McBurnett v. Lampkin

101 S.W. 864, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 379
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 864 (McBurnett v. Lampkin) 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
McBurnett v. Lampkin, 101 S.W. 864, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 379 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This suit was brought by the appellant McBumett in the Justice’s Court against Lampkin for $115.30. Lamp-kin answered in the Justice’s Court and by plea in reconvention asserted a claim against the appellant for $186, upon which claim he recovered judgment. The case was carried to the County Court on petition for *568 certiorari, and there a judgment was also rendered in appellee’s favor for $186. The appellee made a motion in the County Court to dismiss the certiorari, which motion was overruled. The "appellee in his brief has a cross-assignment of error complaining of the action of the trial court in overruling his motion to dismiss the application and petition for certiorari, which question we will first consider, because if this contention is maintained it will dispose of the case.

It appears from the record that the appellant filed a suit in the Justice’s Court against the appellee Lampkin for the sum of $115.30, the alleged value of certain hogs and cattle shipped by plaintiff from Milano to Galveston under the care and control of Lampkin; that the latter accepted the stock for shipment, and agreed to account to the plaintiff for the proceeds of the sale of the same; that the stock was sold and the proceeds, received by defendant, which he has failed and refused to pay to the plaintiff. Lampkin, the appellee, was duly served with a copy of citation from the Justice’s Court stating the plaintiff’s cause of action substantially as stated. At the February term of that court he filed an answer embracing a general demurrer and a general denial, and specially pleaded in reconvention that on the 25th day of February, 1905, the plaintiff and one Sam Phillips were engaged as partners in buying and selling cattle and hogs, and that on said date that firm contracted with the defendant for certain cattle and hogs to be delivered at the railroad stock pens in Cameron, Texas, which answer states the number and head of hogs and cattle to be delivered, and that the said firm was to pay the defendant for the same the sum of 2% cents per pound for cattle, 2% cents per pound for calves, and 2% cents per pound for hogs; that the whole aggregated in value the sum of $727; that the defendant delivered the said stock as agreed, but that the firm failed to pay for the same; that at that time the said firm had in Cameron, ready for shipment to market, the hogs and stock named and described in the citation issued upon the plaintiff’s cause of action, and the said firm agreed with the defendant to turn over the same to him to be shipped to market in his name, along with the stock defendant had delivered as aforesaid, and that the defendant could sell all of said stock on the market at Galveston and out of the proceeds thereof, pay himself for the stock which he had sold to said firm at Cameron, and that in pursuance of this agreement the defendant shipped the stock, and the same brought in the market at Galveston the sum of $617.90, out of which freight charges $38.50, broker’s commission of $30.85, yardage of $4.50 and fees $3.05 were paid, leaving a net sum for said stock of $541, or $186 less than enough to pay defendant, and plaintiff is due and owing defendant said sum of $186, for which he now reconvenes and sues in this action, and for which he asks judgment.

The justice’s record also shows that the case was styled and docketed in that court as C. W. McBurnett, plaintiff, v. Seeley Lampkin, defendant; and that Wallace & Camp were plaintiff’s attorneys and Moore & Moore defendant’s attorneys, and the suit is stated on the docket as one upon account for $115.30. Plaintiff in the Justice’s Court stated in his pleading that he adopts the pleading as set forth in substance in the citation; and also, in addition, that the defendant *569 had promised to pay him $15.30, and that he sues for the same. His pleading also shows that he demurs to defendant’s answer setting up the plea in reconvention, and he denies all and singular the statements contained in that plea.

It appears from the recitals contained in the judgment of the Justice’s Court, as stated in the record, that the case was called in its regular order for trial, and that the plaintiff McBurnett appeared by his attorneys, and the defendant Lampkin appeared in person and by his attorneys, and both plaintiff and defendant announced ready for trial; that no jury having been demanded, the matters of fact and of law were submitted to the court and the court, after hearing the evidence and the argument of counsel, determined that the plaintiff has shown no cause of action and that the defendant should go hence without day with his costs; and that it appeared to the court that the defendant’s plea in reconvention for $186 was fully proven, and that he ought to recover, it is therefore considered, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the plaintiff McBurnett take nothing by his suitj and that the defendant Lampkin recover of and from the plaintiff upon his plea in reconvention the sum of $186 and all costs, for which let execution issue.

The petition for certiorari which was granted by the trial court substantially states the record of the Justice’s Court as above stated ; and further, in substance, declares that the claim asserted by the plaintiff in the Justice’s Court is a just and legal claim and debt against Lampkin, and that Lampkin admitted that he owed the debt and promised to pay the same; that the petitioner could not prevail upon him to pay and turned the debt over to his attorneys, Wallace & Camp, for collection; that since the judgment of the. Justice’s Court he had been informed and now charges the fact to be that on his claim his attorneys, Wallace & Camp, filed suit in the Justice’s Court; that on the date of trial of said cause in that court the defendant, Lamp-kin, filed what purported to be a cross-action and plea in reconvention, asking judgment for $186, alleging, in substance, that he had made the contract as we have previously described in stating what is contained in the record from the Justice’s Court; that great injustice was done the petitioner in the final determination of the case in the Justice’s Court, in that the petitioner avers that he did not owe the defendant Lampkin any of the amount sued for in his plea in reconvention; that Lampkin is indebted to petitioner in the sum of $115, and was so indebted to him in that amount at the time of the suit; that petitioner did not know that any suit had been filed on his claim and did not know that the case had been tried at the date it was disposed of, and did not know that any cross-action or plea in reconvention was filed by Lampkin, as pleaded by him and that he did not obtain any information that suit had been filed and that judgment had been rendered against him for more than ten days after the rendition of the judgment; that he had no opportunity to show the justness of his demand or to show the falsity of the defendant’s plea in reconvention, and the application has this peculiar averment: “That if there had been any negligence in the premises, it was done wholly by his said attorneys, Wallace & Camp, without notice or consent of your peti *570

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 864, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcburnett-v-lampkin-texapp-1907.