Hinkle v. Thompson

195 S.W. 311, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 527
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 1917
DocketNo. 169.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 311 (Hinkle v. Thompson) 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
Hinkle v. Thompson, 195 S.W. 311, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 527 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, Jr., C. J.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court of Hardin county, dismissing and refusing to reinstate, or, perhaps, more accurately speaking, refusing to reinstate, after dismissing, this cause on the docket thereof. What we might term the “pleadings” herein, that is to say, appellees’ motion to dismiss the cause, and appellants’ answer in reply thereto, as well as appellants’ motion to reinstate, and appellees’ reply thereto, are very voluminous, and this court could not be expected to set out at length these pleadings, but can only state, substantially, the contentions of the parties.

This suit was filed on the 10th day of June, 1913, in the district court of Harris county, against the appellees, F. L. Thompson and W. A. Thompson, alleged to be partners, for damages averred to have been caused to the plaintiffs by reason of the death of William Marion Hinkle, the husband of the appellant, Mrs. Alice Hinkle, and the father of the other appelldnts. It was alleged, substantially, that the said William Marion Hinkle, while in the employ of the appellees, as a fireman in the Humble oil field, was instantly killed on or about May 14, 1913, in consequence of the explosion of defendants’ boiler, which was being fired by deceased. *312 It was alleged that such injury and death was caused by negligence of appellees, and several specific grounds of negligence were charged in the petition, hut it is unnecessary for the purposes of the disposition of the case before us to further mention the pleadings touching the merits of the suit. Suffice it to say that the petition of appellants stated a cause of action against appel-lees growing out of the death of said William Marion Hinkle.

In due time, the defendant F. L. Thompson filed in the district court of I-Iarris county his plea of privilege to be sued in Hardin county, alleging in his plea that he was a resident of Hardin county, and that he was the sole owner of said oil properties and boiler, and that he had no partnership relation with his codefendant, W. A. Thompson, who resided in Harris county. This plea of privilege, it seems, was continued by the parties, by agreement, for several terms of the court, and finally, on June 26, 1914, the plea of privilege was heard and sustained by the district court of Harris County, and the cause was ordered transferred to the district court of Hardin county, in accordance with the statute.

This cause was not, however, transferred or filed in the district court of Hardin county until October 19, 1915, and in November, 1915, the plaintiffs filed their first amended original petition in the district court of Hardin county. Thereafter, on March 5, 1910, the defendants filed a motion in the district court of Ilardin county, seeking to have the suit dismissed and stricken from the docket, on the ground that the plea of privilege was sustained in the district court of Harris county on June 20, 1914, but that the suit was never transferred or filed in the district court of Hardin county until October 19, 1915, claiming that the lapse of time between the sustaining of the plea by the district court of Harris county and the transfer and filing of the cause in the district court of Hardin county was tantamount to an abandonment by plaintiffs of their suit and cause of action. On the 1st day of March term, 1916, the district court of Hardin county, by agreement of the attorneys for appellants and appellees, set the motion to dismiss for hearing on April 4, 1916, at which time said motion was heard and granted, and the cause was, by order and judgment of the court, dismissed and stricken from the docket. _ Thereupon appellants, in due time, filed a'motion to reinstate the cause, which motion was later amended, and appel-lees filed their reply thereto, which motion of appellants was heard by the court on April 22, 1916, and was overruled by the court, to which action of the court in failing and refusing to reinstate the cause, appellants excepted in open court, and gave notice of appeal to this court.

The sole question for decision iby this court at this time is whether or not the district court of Hardin county abused its discretion in dismissing this cause from its docket, and in refusing to reinstate the same.

The first assignment of error found in the brief of appellants is as follows:

“The district court erred and clearly abused its discretion in sustaining the motion to dismiss, and thereon dismissing the cause, in that it appeared from the face of the motion, particularly in connection with the sworn answer thereto on file, that the cause had not been abandoned, and that there was no such lack of diligence in its prosecution as would warrant the drastic course of a dismissal.”

The proposition following this assignment is:

“It is error for the court to dismiss and strike from its docket on motion of defendants, a case transferred from another county, on account of delay in the transfer of the record in the case, when it conclusively appears that there has been no abandonment of the suit by the plaintiffs, and no undue want of diligence.”

In their motion to dismiss the cause, ap-pellees alleged, substantially, that the plea of privilege was sustained on June 26, 1914, and that appellants did not appeal therefrom and never paid the costs which accrued in the district court of Harris county, and that the record in said cause was never transferred or filed in Hardin county until October 19, 1915, after two terms of the court of Harris county had been held and the third was well is session and long after appel-lees supposed that said suit was abandoned by appellants; that when the cause was ordered transferred, the record and papers in said cause were not transferred, but only the original citation was finally transferred, together with a receipt for all the other papers in said cause executed by attorneys for appellants, and also a copy of the court’s order sustaining the plea, etc. Appellees then say, in effect, that the cause of action ought to be treated by the district court of Hardin county as abated and discontinued and barred by limitation, and should therefore be dismissed.

Appellees then further contended that if it should be held that said cause of auction did not abate, and was not discontinued by operation of law, and should not be dismissed and stricken from the docket solely on such grounds, then, in that event, ap-pellees contended that as a matter of equity appellants should not now be permitted to further prosecute said cause, and that the same should be dismissed, because appellees had more than one valid defense to said suit, but in particular, appellees alleged and could and would have shown by competent testimony that the boiler in question was in good condition, and had, just before the explosion, been carefully and officially inspected and pronounced to be in good condition, and could not and would not have exploded, if looked after properly by deceased, and that the same had sufficient appliances for all ordinary purposes; that de *313

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 311, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinkle-v-thompson-texapp-1917.