Jones v. Maples

184 S.W.2d 844, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1039
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 8, 1944
DocketNo. 2486.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 184 S.W.2d 844 (Jones v. Maples) 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
Jones v. Maples, 184 S.W.2d 844, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1039 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

*846 FUNDERBURK, Justice.

This suit was brought in the name of “Haskell Cemetery Association, represented herein by the officers of said Association, to wit, Rey. C. Jones, President, Joe Massie, Vice-President, Mrs. Ora Stovall, Treasurer, Mrs. H. J. Hamilton, Secretary, Mrs. Louise Merchant, a feme sole, Reporter, Mrs. John E. Fouts and Mrs. Ed Cass, Advisory Board.” The same persons, together with John E. Fouts and Ed Cass as Plaintiffs, also sued as individuals. The defendants were Mrs. Joe Maples, Joe Maples, Mrs. C. Hunt and husband, Courtney Hunt, Mrs. Linna Cunningham, a feme sole, F. L. Peevy, Mrs. F. L. Peevy, and R. C. Couch. The purpose of the suit as disclosed by plaintiffs’ first amended original petition was to have money and property allegedly belonging to the Has-kell Cemetery Association in the hands of defendants, or some of them, transferred to plaintiffs, or such of them as were officers of said association and claiming the right to such custody. The defendants answered first by “Special Exception and plea to the jurisdiction of the court * * (This was, in fact, an exception and not a plea.) Then followed a general denial, and following the general denial defendants pleaded specially as follows:

“For further answer, if required, said defendant • say that although this suit appears to have been brought in the name of Haskell Cemetery Association, a non-profit association, and in the name of the individual plaintiffs as purported officers thereof, it is in truth and in fact an effort on the part of said individual plaintiffs to have this court declare said individual plaintiffs to be the officers of said association in preference to the defendants herein, who are in fact the duly and regularly elected officers of the association; that said association is an unincorporated association .or organization of individuajs, operating a cemetery at Haskell, in Haskell County, Texas, under a Constitution and By-Law, without profit to any member; that the officers tha<-aof do not draw any pay for their services and do not receive any benefit from said offices; that the rights and privileges of holding the offices and of exercising their functions are purely honorary; that this suit is merely an attempt on the part of the individual plaintiffs herein, to have this court interfere with the internal affairs and operations of said association of private individuals, and to oust these defendants as officers thereof; that it is not brought for the purpose of protecting the emoluments of office of the plaintiffs alleged to be officers, or any valuable civil or property right of the plaintiffs, or either of them, and which they are entitled to have protected by the court.”

The prayer following this plea was as follows: “Wherefore, ■ said defendants pray that this suit be dismissed for the want of jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine the matter in controversy, at the costs of the plaintiffs; or, that plaintiffs take nothing as against defendants by reason of this suit, and that they go hence without day and recover of the plaintiffs all costs in this behalf incurred.”

The judgment referring to “exception and plea to the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine the matters involved in this cause” recites that the Court, “having heard and considered the argument for both defendants and plaintiffs on such exception and plea, reserved a ruling on the same until such time as the court might become satisfied thereon through and by reason of testimony and evidence which might be adduced on the trial.” At the close of a jury trial the Court, according to further recitations in the judgment, “further considered said exception and plea to the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine the matters in controversy in this cause, and after hearing the arguments of counsel for both the defendants and the plaintiffs and considering the evidence and testimony adduced, announced the opinion of the court that the law is with the defendants and that this court has no jurisdiction to hear and determine any issue involved in this cause raised by plaintiffs’ pleading or by the evidence and testimony presented to the Court by the plaintiffs; that no fraud has been shown; that there are no emoluments of office involved; that no valuable civil or property rights are involved in this cause, and that same should be dismissed.” Accordingly, after first dismissing the jury, the cause was dismissed. Plaintiffs have appealed.

A preliminary question is: What has been determined by the judgment? Apparently the Court observed no distinction between the exception to plaintiffs’ petition, which sought to elicit the Court’s judgment as to whether said pleading alleged a cause of action within the jurisdiction of-the Court; and the special plea al *847 leging facts additional to those pleaded by plaintiffs, as the basis for eliciting judgment of the Court that the Court was without jurisdiction. The plea was in nature and purpose a plea in abatement following a general denial, and, therefore, waived except for the fact that a lack of jurisdiction cannot be waived.

It seems to us that most of the facts or conclusions alleged in the plea to the jurisdiction were, if not expressed, at least implied in the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition. One exception, however, is the allegation of the plea that defendants “are, in fact, the duly and legally elected officers of the Association * * * That this suit is merely an attempt on the part of the individual Plaintiffs herein to have this court interfere with the internal affairs and operations of said Association of private individuals, and to oust these Defendants as officers thereof.”

In our opinion, plaintiffs’ petition alleged a cause of action within the jurisdiction of the Court in favor of the Association and of some of the other plaintiffs in at least some capacity and against the defendants, or some of them, and that, therefore, the Court erred in sustaining the exception to plaintiffs’ petition.

There are, perhaps, more than one good reason which would impel us to the conclusion that the judgment should not be considered as resting upon findings to the effect that defendants, and not plaintiffs, were the duly elected officers of the Association. One such reason is that the judgment of dismissal is not one appropriate to such findings. Under our view above stated, that the pleadings were sufficient as against the exception, the proper judgment, if the Court found that the de- - fendants were the duly elected officers of the Association, would have been a take-nothing judgment — a judgment on the merits; and, therefore, inconsistent with the Court’s conclusion that it was without jurisdiction.

In the view we take of the case the only questions presented are those which arise upon the pleadings and are properly to be considered and determined without reference to the evidence. When the Court, after deferring action upon the exception and after hearing the evidence, sustained the exception, with the effect of a judgment that no cause of action within the jurisdiction of the Court was alleged, there remained no pleadings to support any evidence.

A general rule, and exceptions thereto, is stated thus: “In the absence of illegality or injustice ordinarily courts will not interfere in the internal affairs of an association, and the due decision of an association’s tribunal as to such matters is controlling.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W.2d 844, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 1039, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-maples-texapp-1944.