Ferguson v. Washburn

4 S.W.2d 574
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 2, 1928
DocketNo. 9099.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 574 (Ferguson v. Washburn) 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
Ferguson v. Washburn, 4 S.W.2d 574 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

In this action, under express disclaimer that it was in any respect founded upon libel, slander, or malicious prosecution, appellant sought $50,000 actual, special damages of the appellees, $40,000 of it for causing his defeat for re-election to the office of tax collector of Harris County for 1925-26, thereby depriving him of its revenues of $20,-000 for each year, and the remaining $10,000 for forcing him to incur in defending himself against their actions certain, items of expense for attorney’s fees, clerical hire, office expense, printing, etc.; his brief in this court thus in substance, epitomizing the grounds upon which his cause of action was based:

“Appellant set forth that all the appellees sought to injure him in his official capacity as tax collector of Harris county, Tex., and as a candidate for re-election and in his individual *575 capacity, by entering into a conspiracy and acting jointly and severally against him for the purposes above specified.
“Appellant did not bring this suit as an action based upon libel or slander or malicious prosecution, but upon the basis of facts as set forth in his third amended original petition, charging and showing that his fundamental rights as a citizen had been violated and interfered with and that he had been thus injured in a pecuniary way, his-reputation had been injured, and his business as a private citizen and as an official had been injured and destroyed. * * *
“Appellant claimed that by the conspiracy and the joint and several actions of appellees he was defeated for renomination and re-election as tax collector of Harris county, Tex., and was forced to incur certain items of expense, which he set forth as special damages.”

The appellees, in different groups, filed answers, severally presenting among their defenses, according as appropriate to their different attitudes, demurrers, and denials, special exceptions, pleas of limitation, absence of malice or ill will, good faith, and of privileged matter.

The trial court heard the cause upon the general demurrer and special exceptions to the trial, petition, overruling the former, but sustaining a number of the latter, and, upon the appellant’s refusal to further amend, dismissing his suit in its entirety; so that the appeal comes here upon a challenge of that adverse action.

One of the special exceptions sustained was that of the appellees Houston and Lil-ley, who were made parties to the suit more than two years after all the complained-of acts were alleged to have occurred, interposing the 2-year statute of limitation (R. S. art. 5526) in bar of the action as against them.

Under appellant’s above-quoted statement of the character of his suit, this action was clearly correct, the 2-year statute of limitation applying to it rather than the four-year one, as he contends; having himself expressly taken his cause of action out of the purview of the one-year period applying to actions for malicious prosecution, libel, or slander (R. S. art. 5524), he plainly left it as one either “of trespass for injury done to the estate or the property of another,” or as one “for injury done to the person of another,” hence necessarily falling within article 5526 and under subdivisions 1 or 6 thereof, according to whether it be regarded as for injury to his property or his person, since it must be one or the other (Cyc. vol. 58, p. 994; Bear Bros. & Hirsch v. Marx & Kempner, 63 Tex. 298; Railway Oo. v. McAnulty, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 321, 26 S. W. 414; Davies v. Railway Co., 62 Tex. Civ. App. 599, 133 S. W. 297).

The leading case cited by appellant in his contention for the application of the four-year statute (Brown v. Mortgage Co., 97 Tex. 599, 80 S. W. 987, 67 L. R. A. 195), which will be discussed in other respects, infra, does not hold otherwise, but simply that the one-year limitation for libel or slander suits did not apply, because the plaintiff in that action did not seek that sort of recovery, the two-year statute not being involved at all.

Objection is made by the appellees to the consideration of appellant’s^ propositions 1 and 2, upon the ground that each is submitted as being applicable to an enumerated group of assignments of error, when in fact the assignments so put together severally deal with as many separate and distinct matters as there are numbers of them, therefore in neither instance furnishing the source of a common point or proposition of law—that is, one germane to them all.

The record verifies as a fact the statement thus made in the objection; it is therefore well taken, and must be sustained. Rule 30 for Courts of Civil Appeals. If they were considered, however, neither of these • propositions could be approved. The first of them, No. 1, complains singly of the court’s sustaining appellees’ special exceptions 1, 2, 5, 7, 8, and 9 to appellant’s trial petition, all of which called for more detail and particularity in the cause of action therein declared upon, and in like manner affirms that the pleading was not obnoxious to any of the objections so interposed against it; if, therefore, any one of the exceptions was good, the proposition would fail. Railway Co. v. Biggs (Tex. Civ. App.) 283 S. W. at page 628(5), column 1.

That several of them were well taken, we have no doubt, indeed, we are not prepared to say that any of them were not, but, as the petition is very long, as well as somewhat involved, it is deemed unnecessary to here test it as against all these specified exceptions, but only as to enough of them to indicate the correctness of the trial court’s ruling. For example: (1) The fifth exception was addressed to the sixth paragraph of the pleading ; that paragraph alleges in general terms that, by reason of the wrongful acts, malicious conduct, and false statements to his bondsmen and others of each and all of the appellees, especially of Houstoun, acting both severally and together in confederation and conspiracy against him, he was compelled to pay two law firms the sum of $1,000 each, and a Mr. Heiser $250; that the $1,000 to the first law firm was paid to them as attorneys for his bondsmen on the insistence of Houstoun' that the contract for making his official bond so provided, and that the $250 to Heiser was paid for certain work Houstoun insisted must then be done under his direction in the county tax collector’s office; that the other $1,000 was paid for legal services in the effort to defend himself against the attacks thus made upon him by the appellees, etc.

The fifth special exception challenged the legal sufficiency of these averments to authorize appellant to recover the stated sums *576 from the appellees, in that they fail to show in what way and for what particular service the alleged false statements and wrongful conduct upon their part made it necessary for him to pay out attorney’s fees, as well as employ a supervising clerk; it seems to us, they are insufficient. For aught that appears in them, the payments and employment may have been not only entirely voluntary but improvident as well; certainly no proximately causal connection is shown between them and the wrongs' alleged, and without it no recovery of them as damages could be had.

2.

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4 S.W.2d 574, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-washburn-texapp-1928.