El Paso Townsite Co. v. Watts

227 S.W. 709, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 620
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 13, 1921
DocketNo. 1156.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 709 (El Paso Townsite Co. v. Watts) 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
El Paso Townsite Co. v. Watts, 227 S.W. 709, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 620 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

This suit was brought by appellee, J. J. Watts, against El Paso Town-site Company, a corporation, E. B. Donaldson, as trustee in a deed of trust, M. W. Stanton, individually and as trustee with an interest, Lloyd W. Stanton, Marvin W. Stanton and Hale McClure Stanton, the last named two, minors, to recover on two promissory notes, one in the sum of $2,500, and the interest note in the sum of $100, and to foreclose the deed of trust on certain real estate situate in the city and county of El Paso, Tex., given by the appellant El Paso Townsite Company to plaintiff to secure the above principal note, interest, and costs, including attorney’s fees, as expressed in the principal note, and an assumption of the payment of the notes by defendant M. W. Stanton, expressed in the writing.

The suit was filed on March 25, 1919, and was tried on appellee’s second amended original petition, and defendant’s first amended original answer. We need not state the issues presented in the pleadings of these parties, as is done in briefs filed, other than those upon which the trial was had, except as it might be necessary in discussing questions arising thereon and presented in some one or more of the assignments.

Defendant Donaldson filed a disclaimer. M. W. Stanton was appointed guardian ad litem for the two minors, and filed answer for himself, individually and as trustee, and as guardian ad litem for the two minors. Lloyd W. Stanton joins in the answer of the other defendants. The answers of defendants, other than that of Donaldson, embraced a motion to make parties, motion to strike out the disclaimer of defendant Donaldson, nonjoin-der of necessary parties, special exceptions, general denial, payment of the sum of $1,500 on the notes by defendant M. W. Stanton, want of authority in the El Paso Townsite Company to extend the due date of the principal note.

The trial resulted in an instructed verdict for appellee and against the El Paso Town-site Company and M. W. Stanton, individually, in the sum of $1,528.46, and interest from date of judgment, and attorney’s fees, and for foreclosure of the lien expressed in the trust deed on the real estate described, as to all defendants. All defendants, except Donaldson, excepted and gave notice, and have perfected an appeal.

Appellant’s first assignment, submitted as a proposition, reads:'

“The trial court erred in overruling and not sustaining the third ground or paragraph of the motion of defendant filed on May 3, 1920, in that the court thereby erred in peremptorily setting down said cause in violation of the rules of the bar committee, and over the protest and objections of the defendants made in open court, as fully shown by said motions and bills of exceptions based thereon, (a) In this connection the trial court erred in failing and refusing to postpone the hearing of said cause, and in forcing an immediate trial thereof, after the plaintiff had failed and refused to have sayl cause set by the bar committee and rules -there *711 of, as fully shown by said motions and bills of exceptions based thereon.”

The case was originally -filed in the Forty-First judicial district court on March 25, 1919, and thereafter transferred to the Sixty-Fifth district court for trial. After announcment of ready to try in the latter court and the trial had proceeded to some length, by consent of all parties, the announcement of ready to try was withdrawn on application of plaintiff. After reciting the above facts the order of the court proceeds as follows:

“Therefore be it ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiff’s announcement of ready be, and the same is, hereby withdrawn, and cause postponed, to be set in regular order.”

Thereafter the Sixty-Fifth district court on its own motion retransferred the case to the Forty-First district court for trial. Thereafter the last-named court granted defendants leave to amend, whereupon defendants filed their first amended original answer in said court upon which they went tQ trial. In that amendment defendants sought to have the court, on various grounds, to re-transfer the case to the Sixty-Fifth district court for trial, and to refer the case to the bar committee for setting.

The only error urged in the assignment is that the court set the case for trial in its regular order, and overruled defendants’ motion and insistence that the ease be set for trial by the bár committee of El Paso county, under its rules and regulations for setting civil cases for trial in the district courts of El Paso county.

[1, 2] It is sufficient to say that the statutes of this state, article 1943, and those immediately following, provide that all suits shall be called in the order in which they stand on the docket to which they severally belong, unless otherwise ordered by the court, and tried when called, unless continued or postponed to a future day of the term, or placed at the end of the docket to be called again for trial in regular order. The Legislature has never recognized, so far as we know, any bar committee in any of the counties in this state,, as having jurisdiction or power over or in connection with, or in aid of the courts in setting cases for trial, whether in or out of the regular order for trial. It is not shown here that the Forty-First district, by order, had authorized the bar committee to set cases in that court for trial, or to set this particular case. There is no doubt but that the bar committee has well and long rendered most efficient service to the district courts in El Paso county in setting civil cases for call; but it can hardly be claimed that a litigant can, as a matter of right, have his ease set down for trial by the bar committee; especially is that true .where the court in which the case is pending has made no order authorizing the bar committee to set the eases for call on the trial docket, or to set this particular case. Appellants do not show that their interests were in any wise prejudiced by the refusal of the court to refer the setting of the case to the bar committee. The court was not in error, as suggested in the second assignment, in refusing to postpone the hearing to a future day of the term, on the ground, as stated, that on the former partial hearing of the case in the Sixty-Fifth district court it developed that other parties than plaintiff owned or had an interest in the note sued on. The court trying the case could, on the hearing, determine the question as to the necessity of bringing in other parties having or claiming to have an interest in the subject-matter of the suit. The notes were made payable to plaintiff.

[3] The third assignment presents no reversible error.

The fourth assignment claims error on the ground and to the effect that there was “variance between the allegation of said note and indorsement thereon as to the ownership thereof,” and that because of said variance the note should not have been admitted in evidence over objection. The case was tried on appellee’s second amended original petition. The $2,500 note sued upon is made payable to appellee, or order, a copy of which was attached to and made a part of the original petition, marked as an exhibit, referred to and by reference made a part of the second amended petition. Plaintiff alleged that he is the owner of said notes and lien. The petition makes no mention of any indorsements on the principal note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 709, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-paso-townsite-co-v-watts-texapp-1921.