Kelly v. National Bank of Denison

233 S.W. 782, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 937
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 8, 1921
DocketNo. 1838.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 233 S.W. 782 (Kelly v. National Bank of Denison) 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
Kelly v. National Bank of Denison, 233 S.W. 782, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 937 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HALE, J.

Appellee Harston, as sheriff! of Dallas county, served notice upon appellants, a firm, composed of M. L. Kelly, Jr., and Edwin Kelly, that he had levied upon the interest of M. L. Kelly, Sr., in the firm of Kelly & Co., under a judgment rendered in the district court of Dallas county, in favor of the National Bank of Deni-son, against M. L. Kelly, Sr., and Irene Kelly, and that he would proceed to sell said interest according to law. Appellants are the sons of M. "L. and Irene Kelly, the defendants in said judgment. Appellants were not parties to the Dallas county suit, and are both residents of Hall county. They applied for and had issued out of the district court of Hall county a writ of injunction restraining the sale, making the said’ Harston and the bank parties defendant. When the ease came on to be heard in the district court of Hall county on January 4, 1921, no answers had been filed by either Harston or the bank. Whereupon appellants in open court announced that they would take a nonsuit. Subsequent proceedings are better explained by the recitals of the judgment and the following additional findings filed by the trial judge:

“(1) Plaintiffs requested a nonsuit before defendants fid ell their pleas of privilege; (2) plaintiffs requested a nonsuit before defendants filed any answers in this cause; (3) defendants requested the court to withhold his order until defendants should file a cross-action; (4) the plaintiffs’ request for nonsuit was granted immediately upon request, but the court did not enter the order until all issues raised by counsel had been presented to the court.”

The judgment recites in part as follows:

“January 4, 1921. On this day the above-styled cause came regularly on in open court for trial. The plaintiff herein having moved for a nonsuit, said suit was ordered nonsuited as to the original suit, and the plea of privilege of the defendant Dan Harston, sheriff of Dallas county. Tex., and the plea of privilege of the defendant the National Bank of Deni-son, a corporation under the laws of the United States of America, with its principal place of business at Denison, Grayson county, TSx., was presented to the court, and after the reading of said plea and the controverting affidavits thereto, and the introduction of testimony and arguments of counsel, the court is of the opinion that each of said pleas of privilege is well taken, and that each of said pleas of privilege is in conformity to article 1903, Revised Civil Statutes,, and that each of said pleas of privilege should be sustained, and that the venue of this cause should be transferred to the district court of Dallas county, Tex.”

This is followed by a decree in proper form sustaining the pleas of privilege and transferring the case to Dallas county.

From the order making the transfer the appellants bring the case to this court, assigning as error such action of the trial court upon the ground that the defendants had filed a eross-action, thereby waiving their pleas of privilege and submitting themselves to the jurisdiction of the district court of Hall county. The' appellee bank, subject to its plea of privilege and the special excep *783 tions attacking the jurisdiction of the district court of Hall county, alleged as follows:

“Now comes the National Bank of Denison by cross-action, and says that the injunction issued herein was wrongfully issued in that no property was levied on only the interest of M. L. Kelly in said partnership, and since said injunction was issued the assets of said partnership have been sold and dissipated, and the interest of M. L. Kelly, of the value of $50,000, has been placed beyond the reach of an execution. The National Bank of Denison has lost the opportunity of perfecting the collection of said judgment all by the wrongful acts of plaintiffs. It further alleges that said injunction was maliciously- issued without cause, and the plaintiffs and sureties on their injunction bond are indebted to the National Bank of Denison in the amount of said judgment, interest, costs, and 10 per cent, damage, the plaintiffs being M. L. Kelly, Jr., E. T. Kelly, and their sureties being É. E. Chamberlain and S. S Montgomery, a copy of said bond, petition for injunction, order of court thereon, and writ being attached hereto and made a part hereof.”

The prayer is for judgment against the principal and sureties upon the bond. There is no prayer for citation.

[1] Appellees insist that upon the holding of the Supreme Court in Hickman v. Swain et al., 106 Tex. 431, 167 S. W. 209, the filing of a cross-action by the bank was not a waiver of their pleas of privilege. It is true in that case Judge Brown said:

“If the plea of privilege was filed in due order of pleading, the filing thereafter of a plea over against plaintiff did' not affect the right of the defendants to insist upon the transfer of the case to the county in which they resided.” '

No authorities are cited. The Court of Civil Appeals of the Ninth District, in Griffith v. Gohlman-Lester & Co., 200 S. W. 233, has followed the holding in the Hickman-Swain Case. The Court of Civil Appeals of the Second District in McClintic v. Brown, 212 S. W. 540, held to the contrary. Tije decision in the last case is based upon.previous decisions by the Supreme Court and cite Courts of Civil Appeals cases in which writs of error were refused by the Supreme Court which also follow the holding by the Supreme Court of Texas in Douglas v. Baker, 79 Tex. 499, 15 S. W. 801, and the Supreme Court of the United States in Merchants’ Heat & Light Co. v. Clow & Sons, 204 U. S. 286, 27 Sup. Ct. 285, 51 L. Ed. 488. There seems to be an irreconcilable conflict between the Douglas v. Baker Case and the Hickman v. Swain Case. In the Douglas v. Baker Case the defendant was sued out of the county of her residence in an effort by plaintiff to have a lost power of attorney alleged to have been given by her and her husband established. She pleaded in re-eonven'tion, setting up her ownership of the land, making a third party a defendant by1 her' cross-action, praying for possession- - of the land and judgment against- the third party for the land and rents; Upon' this issue Collard, Justice, said:

“But we think that the defendant, having invoked the jurisdiction of the court upon original and independent matter set up by her claiming the land, making Renólds a' party, and asking judgment against him for the land, waived the question of jurisdiction raised by her exceptions. The entire form -of the action was changed by her from a suit to establish a lost power of attorney to an* ¿etion of trespass to try title, and in order to ■ a1 recovery she made the person claiming'the land a-party defendant. * * * Having brought intp court a new party defendant, to try title to the land with him as a purchaser from plaintiff pending the suit, becoming the actor, and claiming affirmative relief upon an issue with him that could only be tried in the county 'Where the land was situated, she was in no attitude to disclaim the jurisdiction of the court, or to insist upon her exceptions.

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W. 782, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-national-bank-of-denison-texapp-1921.