Grogan-Cochran Lumber Co. v. McWhorter

15 S.W.2d 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1929
DocketNo. 9178.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 126 (Grogan-Cochran Lumber Co. v. McWhorter) 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
Grogan-Cochran Lumber Co. v. McWhorter, 15 S.W.2d 126 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

This cause comes here under somewhat unusual circumstances. The ap-pellee sued appellant, a corporation whose domicile and residence was in Montgomery county, in the district court of Harris county, to recover $8,985.90, the manufactured price of certain pine timber alleged to have belonged to appellee, and to have been wrongfully cut and removed by appellant from certain lands located in Montgomery county.

Appellant filed its plea of privilege in all respects in statutory form pursuant to article 2007, Rev. St., to be sued in the county of its residence, Montgomery, specifically averring thereunder, among the other prescribed requisites of that statute, that “no exception to exclusive venue in the county of one’s residence provided in law existed in said cause.” To this plea the appellee filed its controverting affidavit, alleging:

“That the defendant is a corporation and that the cause of action herein sued upon arose in part in Harris County, Texas, for this; That the written contract of date the 2Gth day of January, 1925, between the plaintiff and defendant, Grogan-Cochran Lumber Company, as plead in full in plaintiff’s petition filed in this cause, was made and entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant in Houston, Harris County, Texas; that the cause of action is the contract herein sued upon and the breach thereof, and said contract having been made and entered into by and between plaintiff and defendant in Houston, Harris County, Texas, venue in this suit properly lies in Houston, Harris County, Texas.

“Because of the facts aforesaid, plaintiff respectfully submits that the venue of this *127 suit lies in Harris County, Texas, under tlie provision of subdivision 23 of Article 1995, of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925.”

A hearing was had on the issue thus joined and the plea of privilege overruled on June 20, 1927, to which action the appellant excepted and gave notice of appeal to this court, duly thereafter perfecting the same on July 1, 1927, by filing its appeal bond therein, and duly pursuing such appeal by filing its transcript and statement of facts therein in this court on September 19, 1927.

Such appealed cause was thereafter, under order of the Supreme Court, transferred from this court to the Ninth Court of Civil Appeals at Beaumont, where on March 1, 1928, that court reversed and remanded the same to the district court of Harris county, with instructions to transfer it to the district court of Montgomery county, holding that appellant’s plea of privilege so asking should have been sustained in an opinion reported in 4 S.W.(2d) 995, under the style of Grogan-Cochran Lumber Co. v. T. A. McWhorter. Thereafter that court further overruled the separate motions of the appellee for a rehearing and to certify the question involved therein to the Supreme Court. No further procedure was taken in that cause, no appeal nor application for writ of error prosecuted' from the action so entered by the Ninth Court of Civil Appeals, a-nd its judgment in consequence became final.

After appellant’s plea of privilege had been so overruled by the district court of Harris county, and after its appeal therefrom had been perfected and was in the due process of prosecution (that is, on July 18, 1927), the cause went to trial on its merits in the district court of Harris county upon amended pleadings of both parties filed after the perfection of the appeal from the adverse order on the plea of privilege and while the same was being so prosecuted in due time and order of procedure.

While appellant had, on July 11, 1927, filed a motion for continuance of the cause, the ground of which is not shown by the record, its amended answer so filed on the day of this trial did not aver that it was presented subject to such action as might result from its appeal on the plea of privilege, but did contain a cross-action against the appellee in trespass — and alternatively on the contract between .them — for the value of timber alleged to have been removed from the land by him'; in this connection the appellee’s brief contains an undenied statement that it had also, in its original answer not shown in the record, asked that its warrantor under the timber deed its title emanated from be made a party, but it does not appear that he ever was.

On the trial so entered upon below, the court submitted the cause to a jury upon special issues, pursuant to the answers to which it entered judgment in favor of the appellee for substantially the amount of money he sued for, and from that decree appellant lumber company presents this appeal.

Under an order of this court, a transcript from the trial court showing the proceedings taken there upon the plea of privilege is before us, and appellant has assigned as error the action of the trial court in so overruling that plea.

Its sixth proposition in this court is: “Appellant having regularly perfected an appeal from the order of the trial court overruling its plea of privilege to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Ninth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, at Beaumont, Texas, and the said Court of Civil Appeals upon a hearing having by judgment reversed and remanded the said cause to the District Court of Harris County, Texas, with instructions to remand the said cause to the District Court-of Montgomery County; Texas, the question of the right of appellant to transfer the cause to Montgomery County, Texas, has become res ad-judicata and this court should enter its order reversing and remanding said cause, with instructions, that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals, for the Ninth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, at Beaumont, Texas, be carried into effect.”

This contention we think is sound, and must be sustained. Old v. Clark (Tex. Civ. App.) 271 S. W. 183; Watson Co. v. Cobb Grain Co. (Tex. Com. App.) 292 S. W. 174. Discussing this question in the Old Case, where the legal effect of the facts was not different from that here obtaining, the Dallas Court of Civil Appeals said:

“Article 1903, Revised Statutes 1911 [now articles 2007, 2008], provides for a trial of the issues made on a question of venue by the filing of a plea of privilege by a plaintiff and a controverting plea by defendant. The issues on this question are tried on pleadings separate and distinct from the pleadings in the main case, and this trial is clothed with all the solemnity and deliberateness that attend the trial of the main case. The allowance of an appeal gives statutory finality to a judgment entered on such a trial. The issues determined on such a trial touch the substantial rights of the parties. The public- welfare and the dictates of common justice demand that there should be an end to litigation, and this doctrine applies with just as much force to the issues arising out of a trial of a plea of privilege as it does to issues arising out of any other trial. * * *
“We think the. manifest intention of the Legislature in its provision for the trial of the issues raised by the filing of pleas of privilege, as contained in said Article 1903 [now articles 2007, 2008], is that the judgment entered on trial of a plea of privilege, when it becomes final, shall be conclusive against the parties on. these same issues, *128 whenever and wherever the subject-matter of the main suit is litigated between the same parties.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grogan-cochran-lumber-co-v-mcwhorter-texapp-1929.