Kruegel v. Porter

136 S.W. 801, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 936
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 801 (Kruegel v. Porter) 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
Kruegel v. Porter, 136 S.W. 801, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 936 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

TALBOT, J.

The petition in this proceeding, omitting formal parts, is as follows:

“Your petitioner, Herman Kruegel, residing in the city' and county of Dallas, state of Texas, hereinafter styled plaintiff, in his own proper person and behalf, complains of R. C. Porter of the same place, hereinafter styled defendant, and for cause of action and ■ complaint against him respectfully shows to the court as follows, to wit:
“That this is a bill of review or suit for new trial to set aside a judgment of dismissal rendered against plaintiff on June 8th by accident or mistake in this court in a case of the same style, numbered 24,178, filed therein on December 13, 1904, which case presented a good, legal, valid, and meritorious cause of action and was at a pre-' vious term, to wit, the May term of 1908 of this court dismissed for want of prosecution in plaintiff’s absence and without his fault, when plaintiff was, in fact, eager and ever ready to prosecute said case to final termination, and was by a peculiar and irregular action or accident of the court misled, and did not know fhat said case had at all been assigned on said May term of said court. And that it. has always been the custom and practice of this court, and it is by law required, that all cases assigned for trial are assigned in their numerical order, unless for'good cause by special agreement, etc., and that he has as many as four or more other cases on the jury docket of this court ranging along that number, among them Nos. 22,356, 22,634, 23,490, and 278, in which he is also plaintiff, and which should have also been in their numerical order close to each other on the same assignment with this case No. 24,178, if the latter belonged thereon; and, when the jury assignment of the May term was published in Dallas daily papers plaintiff specially looked for, where said cases appeared close together, but failed to see any of them on said assignment in which he was plaintiff, but found on said assignment No. 1,120 in which he was a defendant, and charged his memory with it. And plaintiff did not know that the case No. 24,178 against R. C. Porter was in fact on said assignment until *802 after lie saw in tlie Dallas evening paper of June 8, 1008, that the case had been dismissed for want of prosecution by Judge Scott, special judge. Plaintiff at once on the next day, to' wit, June 9, 1908, filed his motion to set aside the judgment of dismissal and to reinstate his said case on the grounds aforesaid; and, when the motion was called, plaintiff was ready for hearing of same, but defendant R. 0. Porter, who was present and is a lawyer, asked the court to pass the motion, stating that his counsel J. C. Muse was at that time engaged in the trial of another case in another court. The motion was accordingly passed, and which was the last official act done during said term in said case or in any other case. Judge Scott there and then in substance announced he had just been notified that Judge Nash (the regular judge) would at once take or assume the bench, and Judge Nash did atf once do so, and also at once adjourned the court, and soon after died; and said court was never again convened or opened for business during said term, and the court’s minutes for said term were by the sudden and abrupt action of Judge Nash never signed by either Judge Nash, the regular judge, or by Judge Scott, the special judge, who did all that was done during said term. And plaintiff has good reasons to believe, and so believing avers, that all the actions of this court during said term are without signing. up the minutes before beginning a new term invalid, null, and void, including plaintiff’s said judgment of dismissal for want of prosecution; and plaintiff’s said case should be reinstated as a matter of law. And because plaintiff has, as aforesaid, without his fault, by accident, been deprived of a hearing of his said motion to reinstate his case, etc., plaintiff’s said case should be reinstated, and reopened as a matter of equity and justice.
“Wherefore, plaintiff sues now at a subsequent term for to set aside the judgment of dismissal, and to reinstate his said case, and for a judgment on its merits; and for cause of action and complaint against defendant Porter further pleads as follows, to wit: That defendant is now and was on December 15, 1900, and a long time before, a practicing attorney at law in the city of Dallas, and that on said day, by a certain agreement then made and entered into in writing between plaintiff and defendant, duly signed in duplicate, it was agreed and understood that defendant as an attorney at law and counsel for plaintiff should and would conduct and prosecute to a final termination for plaintiff two certain suits at law, theretofore prepared and filed by plaintiff in his own proper person, in behalf of himself and wife, in the Eorty-Fourth district court, Dallas county, Tex. Said suits were on the docket of said court numbered and styled respectively, viz., No. 18,117, Herman Kruegel et ux. v. Ben E. Cabell, Sheriff, et al., and No. 19,937, Herman Kruegel et ux. v. Reinhardt Nitschman et al., and both of said suits as pleaded by plaintiff' presented each a good, legal, valid, and meritorious cause of action, and the damages sustained and sued on by plaintiff in each suit were not less, but a great deal more, than $5,000 actual damages and $5,000 exemplary damages. The record and papers in both cases have since mysteriously disappeared or been made away with in a manner unknown to plaintiff, so they cannot be found, and, as plaintiff believes, purposely, by concerted action for a fraudulent purpose.
“The causes of action for damages in said two suits were in substance based on a willful, malicious, and reckless, wrongful, and unlawful invasion of, and, trespass on, plaintiff’s homestead property, and malicious and mischievous wrongful and unlawful destruction of plaintiff’s property, or improvements thereon, under and by virtue of a pretended writ of possession of an easement, maliciously, wrongfully, and unlawfully sued out under an erroneous, invalid, illegal, void, and dormant judgment rendered in Fourteenth district court in case No. 12,930, Reinhardt Nitschman v. Herman Kruegel et al. And plaintiff in consideration of the aforesaid professional legal services to be performed by defendant as such-attorney and counsel on said 15th day of December, 1900, executed and delivered to defendant his certain promissory note of $175, made payable to the order of the defendant on or before June 1, 1901, with 7 per cent, interest per annum from said date. ■ A «true and correct copy of aforesaid agreement marked ‘Exhibit A,’ hereto annexed, is prayed to be made and considered a part of this petition and complaint. And plaintiff relied upon the integrity and honesty of said defendant as such counsel and attor- ’ ney in good faith as therein agreed and expressed and of him required by law.
“And plaintiff further shows that he, plaintiff, has in every' respect fully complied with his part of the agreement, and has in due time, and before June 1, 1901, personally paid off said note in full of all demands while said two cases or suits were still pending in said court untried. And plaintiff now complains that defendant had accepted plaintiff’s said note and money without giving or intending to give value receiv- • ed therefor, and has willfully or negligently, recklessly, fraudulently, wrongfully, and.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 801, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kruegel-v-porter-texapp-1911.