Fidelity Oil Co. v. Swinney

254 S.W. 137, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 458
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1923
DocketNo. 10262.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 137 (Fidelity Oil Co. v. Swinney) 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
Fidelity Oil Co. v. Swinney, 254 S.W. 137, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 458 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinions

CONNER, O. J.

W. R. Swinney on April 15, 1921, instituted this suit against the Texas Northern Oil Company, a corporation, R. G. Sturn, and the Fidelity Oil Company, a corporation of New Jersey. The original petition filed on the day stated is not in the transcript, and we have no means of knowing the particular grounds of action therein stated, but later, to wit, on June 3, 1921, the plaintiff filed his first amended original petition declaring against the defendants already named, and further alleged that numerous other parties, naming them, claimed some interest in the cause of action and sought to have them made parties. In this first amended original petition it was alleged in general terms that the “defendants became indebted to plaintiff in the sum of $556.36 as follows: To one month’s salary for labor $200, and for money advanced to defendants by plaintiff at their special instance and request in the sum of $336.30.” It was alleged that said labor was performed in the drilling of a certain oil and gas well and the money advanced for labor and material used in the drilling of the well, described as the W. A. Andrews well No. 1, located upon g. described 50 acres out of survey 2075. Plaintiff further declared upon a labor’s lien averring that it had bqen duly made out and filed for record. On August 31, 1921, the Fidelity Oil Company filiad an answer containing a general demurrer and a general denial to plaintiff’s petition and further specifically denied that “it ever employed or authorized the employment of the plaintiff to perform the work and labor set .out” in his petition and denied that the plaintiff “ever performed any work or labor for this defendant,” and denied that it was indebted as ■ alleged. It further specially answered that it bad a contract with one D. A. Hoover whereby it transferred to' said Hoover a one-half interest in the lease described in fhe plaintiff’s* petition and on which the said Hoover was ,to drill free of any cost 'to this defendant an oil well and deliver to said defendant free and clear of any incumbrance seven-sixteenths of- all the oil recovered therefrom; that the said Hoover and his suc *138 cessors In interests are primarily liable and responsible to plaintiff for said claim, and that'the seven-sixteenth interest transferred to Hoover by the defendant is primarily liable for the payment of said claim; and that this defendant was only secondarily liable after plaintiff’s remedies have been exhausted against the said Hoover and his successors.

In this condition of the pleadings, so far as disclosed by the record, it appears that in December following by agreement of the parties the case was set down for trial for January 23, 1922. Prior to the latter date, however, to wit, on January 19, 1922, W. R. Swinney, the plaintiff, filed his second amended original petition, in which he alleged substantially as before, and for the first time further that:

“By virtue of a certain contract by and between Texas Northern Oil Company and Fidelity Oil Company of New Jersey, and plaintiff, said Fidelity Oil Company of New Jersey contracted and agreed to pay all the sum or sums of money that this plaintiff had advanced and furnished said lease and said labor performed for and in consideration of the Texas Northern, transferring their interest in said lease and said production to Fidelity Oil Company of New Jersey, contracted and agreed to pay said amount due this plaintiff, as consideration of this transfer, and this plaintiff says that said contract was made and that Texas Northern Oil Company contracted and transferred their interest to the Fidelity Oil Company of New Jersey for and in consideration of the Fidelity Oil Company of New Jersey, paying this plaintiff’s claim and other claims.”

A number of other defendants and inter-veners filed pleadings in September, but none of them declare upon the agreement charged in the paragraph of the plaintiff’s petition quoted above.

The record further discloses that on January 23, 1922, the day upon which the trial had theretofore been set, the court was engaged in the trial of Smother case, and this case was postponed until the following day, January 24th. On that day, after an announcement of ready for trial and after the Introduction of some of the testimony, counsel for appellant stated that he had just discovered that the plaintiff and certain other interveners had on the 19th day of January, or less than five days before the day set for the trial of the cause, filed amended pleadings in which they set up new and different causes of action against the Fidelity Oil Company of New Jersey, claiming that no notice of such filing had been given to the defendant, and said counsel then made an oral application for continuance on the ground that he and the said defendant had been surprised by the filing of such amended pleadings without notice; that the defendant and its said counsel had no opportunity to meet the same by evidence and requested the court for permission to withdraw his announcement of ready for trial and to postpone or continue the cause for a sufficient time to prepare and procure evidence to rebut the new cause of action, whereupon, as is to be inferred from the record, the court postponed the case until the following morning, January 25th, in order that the parties might review the numerous pleadings and formulate the issues to be determined, it further appears that'on the morning of the 25th numerous other defendants and inter-veners filed amended pleadings setting up the alleged agreement with the appellant Fidelity Oil Company, whereupon counsel for appellant, the Fidelity Oil Company, renewed his application- for a continuance or a postponement of the cause of action, making first an oral statement and thereafter reduced it to writing. In substance, it appears from the oral statement and the written application that the sole counsel for the appellant company was a nonresident; that no notice had been given to him or to the company represented by him of the filing of the several pleadings in which the cause of action embodied in the ^quotation we have made from the plaintiff’s petition was set up; that the agreement so set up, if made at all, was made in Tittle Rock, Arkansas, between J. B. Harris, president of the Texas Northern Oil Company, which had become the owner of the seven-sixteenth interest acquired by D. A. Hoover upon a fifty-fifty contract, and George K. Large, president, and E. P. Allen, vice president, respectively, of the Fidelity Oil Company of New Jersey; that the latter parties were both nonresidents, and that they and each of them would testify that no such agreement as alleged by the plaintiff had ever been made.

The court overruled the application and proceeded with the trial without a jury, which resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff Swinney. and in favor of the numerous interveners against the appellant company and others, to all of which appellant company duly excepted and prosecutes this appeal.

The only assignment of error that we find it necessary to specially discuss is the one complaining of the action of the court in overruling appellant’s application for a continuance. No complaint of the form or substance of the application was made below or now urged except that it was then and now insisted, in effect, that inasmuch as the appellant company had announced ready for trial the question of continuance vel non was placed in the discretion of the trial court which should not now be disturbed, but we are of the opinion that the court erred in his ruling.

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 137, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-oil-co-v-swinney-texapp-1923.