House v. Filgo

163 S.W. 373, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 204
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 373 (House v. Filgo) 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
House v. Filgo, 163 S.W. 373, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 204 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

Defendants in error sued plaintiff in error to recover a vendor’s lien note for $829.58, alleging conversion by plaintiff in error. John G. Wilson, who held the note pending the dispute between plaintiff in error and defendants in error, was made a party defendant. Plaintiff in error denied the conversion and by special plea alleged that the note had been assigned to him by defendants in error to secure payment of a debt of $750 due him by the defendant in error Henry Filgo. This plea was followed by prayer for appropriate protection in that behalf. A jury was waived, and trial was had before the judge, who found the title of the note to be in ■ defendants in error, and enjoined plaintiff in error and Wilson from interfering with the title and possession thereof.

After judgment plaintiff in error discovered evidence alleged to have been unknown to him at the time of the trial, because of which he sought another trial, and the refusal of the court to grant him a new trial on that ground is the sole error assigned upon this appeal. For a correct understanding of the issue it is necessary to state that upon trial defendants in error proved, by facts sufficient to sustain the judgment, that, prior to the transaction herein detailed, they sold their homestead in Dallas county to W. G. Biggett, agent, taking his notes therefor, one being the note in controversy, which was secured by the vendor’s lien on the land conveyed. After the sale of' the land defendant in error Lucinda Filgo sued defendant in error Henry Filgo, her husband, for d|vorce; her attorney being plaintiff in error. In the divorce suit injunction was issued against defendant in error Henry Filgo restraining him from disposing of the community assets of himself and wife, and, at the time of the service of the writ, Filgo delivered the note in controversy to plaintiff in error, with the understanding that he would produce same upon - trial of the divorce case. The divorce suit was to be tried May 25,1912, but prior thereto same was dismissed upon demand of defendant in error Lucinda Filgo. Lucinda Filgo paid plaintiff in error $250 in payment of plaintiff in error’s professional services in the divorce case. About the time Lucinda Filgo dismissed her suit for divorce, plaintiff in error, on the ground that it was necessary to protect Lucinda, procured defendant in error Henry Filgo to indorse the note in controversy to his wife as part of her share of the community estate. Defendant in error Henry Filgo did indorse and deliver the note to his wife. Plaintiff in error then induced Lucinda Filgo to indorse her name on the note, advising her such course was necessary in order for her to receive the benefit of the assignment to her, which she believed and relied upon. She did not intend by her indorsement to convey any right or interest in the note to plaintiff in error.

Plaintiff in error upon trial proved by facts sufficient to have sustained a judgment in his favor, had it been rendered, that defendants in error were indebted to him in the amount of $800, less certain immaterial credits which were due under a contract by Which defendants in error employed plaintiff in error to defend one Bud Simpson, defendant in error, Lucinda Filgo’s brother, who was charged in one indictment with aggravated assault and in another with first degree murder. On the day the assault case was set ffir trial, plaintiff in error accepted the note of defendant in error Henry Filgo and Monroe and Clark Simpson; for $50, in payment of his fee in the assault charge against B,ud •Simpson. Afterwards plaintiff in error, in company with defendant in error Henry Fil-go, Monroe and Clark Simpson, visited Bud Simpson at the jail, and after some negotiations pro and con it was finally agreed that plaintiff in error should be paid $750 to defend Bud Simpson on the murder charge, $250 to be paid January 1, 1912, represented by the note of defendant in error Henry Filgo, and $500 to be paid at trial of the case; Filgo stating at the time that he was about to sell some land in Tarrant county, from which source he could secure the $750. After this transaction defendant in error Lucinda Filgo employed plaintiff in error to file the divorce suit against her husband, Henry Filgo. Suit was filed, injunction issued, and the note in controversy delivered to plaintiff in error substantially .in the manner claimed by defendants in error. Pending settlement of the divorce suit, Henry Filgo asked plaintiff in error to assist him in adjusting matters between him and his wife. Plaintiff in error declined to do so and suggested that he employ an attorney to represent him in the matter, which he did. Plaintiff in error and the attorney for Henry Filgo, after some parleying, agreed on a set *375 tlement of the divorce case. Filgo promised the land notes to his wife, and indorsed one of them to her. While the defendants in error were at the office of plaintiff in error closing up the divorce suit, he told them he would not represent Bud Simpson any longer, unless his fee was secured, since they had not paid the $250 note, and he had been compelled to sue upon it. Plaintiff in error advised them they could either release him from his agreement to represent Simpson or secure his fee by assigning the note in controversy. Defendants in error finally agreed to assign the note to plaintiff in error, which they did. This took place on Thursday. The following Saturday defendants in error attempted to repudiate the transaction. Plaintiff in error represented Simpson on trial for murder, of which he was found guilty, and at the time of trial had just returned from Austin, where he had presented his case to the Court of Criminal Appeals on appeal from his conviction.

Bud Simpson testified upon trial, in effect, that he was depending upon defendant in error Henry Filgo to secure him an attorney, and that, after he failed to secure the attorney they first had in mind, he did secure plaintiff in error, but that he was not familiar with the details of same. At the time he testified he had been tried on the murder charge, found guilty, and sentenced to the penitentiary for SO years.

After the trial the following facts were shown on motion for new trial by affidavit: Bud Simpson swore that after trial Henry Pilgo called on him and mentioned that he defeated House in the suit. Pilgo said he “hated” to have the suit with House over Simpson’s case, because it was not his intention to beat House out of the fee when he employed him, but that he had expected Clark and Monroe Simpson (brothers of Bud) to pay their part, which they refused to do, and that he was forced to either pay it all or beat House out of it. Pilgo further said that, having given his land note to House, he was compelled to pay it all or beat it all, since House had refused to accept his part of the fee. Pilgo also told Simpson that he had secured 'him another attorney to look after his case.

Judge Mike E. Smith, of Ft. Worth, swore that in the spring of 1912 a negro called upon him to employ him to file a suit to clear some land of a judgment held by a lawyer in Dallas, named House, who the negro said he had employed to defend his brother in law against a charge of murder. He referred the negro to W. J. Van Dorn.

W. J. Van Dorn swore that for two years preceeding November 1, 1912, he practiced law in Pt. Worth, having an office with Judge Mike E. Smith. Late in the afternoon of the day in which the instant case was tried, he was introduced to plaintiff in error. He told plaintiff in error he had heard him trying the case and knew Pilgo, who at the time had been referred to him by Judge Mike E.

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 373, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/house-v-filgo-texapp-1914.