Houston Heights Water & Light Ass'n v. Gerlach

216 S.W. 634, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1186
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 1919
DocketNo. 7781.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 216 S.W. 634 (Houston Heights Water & Light Ass'n v. Gerlach) 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
Houston Heights Water & Light Ass'n v. Gerlach, 216 S.W. 634, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1186 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This is a suit for an injunction brought by, appellants, Houston Heights Water & Light Association and the Houston Gas & Fuel Company, against Harry C. Gerlach and six other named defendants. The trial court sustained a general demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition, and, plaintiffs declining to amend, their suit was dismissed. ,

For cause of action appellants alleged that on the 17th day of October, 1918, each of the appellees herein filed suit in the justice court of precinct No. 1, Harris county, Tex., Leon Lusk, justice of the peace, said suits being numbered on the docket of that court 28151 to 28158, respectively, and that citations in the seven suits were served on the same day upon F. D. Murphy as agent of the two appellants, a copy of the citation in each case being attached to their petition.

Appellants further alleged that all of the plaintiffs in the seven suits are relatives of either the said Gerlach or his wife, and that all of them live with Gerlach as members of his family at No. 1202 Rutland street, in Houston Heights; that each of said suits is based on identically the same alleged cause of action; that the cause of action alleged *635 in each of the seven suits is that appellees were residing at 1202 Rutland street, in the -city of Houston Heights, Harris county, Tex.; that appellants were obligated to furnish appellees water, and that on the 15th day of October, 1918, appellants, without notice and without presenting a bill, shut off the water in front of appellees’ residence; that the agent of appellants used no discretion or ordinary care in determining his right or authority to cut off the water; and that the water shut off deprived appellees of the use thereof in the middle of a raging and severe epidemic of grippe and pneumonia.

Appellants alleged that they have a valid and sufficient defense to each and all of the suits filed by appellees, in this, that appellant Houston Gas & Fuel Company had no •connection whatsoever with the transaction involved in these suits; that it did not own the water system during the time appellees were being supplied with water; and that the agent who cut off the water as referred to in the suits of appellees was not in fact an agent of the Houston Gas & Fuel Company. Houston Heights Water & Light Association had previously had a contract with J. A. Jackson, whereby it was supplying water through its water system to the said J. A. Jackson at 1202 Rutland street in Houston Heights, and J. A. Jackson had for a number of years been paying all the water bills for such service, and such payments were made by J. A. Jackson until about the 1st day of July, 1918. On information and belief appellants alleged that on or about July 1,1918, J. A. Jackson sold and disposed of the property to one L. F. Harris, and that from and after that date the bills of appellant Houston Heights Water & Light Association for water remained unpaid, although service was maintained and wáter supplied at that number as had previously been done; that in the early part of August, appellee Harry C. Gerlach, with his family, moved into and occupied the house known as No. 1202 Rutland street, under some contract or agreement with L. F. Harris; and that Gerlach with the other appellees lived and residled at said number continuously up until the filing of this suit.

Appellants alleged that until after the water was cut off neither of them had any contract whatever with either L. F. Harris or with any of the appellees for the supplying of water at said place, although Gerlach and the other appellees had been using said water, as appellants were informed and believe, from on and about the 1st day of August, 1918, until the 15th day of October, 1918; that the collector of the Houston Heights Water & Light Association made four calls on various dates in an effort to collect the bills due for the water, and that on three of these visits -members of the household of appellee Harry C. Gerlach, and some one of the appellees, gave various excuses for falling to pay the bill; that, after such repeated efforts to collect the sum admittedly due, the Houston Heights Water & Light Association, on the 15th day of October, 1918, cut off the water from said premises, as it had a perfect right to do and as it should have done several weeks previously; that if appellees had been using water from the system of appellant, as alleged in the suits filed by them, they had been using the same without paying therefor and without having any contract whatsoever with appellant therefor, and appellant had a perfect right to cut off the supply of water; that, after the water was cut off on the 15th day of October, L. F. Harris called at the office of appellant Houston Heights Water & Light Association, on the afternoon of October 16, 1918, and. paid to appellant all bills due up to October 1, 1918, for water theretofore supplied, and about 5:30 o’clock that afternoon the water was again turned on.

Appellant further alleged, on information and belief:

That, after the bill was so paid by L. F. Harris, the appellee Harry O. Gerlach refunded and repaid to Harris the bill covering the months of August and September, the period the premises had been occupied by Gerlach and the other appellees in this suit.

That appellees, neither individually nor collectively, had any contractual relations whatsoever with either of the appellants, and had no right to require these appellants, or either of them, to furnish water service without having previously contracted therefor. That' said suits were therefore wholly without foundation.

That all of the suits brought by appellees were based on identically the same transaction, and that the testimony of appellants in opposition to the suits will be in each case exactly the same. That all of the suits were filed by appellee Harry 0. Gerlach, as attorney, and were all instituted and the filing thereof induced by Gerlach. That the suits were brought in the justice court for amounts accurately placed within the exclusive jurisdiction of that court, so that no appeal therefrom in any case could be had. That, if the cases are tried in the justice court before a jury, appellants will be unable to have the jury charged as to the law in the case, and, if had before the court, will be had before a judge not required to be learned in the law.

That the- purpose and effect of the suits being so brought was to harass and annoy these appellants and to cause them to incur the expense of attorney’s fees and other costs in defending the seven, suits, all of which are without merit or basis. .That, unless appellees are restrained and enjoined from further prosecution of these suits in the justice court, appellants will suffer irreparable injury, and .their employés will *636 be taken away from work to testify as witnesses in the trial of seven different suits, and appellants will Incur unusual and unnecessary cost and expenses as attorney’s fees, witnesses’ fees, and other costs, all of which charges will be entirely out of proportion to the amounts involved, and far in excess of what the expense would be to appellants if one trial of all of the causes were had.

That the appellees and each of them are wholly insolvent, and that, even though appellants should win the seven suits, they would be unable to collect from the appellees the costs incurred by them in the defense of such suits.

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W. 634, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-heights-water-light-assn-v-gerlach-texapp-1919.