Mansell v. Texas Osage Co-Operative Royalty Pool, Inc.

190 S.W.2d 600
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1945
DocketNo. 11727.
StatusPublished

This text of 190 S.W.2d 600 (Mansell v. Texas Osage Co-Operative Royalty Pool, Inc.) 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
Mansell v. Texas Osage Co-Operative Royalty Pool, Inc., 190 S.W.2d 600 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

*601 GRAVES, Justice.

Appellants, who were plaintiffs below, prosecute this appeal against the appellees, who were defendants below, as proceeding from a judgment of the 55th District Court of Harris County in cause No. 294,743, upon the docket thereof, styled “Maggie Mansell, A widow, et al., v. Texas Osage Co-Operative Royalty Pool, Inc., et al., No. 294,743”, wherein the court on March 16, 1945, in brief substance, adjudicated as follows:

(1) That the court had, back on the 9th day of March, 1945, set aside a purported agreement between counsel for such parties in that court to nullify the preceding order of the court — dated the 19th day of February, 1945 — -sustaining both a “plea in abatement” and a special exception of the defendants in that cause to the plaintiffs’ original petition against them therein; thereby reinstating, or leaving in effect, the original order of February 19, 1945, sustaining such plea and exception, and reciting the dismissal of plaintiffs’ cause of'action against the defendants:

(2) That, having on such March 9, 1945, made a docket-memorandum denying such plaintiffs the right to keep on file an amended petition in the cause it had permitted them to file on the preceding 3rd day of March, 1945, it reiterated, as of that date of its judgment being then entered, March 16, 1945, such prior docket-entry refusal to permit such plaintiffs to revise — or then file- — any such amended petition.

(3) It then further specifically de'creed that the amended petition it had so permitted plaintiffs to file on the preceding 3rd day of March 1945, be so nullified on March 16, 1945, by its stated order withdrawing its permission to them to so file it; the court nevertheless, however, again expressly repeated its prior holding of February 19, 1945, which had been made upon plaintiffs’ original petition, that their amended petition so permitted to be filed on March 3rd thereafter and then withdrawn on March 9th was vulnerable also in like manner as their original petition had been, both to_ the defendants’ “plea in abatement”, and their special exception —in haec verba applying that holding to “both pleadings, to-wit, the amended original petition and the original petition for which it was substituted, be stricken, to which action of the Court Mr. Cook, then being in the presence of the Court and in open court, excepted and requested permission to file an amended original petition, which permission the Court denied, to which action of the Court plaintiffs excepted.”

(4) It then, finally, appended to such decree of March 16, 1945, a full copy, “that it may become a part of the record”, of the above mentioned purported agreement between the respective counsel for the parties of February 19, 1945, undertaking to set aside the court’s preceding order of that same date. In sum, the court thus reinstated such original order of February 19, 1945, as in substance reflecting its final judgment on that date of March 16, 1945; to the effect that its reiterated holding on this last mentioned date was the same as its first holding of February 19, 1945, had been — that appellees’’ “plea in abatement”, as well as their special exception to the plaintiffs’ successive petitions, their original and their tendered one amending it, were good, hence their suit was dismissed.

(5) The plaintiffs’ exceptions to such orders of the court as of both dates referred to — that is, March 9th and March 16, 1945 —were noted in such decree the appellants herein so appealed from, to-wit, the one of March 16, 1945.

In this court the appellees met such declared upon and duly prosecuted appeal of the appellants with the contention that this court has no jurisdiction to consider the same, because the final judgment of the trial court on the whole case had been rendered in such first one of its judgments therein on February 19, 1945, wherein it sustained their “plea in abatement” and special exception to plaintiffs’ alleged cause of action in their original petition, and then dismissed their cause, from which judgment they gave no notice of appeal, within the 10 days allowed by Rule 353, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure; hence had thereafter no standing in court.

This court overrules the appellants’ objection to its taking cognizance of this appeal, holding that to be properly before it, and that, since the trial court so disposed of the entire controversy on the claimed “plea in abatement” and special exception alone, without any trial there on the merits, the only question of law arising on this review is, whether such ruling of the court was correct.

*602 This holding that the appeal was properly perfected so as to give this court jurisdiction is based, in the main, upon these considerations:

(1) Appellants by both their original and amended petitions sued substantially upon the same cause of action, that is, in trespass to try title to an undivided half of Section 65 in Block 2 of H. & T. C. Ry. Survey of land in Harris County, seeking to clear their alleged title thereto from any claim or clouds asserted by the appellees by virtue of a certain mineral deed thereto, under which the latter claimed a one-half interest in such property, as well as for damages, reformation of such deed, and other forms of relief, stating each of them, whether consistent with the others or not, in the alternative, pursuant to Nos. 47 and 48, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure;

Whereupon, the .appellees interposed, first, a special' exception, asserting that such claimed rights and action of appellants were barred by the 4-year statute of limitations, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 5527;

Second, a plea termed one “in abatement” averring that there was a misjoin-der of parties-defendant, in that J. R. Clumpp, and a number of others, were not necessary parties to the suit, as they had by pleadings and evidence introduced by them shown that they had no interest in the subject-matter of the suit.

(2) The trial court’s orders of both February 19, 1945, and March 16, 1945, sustained these objections, and so dismissed appellants’ suit, as recited supra.

(3) The court’s first order of February 19, 1945, was clearly not a final judgment, nor so regarded by the court itself; because, it continued the whole matter under consideration until at least- March 9, 1945, when, for the first time, it set aside the purported agreement counsel for the parties had in the meantime made looking to the cancellation of its original February 19th order, and reinstated that original order; not only so, but on such March 9th, having on March 3rd first permitted appellants to file their amended petition, it again granted them such permission, which permits they promptly availed themselves of by filing notices of appeal on the respective dates of March 19 and 20, 1945, and it never denied them that privilege until in its March 16th judgment, to which appellants promptly excepted. They gave the stated notices of appeal therefrom, within the 10 days time prescribed, hence their appeal is clearly cognizable here, under the prescribed statutory procedure.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mansell-v-texas-osage-co-operative-royalty-pool-inc-texapp-1945.