Jeff Chaison Townsite Co. v. McFaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Co.

121 S.W. 716, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 611, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 563
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 28, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 716 (Jeff Chaison Townsite Co. v. McFaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Co.) 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
Jeff Chaison Townsite Co. v. McFaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Co., 121 S.W. 716, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 611, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 563 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from an order, in chambers, of the judge of the Fifty-eighth Judicial District, granting an injunction against appellants at the suit of appellees. The petition was filed May 14, 1909, upon which the injunction prayed for was on the same day granted without notice. On May 17th defendants filed their answer under oath, upon which they predicated a motion to dissolve the injunction. Thereupon plaintiffs, on May 25th, filed their first supplemental and first amended petitions. The motion to dissolve coming on to he heard, on May 27tli, was overruled. This action would appear to have been had by the court, in session, from the terms of the order. From this order notice of appeal was given to this court. This appeal, however, is prosecuted, not from this order of the court refusing to dissolve the injunction, but from the original order. *613 granting the same, and the contention is made, in limine, by appellees that appellants, by filing their motion t'o dissolve in the District Court, have lost their right to appeal from the original order granting the injunction.

The statute gives no right to an appeal from an order refusing to dissolve an injunction once granted, which is a serious defect' in the law, and is probably due to an unintentional oversight. We are inclined to the latter view by a consideration of the various defects, in the Act in question, which bears the marks of crudeness. Unquestionably it is, or should be, the policy of the law t'o encourage parties litigant to seek to have errors corrected, so far as this may be done, in the cheapest and most expeditious way, and in view of this, we do not think it was the purpose of - the statute to penalize a litigant, by depriving him of the remedy of appeal to this court from an order granting an injunction, if he should seek, at the source of the injunction, to have the supposed error corrected by a dissolution. It' would have been better if the Act in question had, in fact, given the right of appeal from an order refusing to dissolve, instead of from the order granting the injunction, which would have allowed a presentation of the case on appeal upon the petition, answer and such evidence in addition, as was heard on the motion to dissolve, instead of the naked allegations of the petition. We overrule appellee’s contention as to the effect of the motion to dissolve, on this appeal, which has been perfected within fifteen days of the date of the granting of the injunction.

Appellees have had sent up their supplemental and first amended petition in which the grounds for injunction are more fully and clearly stated, and we find in the record also an answer of appellants, with their motion to dissolve, and the order refusing the same.

In an appeal from the naked order of the judge granting an injunction upon the allegations of the petition alone, we doubt whether the pleadings referred to, filed some days afterwards, can be properly considered over the objection of appellant, and we therefore have not considered them. This applies as well to the answer of appellants as to the other pleadings of appellees.

The allegations of the petition, upon which the injunction was granted are as follows:

“Plaintiff shows unto the court that on or about the - day of February, 1906, it constructed a lateral canal from its main canal upon and across a portion of the Pelham Humphries and J. Douthitt surveys, for the purpose of furnishing water to different parties, and among others, to parties cultivating lands upon the Grange survey; that at the time of constructing its canals the plaintiff contracted and agreed with C. J. Chaison, who represented the American Oil & Befining Company, in consideration of the American Oil & Befining Company granting unto it a right of way for its canals over the lands of said American Oil & Befining Company, that it would water the lands of American Oil & Befining Company at the prices to be charged other people for the same service; that at the time of construction the lateral hereinbefore referred to, which crosses a portion of the said Pelham Humphries survey, plaintiff had no knowledge of any objection thereto by any person owning the same or having an interest therein, believing *614 that if the same belonged to the said American Oil & Befining Company, the stock of which was owned very largely by the defendant C. J. Chaison and his family, or if it belonged to the defendant, the Jeff Chaison Townsite Company, of which the said C. J. Chaison was president, and the said lateral being constructed in a large measure to furnish water to tenants of the said American Oil & Befining Company, on the said Grange survey, that there could be no objection thereto; and as a matter of fact there had been no objection thereto or complaint made of the situation of said lateral until now. That at the time of the construction of said canal it was so constructed, laid out and built on- and across five acres of the Pelham Humphries survey situated west of the Sabine & Bast Texas Bailroad and south of J. Douthitt survey, fronting the public road, which said five acres at that time was owned by the Favorite Oil Company, and which said Favorite Oil Company had made no objection to the construction of the said canal; that after the construction of said canal at the June term, 1907, of the Sixtieth Judicial District Court, the Jeff Chaison Townsite Company recovered ten acres of the Pelham Humphries survey from the said Favorite Oil Company, which said ten acres includes the five acres across which the said lateral was so constructed and is now situate.

_ “Plaintiff shows unto the court that said lateral was not constructed and run across said land with the intention or purpose of injuring an)r one, and especially not any of the defendants herein, but .solely for the purpose of conveying water for the purposes of irrigation to different farmers,. and especially those upon the Grange survey for the purpose of irrigating rice grown upon the lands of the said different parties as herein alleged. It is further shown the court that the plaintiff had contracted and agreed to furnish water for irrigation for 300 acres of land now planted in rice upon the Grange survey for tenants of the said American Oil & Befining Company, of which C. J. Chaison, one of the defendants, is president, and also for 500 acres for Baird Brothers, 100 acres for Winsor & Head, and 200 acres for Winsor & Head, which is also on the American Oil & Befining Company’s property, and 100 acres for Huffman on the property of the said American Oil & Befining Company.

“It is further shown to the court that unless it is permitted to use its canal as now constructed it will be impossible to furnish the said farmers water as it has agreed to do, .and they will thereby be unable to make a crop and suffer irreparable damage, and that this plaintiff will suffer the loss of its rental for water agreed to be so furnished said different rice farmers, and subject this plaintiff to numerous damage suits. Plaintiff shows that the said defendant, C. J.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 716, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 611, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeff-chaison-townsite-co-v-mcfaddin-wiess-kyle-land-co-texapp-1909.