the appointment of a *1105 receiver to take over said proceeds and distribute them to the rightful owners, to be as-' certained in said proceedingls.| The trial judge granted a temporary restraining order as prayed for and ordered notice to issue to the defendants named in the hill to appear on April 15th and show cause why the temporary injunction should not he granted as prayed for. Upon a hearing on that date the facts alleged in the bill were established and the temporary injunction was’ granted. It is from this interlocutory order that the defendants in the proceeding have appealed.

We conclude that the injunction was rightfully granted and that the judgment should be affirmed. It is obvious from the whole record that the matter or thing in controversy in this' suit as well as in the suit which appellants were preparing to institute in Webb county consists of the proceeds of the, sale of the properties involved to the Crown Central Petroleum Corporation. All the necessary parties to this action as well as to the threatened action claim some character of interest in that subject-matter, and the ultimate object of all is the adjudication of those claims and the distribution of the fund in accordance with that adjudication.

The Bexar county tribunal has competent jurisdiction over the subject-matter and of the persons involved in the controversy thereover. The filing of this action and prayer for the appointment of a receiver of the fund involved definitely fixed the jurisdictional status of the Bexar tribunal, and gave it the power and burdened it with the duty to assume custody of the fund, to bring all claimants into that court, to adjudicate their claims, and distribute the funds in accordance with that adjudication. Cleveland v. Ward (Tex. Sup.) 285 S. W. 1063.

Having thus obtained jurisdiction over the res, that court had the power, and it was its duty, to preserve and protect its jurisdiction by any' or all the extraordinary writs incidental to its general powers. It could impound the fund and place it in the hands of a receiver of its own appointment, or it could preserve the status of the fund by injunction until the rights of all claimants were settled in that forum. In this case, pending consideration of the appointment of a receiver, the court resorted to the writ of injunction to prevent interference with its jurisdiction by the filing of other suits in other courts by somei of the claimants. This was proper practice, and commendable, for it would be improvident to plunge the estate into receivership and burden it with the large expense thereof, without first ascertaining with certainty that such coiirse was necessary. And injunction was a proper and, as the record discloses, an efficacious expedient for preserving the status quo pending consideration of the proposed receivership. The record discloses that there are more than 1,800 probable claimants to the fund in controversy. This action served primarily to bring some of the claimants and the stakeholders of the fund before the trial court, and the stakeholders, admitting the justice of some of the claims and asserting the existence of many others, pray that the respective rights of all the claimants be here adjudicated in order that they may rightfully distribute the fund held by them. In this situation the court is bound to protect its jurisdiction over that fund—must conclude all' claimants thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 1103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickerson-v-hopkins-texapp-1926.