Hall v. Jankofsky

29 S.W. 515, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 504, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 389
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 2, 1895
DocketNo. 1044.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 515 (Hall v. Jankofsky) 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
Hall v. Jankofsky, 29 S.W. 515, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 504, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 389 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

LIGHTFOOT, Chief Justice.

— The following statement by appellee’s counsel is substantially correct, and is adopted: Appellee, L. Jankofsky, recovered judgment in the District Court of Camp County, Texas, on December 10, 1890, in cause number 882, against John P. Richardson, L. C. Dupree, J. P. Dewberry, J. F. Reynolds, L. R. Hall, J. E. Robinson, J. T. Musick, J. M. Delson, and F. M. Dewberry, for $3304.70, and all the costs of suit.

The cause of action upon which said judgment was rendered was the unlawful seizure of a stock of goods belonging to appellee, under an execution in favor of John P. Richardson, one of the defendants in said suit, against one Slotsky. Hooper & Thompson (a firm of lawyers, the members of which were John W. Hooper and John A. Thompson), as the attorneys of said Richardson, directed the sheriff of Camp County to levy said execution on appellee’s said stock of goods. L. C. Dupree, one of the defendants in said suit, was sheriff of said county at said time, and levied the execution on appellee’s goods, as directed by said attorneys. Appellee brought suit for the value of said stock of goods, making said John P. Richardson, John W. Hooper, John A. Thompson, L. C. Dupree, and the sureties on the latter’s official bond as sheriff, defendants. The sureties on said bond were J. P. Dewberry, J. F. Reynolds, L. R. Hall, J. E. Robinson, J. T. Musick, J. M. Delson, and F. M Dewberry.

The wife of defendant John A. Thompson is, and was at the"time of bringing said suit, a sister of the judge of the District Court for the district in which said suit was brought, to wit, Hon. John L. Sheppard. Thompson died after said suit was filed, without being served with citation.

At the May Term, 1890, of the District Court of Camp County, an agreement was made and filed in said cause by the attorneys of record for the several parties, that S. P. Pounders, Esq., should try said cause as special judge, and he was duly qualified as such.

Said cause was continued on application of defendants at said term, and was tried with a jury (demanded by defendants) at the succeeding term of the court, with the result above stated. After announcement of ready for trial by both parties at said time, and before proceeding further with the trial, appellee asked and obtained leave of the court to discontinue the suit as to defendant Hooper, because of defective service of citation, and as to defendant J. A. Thompson, because *506 of his death. Judgment, as above stated, was rendered against all the remaining defendants in favor of plaintiff, and over against defendant Richardson, in favor of his co-defendants, Dupree, J. P. Newberry, J. F. Reynolds, L. R. Hall, J. E. Robinson, J. T. Musick, J. M. Nelson, and F. M. Newberry. From said judgment and order overruling their motion for new trial, all the defendants appealed to the Supreme Court. Dupree, J. P. Newberry, Reynolds, Hall, Robinson, Musick, Nelson, and F. M. Newberry, executed a supersedeas bond, and Richardson executed a cost appeal bond.

The case went to the Supreme Court, and afterwards, under the operation of intervening legislation, was transferred to the Court of Civil Appeals, and, on October 18, 1893, the judgment of the District Court was in all things affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial District. Richardson et al. v. Jankofsky, 23 S. W. Rep., 815. Hpon this decision the mandate of the court was issued and filed in the District Court, and execution was issued by the clerk of the latter court in accordance with the mandate. Defendants J. P. Richardson and J. M. Nelson having died after perfecting their respective appeals, and before the issuance of execution, no execution was issued against them.

After said execution was issued and placed in the hands of J. D. Stafford, sheriff of said county of Camp, and after levy was made by said sheriff on property of some of the defendants sufficient to satisfy said execution and judgment, and after the defendants upon whose property said levy was made had paid over to said sheriff the amount of said judgment and execution, four of the defendants in execution applied to the district judge for an injunction. The injunction was granted by the Hon. John L. Sheppard, who afterwards decided that he was disqualified to try said case, and S. P. Pounders, Esq., the same person who presided as special judge at the trial when said judgment was rendered, again qualified as special judge under executive appointment. The injunction was subsequently dissolved and petition dismissed by the special judge, from which this appeal was taken.

The other facts necessary to a proper determination of the cause will more fully appear under the different assignments of error, which will be considered separately.

1. Under appellants’ proposition under their first assignment of error, they insist that the judgment rendered in cause number 882, Jankofsky v. Richardson et al., was void, for the reason that the special judge, S. P. Pounders, who tried said cause, was not selected by all the parties to that suit, but only by a portion of them. John A. Thompson, a brother-in-law to the regular judge, died pending the suit. After the qualification of the special judge, that suit was dismissed as to Thompson, and no complaint is being made from that' source. Appellants insist in this case, that they were not represented in the selection of the special judge and as this case went off below upon questions of law raised upon the motion to dissolve the injunc *507 tion, and exceptions to the petition of appellants, we must look to the petition and exhibits attached thereto to determine the merits of appellants’ cause. It is alleged in the petition that appellants were parties to suit number 882; that they recovered judgment therein over against the principal defendant, Richardson; that they made a motion for a new trial therein; gave notice of appeal from that part of the judgment against them; executed appeal bond, and prosecuted the appeal to final judgment in the appellate court. From the judgment in that cause, which is made an exhibit to the petition, we find the following recitations:

“L. Jankoesky
“v. “December 10, 1890.
“ J. P. Richardson et al.
“On this day came on the above cause, and it appearing that Hon. John L. Sheppard, the presiding judge of this court, was disqualified to try this cause, and S. P. Pounders, an attorney at law, was by consent agreed upon by the parties to try this cause, and the oath prescribed by law having been duly administered to said S. P. Pounders, and said case being called for trial, when came on to be heard defendants’ special exception to plaintiff’s petition, and the court having heard and considered same, is of opinion the law is with the plaintiff, and said exceptions in all things overruled, to which defendant’s except. And the death of John A. Thompson, one of the defendants, having been suggested, the suit is discontinued as to him; and it appearing to the court that the citation issued to the defendant John W.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 515, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 504, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-jankofsky-texapp-1895.