Eddingston v. Acom

287 S.W. 96, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1171
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 5, 1926
DocketNo. 1296. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 96 (Eddingston v. Acom) 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
Eddingston v. Acom, 287 S.W. 96, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1171 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This was an original suit in equity in the nature of a bill of review, filed in the district court of Jefferson county (Sixtieth judicial district) by the appellant, A. T. Eddingston, as plaintiff below, against O. H. Acorn, G. O. Daniels, and L. L. Eden. Appellant’s purpose in bringing the suit was *97 to have reviewed, canceled, and set aside as to himself a certain money judgment that had been rendered by the same district court in favor of the appellee here, Acom, against appellant, Daniels, and Eden, for the sum of $6,605.92. The style of the cause in which that judgment was rendered was O. H. Acom v. A. T. Eddingston et al., No. 17707 on the docket of the district court. That judgment will be hereinafter referred to as the judgment in the former suit, and it will be found reported in the Southwestern Reporter, vol. 259, at page 948. The opinion was by this court, and a full, and complete statement of facts underlying the controversy, as well as its history and finál determination, will be found in the opinion of this court on the former appeal, and no useful purpose would be served by reiterating the facts which give rise to the controversy between the parties in the former suit, and we will therefore not undertake to do so.

This suit was filed almost immediately aft" er the judgment in the former suit had become final, and the grounds upon which that judgment is attacked by the bill in this suit were that appellant, Eddingston, was prevented from making a full and complete defense against Acorn’s cause of action in the former suit by accident and mistake. The bill in this suit alleges, in substance, that the former suit between the parties had been pending' in the district court of Jefferson county for more than two years before Acom in that suit claimed by amended petition that appellant had agreed and promised in the written bill of sale which was executed to him by Daniels and Eden to assume and pay the indebtedness-that Daniels and Eden owed to Acom for merchandise, etc., while Daniels and Eden were engaged in the business of rice farming during the years 1919 and 1920; that such^allegation was not made by Acom in the former suit until on the morning of May 3, 1923, the day on which the former suit went to trial; that up to that time it had only been claimed by Acom in the former suit that appellant, Ed-dingston, was liable to Acom on the theory that he was a partner in the rice business with Daniels and Eden; that when the former suit was reached for trial and the allegation was made by Acom for the first time that appellant promised in the written bill of sale to assume and pay off the indebtedness owed by Daniels and Eden to Acom, appellant’s main attorney, Hon. John M. Conley, was engaged in the trial of an important civil suit then pending on the docket of the district court of Orange county, and that the said Conley had been so engaged in the Orange, county litigation for a period of some 10 days at the time the former suit between the parties was called for trial, and that it was impossible for the said Conley to leave the Orange case and return to Beaumont to represent appellant in the former suit, and that appellant was represented in that suit by Mr. P. D. Renfro, who had just recently before become associated in the law practice with Judge Conley; that when Mr. Renfro, 'on the morning that the former suit went.to trial, discovered in the amended petition of Acom that he was asserting personal liability ■against appellant as defendant in that suit, on the ground that he had agreed in the written bill of sale to assume the payment of the Daniels and Eden indebtedness, he (Mr. Ren-fro) stated to Hon. E. A. McDowell, who was then the judge of the Sixtieth judicial district, that he could not go into trial in the former suit because the bill of sale from Daniels and Eden to Eddingston was locked up in Judge Conley’s safe in his law office, and that Mr. Renfro did not have access to the safe and did not know the combination, and that Judge Conley’s stenographer. Mrs. Beulah Morrison, was also absent from Judge Conley’s office, and was with him attending the trial of the litigation in.Orange county, and that it would be impossible for Mr. Itenfro to get into Judge Conley’s safe and get the bill of sale so that it might be used upon the trial ■ of the former suit until Judge Conley could return to his office in the city of Beaumont and unlock the safe; that thereupon Hon. E. A. McDowell stated to Mr. Renfro that he was very anxious for the former suit to go to trial, for the reason that it had been pending a long time, and that, the case being tried before the court without a jury, if counsel for Eddingston would proceed, the court would permit the bill of sale to be introduced in evidence as soon as it could be procured from Judge Conley’s office, and that the court would give such effect to that instrument, when produced, as it "should have; that, being promised by Judge McDowell that the bill of sale would be permitted in evidence and given its proper legal effect, as just stated, Mr. Renfro, as the only counsel for appellant in the former suit, proceeded to trial, after having fully denied under oath for his client that there was any partnership existing between Eddingston, Daniels, and Eden, and after having denied fully under oath that Ed-dingston had ever agreed in the bill of sale or otherwise to assume the indebtedness owed by Daniels and Eden to Acom; that, as soon as the evidence was all introduced upon the trial of the former suit, and on the next day after the trial had commenced, Hon. E. A. McDowell immediately announced from the bench that the judgment in that suit would be in favor of Acom, the plaintiff, against Eddingston, Daniels, and Eden for the full amount claimed by Aeom, and that Hon. E. A. McDowell did, immediately upon conclusion of the evidence in that suit, render such judgment against appellant, Daniels, and Eden for the full amount that was claimed by Acom in that suit; that appellant’s attorney, Mr. Ren-fro, had been unable up to the time the evidence in the former suit was concluded to get into Judge Conley’s safe and get the bill of *98 sale, by the terms of which Acom was claiming appellant had assumed the payment of the indebtedness owed him by Daniels and Eden, and that in fact the bill of sale was not in Judge Conley’s safe, as appellant, in good faith, believed it to be at the time the announcement of ready for trial was made by his attorney in that suit, but that, on the contrary, the bill of sale had been, by accident, put in the wrong file in Judge Conley’s law office, and was not discovered by the most extraordinary efforts to do so until shortly after the opinion of this court had been rendered on the former appeal affirming the judgment of the district court in that suit; that both Judge Conley, his stenographer, 'Mrs. Morrison, Mr. Renfro, and others were extraordinarily diligent in trying to find the bill of sale from Daniels and Eden that all of them believed had been placed in Judge Conley’s safe; that Mrs. Morrison, Judge Conley’s stenographer, was taken suddenly ill after her return from Orange, and was confined to bed, where she remained for some 9 weeks, and could not thereafter pursue her search for the bill of sale, which appellant and his attorneys all thought was locked up in Judge Conley’s safe; that, when Mrs. Morrison became too ill to pursue the search for the bill of sale, extra assistance was invoked an,d procured in searching for the bill of sale, but without success.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 96, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eddingston-v-acom-texapp-1926.