Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Fisher

253 S.W.2d 656, 152 Tex. 29, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 441
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1952
DocketA-3680
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 253 S.W.2d 656 (Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. Fisher, 253 S.W.2d 656, 152 Tex. 29, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 441 (Tex. 1952).

Opinion

Justice Smedley

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Relator, Humble Oil & Refining Company, which was petitioner in Cause No. A-3126 decided by this Court on October 31, 1951, 150 Texas 617, seeks to have a writ of prohibition issued against respondents, Edwin K. Atwood and Alice B. Atwood, who were the respondents in that cause, and against Thomas Hart Fisher and others, who were their attorneys, to prohibit respondents from attempting by pleading filed or otherwise to cause to be tried in the District Court of Willacy County or in any other Texas court issues which were decided and concluded by this Court’s judgment. The two judges of the district courts of Willacy County are also named as respondents herein, but for brevity the respondents other than the two judges are referred to as respondents.

The substance of the allegations of relator’s petition is: that since the rendition of this Court’s final judgment respondents have filed in Cause No. 1539 in the 103rd District Court of Willacy County, which rendered the final judgment later affirmed by this Court’s judgment in Cause No. A-3126, a written demand for a jury “for the trial of all issues of fact, and of each and every issue of fact, raised by the pleadings in said cause”; that respondents have also filed in said cause in the district court 159 written interrogatories to be answered by several of the officers of relator, the Humble Oil & Refining Company; and that they have also filed in said cause in district court a request for the admission of facts and genuineness of documents set out and designated in 102 numbered paragraphs. It is further alleged in the petition that the written demand for jury trial, the interrogatories and the request for admissions *32 disclose an intention on the part of respondents to ignore this Court’s judgment and to demand a trial of issues foreclosed by the judgment, and that the interrogatories filed and the admissions sought deal only with issues foreclosed by the judgment and are relevant to them and are neither relevant nor pertinent to the issue of accounting, the sole issue which the trial court under this Court’s judgment is authorized to try and determine.

Respondents have filed a full answer supported by brief. They admit the filing of the written demand for jury, the interrogatories and the request for admissions, and admit further that many of the interrogatories and requests for admissions are relevant to other issues than that of accounting. The position taken by respondents in their answer and brief is, stated generally: that only the issues of res judicata and estoppel have been tried in the district court, and that respondents have the right to a trial in district court upon the merits of all of the issues pleaded in their First Amended Original Petition filed in Cause No. 1539; that this Court did not determine and had no jurisdiction to determine in Cause No. A-3126 the merits of any of the issues properly pleaded in respondents’ petition other than the separately tried issues of res judicata and estoppel; and that had this Court undertaken to determine any of those other issues it would have deprived the respondents of their constitutional rights to their "day in court” and to a jury trial.

All of respondents’ First Amended Original Petition filed in Cause No. 1539, except several comparatively brief paragraphs alleged as alternative pleadings attacking the oil and gas leases involved herein as invalid and subject to cancellation or reformation on several grounds, is devoted to allegations attempting to show that the two oil and gas leases were executed as security for repayment of a loan made by relator, and that respondents Edwin K. Atwood and Alice B. Atwood are entitled to a right of redemption, the debt having been paid, and to judgment removing the oil and gas leases as clouds on their title.

In Cause No. 1539 in the district court of Willacy County relator Humble Oil & Refining Company and other defendants pleaded in bar as res judicata of all of the issues raised in the First Amended Original Petition judgments which had theretofore been rendered in three suits brought by respondents Edwin K. Atwood and Alice B. Atwood in the United States District Court. The district court of Willacy County entered an *33 order that the issues of res judicata and estoppel be tried first and separately from the trial on the merits, proceeded to hear evidence on those issues, and rendered final judgment sustaining the defendants’ plea of res judicata, and ordered and adjudged that Edwin K. Atwood and Alice B. Atwood, respondents herein, “are not entitled to any of the relief sought by them in this suit, and that such relief be and the same is hereby denied.”

On appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals that Court held that the judgments of the United States District Court were not conclusive of the question as to mortgage and the right to redeem, reversed the trial court’s judgment, and remanded the cause for trial on the merits. 239 S. W. 2d 412.

After the granting by this Court of writ of error and the submission of the cause as Cause No. A-3126, final judgment was rendered therein on October 31, 1951, described thus in this Court’s opinion:

“Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed and the judgment of the trial court that plaintiffs take nothing is affirmed without prejudice to plaintiffs’ right to an accounting for any money which may be due them as royalty owners under the oil and gas lease. Since plaintiffs prayed for an accounting and that portion of the case was severed before appeal, the trial court may proceed with that portion of the case, but only for the purpose of an accounting.” Humble Oil & Refining Company v. Atwood, 150 Texas 617, 244 S. W. 2d 637, 645.

The judgment rendered and entered on the minutes was in these terms:

“It is therefore ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals be reversed, and the judgment of the District Court decreeing that plaintiffs (respondents here) take nothing by their suit be in all things affirmed; without prejudice, however, to the said plaintiffs’ right to an accounting for any money which may be due them as royalty owners under the oil and gas lease.

“It is further ordered that since plaintiffs below prayed for an accounting and that portion of the case was severed before appeal, the trial court may proceed with that portion of the case, but only for the purpose of an accounting.”

*34 Except for what is said in this Court’s opinion with reference to the issue as to mortgage and the right to redeem, and excepting the issue of accounting for royalty, the meaning and effect of the judgment and opinion in Cause No. A-3126 are that the Court approved the trial court’s judgment that the plea of res judicata interposed by relator Humble Oil & Refining Company, and which was directed to all issues raised by the plaintiffs’ First Amended Petition, should be sustained, and that this Court affirmed the judgment of the trial court, which was that, in view of the sustaining of the plea of res judicata, the plaintiffs were not entitled to any of the relief sought by them in the suit, and that all of the relief sought should be denied.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W.2d 656, 152 Tex. 29, 1952 Tex. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humble-oil-refining-co-v-fisher-tex-1952.