Jeff Davis County v. City National Bank

54 S.W. 39, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 157, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 43
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 54 S.W. 39 (Jeff Davis County v. City National Bank) 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 Davis County v. City National Bank, 54 S.W. 39, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 157, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 43 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

—This suit was brought by the City National Bank of Paducah against Presidio County alone to recover $11,-760 on coupons of certain courthouse and jail bonds issued by said county.

Presidio County answered, making Jeff Davis and Brewster counties parties, averring that the territory of which they arc composed was a part of Presidio County when the bonds were issued, and asked, in event of judgment against it, that it recover over against each of said counties its pro rata share of the indebtedness.

Jeff Davis and Brewster counties answered, (1) by a plea of privilege to be sued in their respective courts; (2) plea of misjoinder of causes of action and parties defendant; (3) special exceptions and general denial, and (4) specially, that the bonds sued upon were invalid both as to Presidio County and themselves, and that Presidio County, owing to the illegality of said bonds, had no right to recover over against them.

Presidio County adopted so much of the answer of the other counties as was not inconsistent with the averments of its answer setting up a cause of action against them.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and the pleas of privilege, of misjoinder of actions, and special exceptions of Jeff Davis and Brewster counties decided against them; and judgment rendered in favor of appellee against Presidio County, alone, for the entire demand; and in favor of Presidio County against each of the other counties for its proportionate share of the indebtedness. From the judgment against Presidio County, it appealed, but failed to file an assignment of errors or file brief. The counties of Jeff Davis and Brewster appealed from the judgment in favor of Presidio against them.

There is no statement of facts in the record, but the trial judge filed his conclusions of facts, which we necessarily adopt as our findings. Only so much of these conclusions, however, as we deem necessary to a proper solution of the questions raised on this appeal will be here stated.

On June 1, 1875, the town of Fort Davis, then in Presidio County, was, by an election, duly constituted its county site. From that time until July, 1885, the county officers of Presidio held their respective offices at Fort Davis, in which town the courthouse and jail of the county were both situated, and district, county, and commissioners courts held there.

On the 15th day of July, 1885, under an order of the county judge of Presidio, an election was had in that county to determine whether or not its county site should be moved from Fort Davis to the town of Marfa. Upon the canvass of the election returns, the county judge found that *159 391 votes were east in favor of the removal, and 320 votes in favor of the county site remaining at Fort Davis. Whereupon he caused to be entered in the minutes of the Commissioners Court an order as follows: “It appearing that no election has ever been held in Presidio County for the election of a county site in pursuance of law, it is therefore declared that the county site of Presidio County is, by the vote of the people, established and located in the town of Marfa.” At the time of the election and the entry of said order there was at Fort Davis a courthouse and jail, which had been used up to that time by Presidio County, since 1882. Immediately after the date of this order all the county officers of Presidio except L. B. Carothers, its treasurer, moved their respective offices from Fort Davis to Marfa, and since then all the courts of the county have been held there. But at the time of the election the town of Marfa was not within a radius of five miles from the geographical center of the county, but more than twelve miles therefrom.

Brewster County was created wholly from the territory of Presidio on February 2, 1887, and Jeff Davis, Buchel,. and Foley counties on the 15th day of March of that year. By an act of the Twenty-fifth Legislature the territory of the two last named counties was incorporated into Brewster, to which county they had from the date of their creation up to that time been attached for judicial purposes, neither ever having been organized.

The bonds from which the coupons sued upon were taken were issued by virtue of an order of the County Commissioners Court (which order and act of the Legislature under which they were issued are recited in the bonds) on February .9, 1886, for the purpose of building a courthouse and jail, which were constructed during that year, and accepted and used by the county ever since for the purposes for which they were built. Prior to the issuance of the bonds various terms of the Commissioners Court of Presidio County were held at Marfa, at which the usual business of commissioners courts was transacted, and ever since July, 1885, taxes have been levied at Marfa as the county site of Presidio County for State and county purposes regularly, and all deeds and mortgages recorded there. After the bonds were issued and delivered in payment to the contractors for the courthouse and jail, a special tax was levied for their payment by the Commissioners Court of Presidio County from the years 1886 to 1895, inclusive, and all coupons due upon the bonds were paid up to and including May 10, 1887.

The appellee is the owner and holder of the bonds and coupons sued upon, having paid value for the same in the regular course of business, without notice of any defects in them, unless the records of Presidio County charge it with notice of the invalidity or the irregularity of their issuance.

The total value of property assessed on the rolls of Presidio County for the year 1887 is $2,382,250; on the rolls of Jeff Davis County, $1,544,530; on the rolls of Brewster’County, $1,688,049; on the rolls of Buchel County, $1,257,226, and of Foley County, $781,459.

*160 Conclusions of Law.—1. The trial court did not err in holding that it had jurisdiction over Jeff Davis and Brewster counties to determine the claim of Presidio County against each for its respective pro rata share of the debt sued upon. Rev. Stats., art. 764; Gen. Laws 23d Leg., p. 124; Presidio County v. Jeff Davis County, 13 Texas Civ. App., 115; Brewster County v. Presidio County, 19 Texas Civ. App., 638. Nor did it err in holding that there was no misjoinder of parties defendant. Presidio County having been sued on a demand for which, if it was liable, it claimed the counties of Jeff Davis and Brewster were liable over to it, had the right to make them parties defendant and settle the entire controversy in this suit. Fleming v. Seeligson, 57 Texas, 532.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W. 39, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 157, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeff-davis-county-v-city-national-bank-texapp-1899.