Lucid v. McDowell

206 S.W. 203, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 829
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 26, 1918
DocketNo. 442.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 203 (Lucid v. McDowell) 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
Lucid v. McDowell, 206 S.W. 203, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 829 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, O. J.

This is an original proceeding in. this court for the writ of mandamus, brought by Tom Lucid and his wife and Henry Weber, as relators, in which Hon. E. A. McDowell, as judge of the Sixtieth judicial district, is made respondent. The purpose of the proceeding is to compel said respondent to proceed to judgment on a plea of privilege interposed by relators in a certain habeas corpus proceeding, which was commenced before said respondent as district judge, on the 28th day of September. 1918, in which proceeding Kezzie Turnipseed and her husband, J. H. Turnipseed, are re-lators, and said Lucid and wife and Weber are respondents. When the petition for mandamus was presented to this court it was ordered that the same be set down for hearing on the 14th day of October, 1918, and Hon. E. A. McDowell, respondent, was cited to appear before this court on that date and show cause, if any, why the writ should not be granted as prayed. On the day set for hearing of the application the respondent appeared by attorney and filed an answer, interposing general and certain special exceptions, a general denial, and also specially denying, in effect, all material allegations contained in the application for the writ.

We think that our disposition of the case will be more clearly understood by making a brief statement, at this point, of the controversy between the parties in the habeas corpus proceeding, and also of such proceedings as were had before the respondent here touching this controversy. As stated above, an application for the writ of habeas corpus was presented to Judge McDowell on the 28th day of September, 1918, by relators herein, in which application it was alleged, substantially, that Mrs. Kezzie Turnipseed was the mother of five minor children, naming them, who were the issue of a marriage between her former husband, Henry Weber, and herself, and that the possessmn of said children had, by means of fraudulent promises and representations and statements and conduct on the part of the said Mrs. Lucid, been obtained by the said Mrs. Lucid, and had been wrongfully and fraudulently withheld from their said mother, and restrained of their liberty, etc.; that the said Mrs. Lucid was the mother of said Henry Weber, the father of said children, from whom Mrs. Turnipseed was legally divorced several years ago, and that the said Henry Weber makes his home with his said mother in Cherokee county, and was also in possession of said children, and participating wrongfully in withholding them from their said mother; that the said Henry Weber was an unfit and unqualified person to have the care and custody of said children, and that said Mrs. Turnipseed was. entitled to their possession and custody, and said Hon. E. A. McDowell was prayed to so determine and to adjudge the right to the possession and custody of said children to be in their mother, the said Mrs. Turnipseed, and that it would be for the best interests of said children to so decree.

At the time the application for the writ of habeas corpus was presented to Judge McDowell his court was in vacation, and he indorsed his fiat on said application, and ordered that the same be set down for hearing on the 4th day of October, 1918, before him at the courthouse in Jefferson county, and commanded the respondents in that proceeding, Tom Lucid and wife and Henry Weber, to produce before him on that date said children. Thereafter, and on said 4th day of October, the respondents in said habeas corpus proceeding appeared before Judge McDowell, as did also the attorney for the rela-tors, and thereupon the attorney for the respondents in that proceeding, Tom Lucid and wife and Henry Weber, filed and presented to Judge McDowell their plea of privilege to *204 be sued in Cherokee county, Tex., the county of their residence and domicile, and requested Judge McDowell to hear and rule upon said plea of privilege, and to change the venue of said proceeding and suit to the district court of Cherokee county. This plea of privilege in all respects complied with, the statute, and contained facts which, if true, entitled the respondents in that proceeding to be sued in the district court of Cherokee county, and to have the same transferred to said district court of Cherokee county for trial and disposition. This plea of privilege was in no maimer controverted by the rela-tors in that proceeding, but, when the same was presented to Judge McDowell for his action and ruling, the attorney for the relators there stated to Judge McDowell that he desired to read a decision from one of the appellate courts in this state, which would show that the respondents in that proceeding were not entitled to have the cause transferred to the district court of Cherokee county and that the plea of privilege should be overruled. At the time, however, the plea of privilege was presented, it appeared that the children named in the writ of habeas corpus had not been produced before Judge McDowell, as commanded, but an affidavit of a physician was presented, showing that one of the children was sick and could not be produced, and it was further represented to Judge McDowell by the attorney for the respondents in that proceeding that the other children named in the writ were attending school at Rusk, in Cherokee county, and that it would be very inconvenient, as well as expensive, to bring them to Beaumont, and entirely unnecessary to do so in the event the plea of privilege should be held to be good; and it was insisted by the attorney for the respondents that the plea be entertained and acted upon at that time, notwithstanding the children were not present, and thereupon it seems some colloquy took place between 'the attorneys for the respective parties before said judge, and, finally, as shown by the answer of Judge McDowell, under oath, in this proceeding, he declined to determine and rule upon said plea of privilege at that time, but instead made an order resetting the hearing of said habeas corpus proceeding and the plea of privilege filed therein for the 14th day of October thereafter. There is some contradiction between the parties here as to some things that were done at the time the plea of privilege was presented, and as to why the same was not then promptly ruled upon and disposed of by Judge McDowell; but in view of the disposition that we shall make of this case, and our reason therefor, we think it unnecessary to determine these matters of contradiction and questions of fact as made by the petition of relators herein and the answer of respondent, even if we are authorized to do so, and therefore deem it unnecessary to notice in detail these contradictory contentions.

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Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 203, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 829, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucid-v-mcdowell-texapp-1918.