Drane v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.

4 S.W.2d 241, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 220
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 1928
DocketNo. 611.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 241 (Drane v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.) 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
Drane v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., 4 S.W.2d 241, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 220 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

BARCUS, J.

Appellants filed this suit against eleven different oil companies and the Powell Salt Water Company, seeking damages to 746.8 acres of land owned by them and located within the levee district on Richland and Chambers creeks in Navarro county, and seeking an injunction restraining appellees from permitting salt water and other mineral waters from running down said creeks along the levee embankments surrounding said land. Appellants alleged that when the levee was built inclosing said land owned by them, the channels of said creeks were changed to run along by the -levee embankments on tbe outside of the levee inclosing their lands. They further alleged that appellees had a large number of oil wells on the tributaries of Richland and Chambers creeks, and that they had permitted and allowed a large quantity of salt water and oth- < er mineral waters and oil products to flow into said creeks; that said salt water and other mineral water and refuse oil from said creeks had percolated under said land by subterranean flow or seepage, and had by hydrostatic force and capillary attraction been gradually driven upward toward the surface on their land within said levee and had caused said land to be materially damaged, and that unless restrained, said salt water and other mineral water and refuse oil would by said process utterly destroy their land. The cause was submitted to a jury on ten special issues. The first three issues submitted were, in substance:

(1) Whether the appellees, and each of them, acted jointly and together in the discharge of said salt and other mineral water • into Richland and Chambers creeks.

(2) Whether the appellees, and each of them, acting jointly and together with the other persons and corporations named in the *243 easement or right of way agreement, discharged the salt and mineral waters into Richland and Chambers creeks (the other parties named in the easement being 24 different individuals and corporations in addition to appellees).

(3) Whether the salt or mineral water discharged into said creeks had percolated through the water sand of said channel and gone out under the lands of appellants and damaged the same, or any part thereof.

The court instructed the jury that if they, answered issue No. 3 in the negative, they need not answer any of the subsequent questions. The jury answered each of the first three issues in the negative and, by reason of the court’s instruction, did not answer any of the remaining questions. There was no objection made by appellants to said instruction as given nor as to the manner and form of said issues as submitted, and no contention was made by appellants until after the jury returned its verdict that the issues as submitted were not properly raised by the pleadings and the evidence. Appellants requested a large number of special issues, some of them embracing, in effect, some of the issues submitted by the trial court. Upon the findings of the jury the court entered judgment denying appellants any recovery.

By their propositions 1 to 4, appellants contend that the evidence does not support the answer of the jury to any one of the three issues which the jury answered. The statement of facts embraces 1,165 pages. Without attempting to state the evidence that will support the answers of the jury, we will state that we have carefully examined the record and think the evidence is sufficient to support the answer to each of said three issues. Under the first issue as submitted, the jury, in order to have.answered the question in the affirmative, were required to find that appellees, and each of them, were acting together and jointly in the discharge of salt water and other minerals in Richland and Chambers creeks, and for the jury to have answered the second issue in the affirmative they were required to find that appel-lees, and each of them, were acting together and jointly and acting with 24 other parties in the discharge of salt water and other minerals into Richland and Chambers creeks. We have examined the statement of facts, and find that the evidence with reference to whether the parties named were acting jointly and together is very conflicting, and we cannot say that the jury’s findings with ref-"erenee thereto are not supported by the testimony. In order for the jury to have answered the'third issue in the affirmative, they were required to find that the salt or mineral water which had been discharged into Richland and Chambers creeks had percolated under the levee and out under the land of appellants to such an extent that same had injured said land. There are hundreds of pages of evidence in the record on this question. It was a very sharply contested issue, and the evidence is amply sufficient to support the jury’s finding on said issue. Each of said questions having submitted an issue of fact, and the evidence being sufficient to support the jury’s findings, we will not disturb same, and said propositions are overruled.

By propositions 5 to 11, appellants contend that the trial court committed error in refusing to consider their supplemental motion for a new trial, which they filed some 25 days after the adjournment of court. The record shows this cause was tided at the April term of court, which by operation of law would have adjourned on June 25th. On June 25th the trial court made an order extending the term of said court until July 2d in order that the trial of this cause might be completed. On June 28th, after the cause had been given to the jury, all of the attorneys in open court verbally agreed that the losing party might have 30 days after July 2d, the time the court had fixed for its adjournment, in which .to file a motion for rehearing. The court, however, refused at said time to extend the term of court for that length of time, on the theory that he perhaps did not have the authority to extend the April term of court over into the July term of court, which began on July 4th. The jury returned its verdict on June 28th, and on July 2d, within the time to which the court had extended the April term, appellants filed their motion for rehearing, which was on said date overruled, and appellants excepted and gave notice of appeal, and on July 20th perfected their appeal by filing and having approved their appeal bond. On July 27th appellants filed their supplemental motion for rehearing and set up, in addition to the things contained in their original motion, misconduct on the part of the jury. The trial court refused to consider said motion on the ground that the term of court had expired and the cause had been appealed and that it did not, therefore, have jurisdiction to hear and determine said motion. Article 1915 of the Revised Civil Statutes, provides that the judge of a district court may in vacation, by agreement of all parties, make any orders or try cases (with certain exceptions) the same as in term time. Appellants contend' that under this statute the trial court had a right, since all the parties had agreed that a motion for rehearing might be filed within 30 days after the adjournment of court, to hear and determine the supplemental motion filed within said 30 days after -the court had adjourned. We cannot agree with this contention. While it is unquestionably the law that the trial court may by agreement of all parties hear and try certain causes in vacation (Cowan v. Capps [Tex. *244 Civ. App.] 278 S. W. 283; Id. [Tex. Com. App.] 286 S. W. 161; Seagraves v. Green, 116 Tex. 220, 288 S. W. 417; Glenn v. Milam [Tex. Sup.] 263 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 241, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drane-v-humble-oil-refining-co-texapp-1928.