Meyers v. Walker

264 S.W. 314, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 628
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 1924
DocketNo. 10976.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 314 (Meyers v. Walker) 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
Meyers v. Walker, 264 S.W. 314, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 628 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

On January 28, 1924, the appellant R. L. Meyers and seven other taxpaying voters of the city of Lamesa, Tex., sought and obtained a temporary injunction against Jesse Walker, mayor, and C. H. McCormick and J. R. Flaniken, commissioners, and J. R. Lourie, secretary, respectively, of the city of Lamesa, restraining them from declaring the result of a bond election for street improvements held on December 4, 1923, and from selling or offering to sell street-improvement bonds authorized by said defendants in an order of December 12, 1923, and restraining them from levying or collecting the 30-cent tax provided for in said order of December 12, 1923, and further restraining them from contracting for any of the street improvements contemplated. On the 31st day of January, 1924, the defendants presented to the district judge of Lubbock, Tex., an answer to the petition of plaintiffs and moved to dissolve the temporary injunction. No previous notice of the filing of the answer or of the motion to dissolve was given to the plaintiffs, and they protested and objected to the hearing on that ground. The trial judge nevertheless heard the'motion and dissolved the writ and dismissed the plaintiffs’ petition, to which action the plaintiffs duly excepted and gave notice of appeal to this court.

Article 4663, Revised Statutes; reads as follows:

“The defendant to an injunction proceeding may answer as in other civil actions; but no injunction shall be dissolved before final hearing because of a denial of the material allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, unless the answer denying the same is verified by the oath or affirmation of the defendant.”

*315 Article 4664 thus reads:

“In all cases of injunction, motions to dissolve the same without determining the merits may be heard after answer filed, in vacation as well as in term time, at least ten days’ notice of such motion being first given to the opposite party or his attorney. In such cases, the proceedings upon such hearing, including the action of the judge upon the motion, shall be entered upon the minutes of the proper court by the clerk thereof, on or before the first day of the succeeding term of such court, and thereafter shall constitute a part of the record of the same.”

We are of the opinion that the trial court erred in dissolving the temporary writ of injunction theretofore issued by him at the time and place he did, over the protest of the plaintiffs in the petition; the notice provided for in article 4664 not having been given.

Appellees insist, in substance, that they made no written motion to dissolve the temporary writ, and therefore notice was not required, but in this contention they are contradicted by the formal bill of exception taken at the time and duly approved by the trial judge and presented in the transcript before us. It is there distinctly stated, in so far as necessary to quote, that—

“On January 31, 1924, came on to be considered by the district judge of the Seventy-Second judicial district of Texas, in vacation, at the courthouse in Lubbock, Tex., a written motion presented by Attorney Dumas, of Dallas, for the defendants to dismiss the plaintiffs’ petition for injunction in the abov.e styled and numbered cause, whereupon counsel for the plaintiffs protested against and objected to any hearing before entering into any proceeding, on the ground that the motion aforesaid had not been filed with the clerk, and on the further ground that neither the plaintiffs nor attorney for plaintiffs had been served with 10 days’ notice as required by article 4664 of the Revised Statutes of Texas, and on the further ground that the plaintiffs were not prepared to resist the defendants’ said motion and were not acquainted with the grounds thereof, all of which protests, and objections, being heard and considered by the court, were overruled,” etc.

The defendants’ answer covers some 14 pages in the transcript and consists of numerous exceptions and allegations of fact. In addition to what has heretofore been quoted from the bill of exception, the court certified:

“When Attorney Dumas presented the motion for hearing, that said motion, consisting of about 23 typewritten pages, had been finished, he said, about 10 minutes; that said motion had not been filed with the clerk and no notice thereof served on plaintiffs or their attorneys; that they had no opportunity for knowing the grounds of the motion other than that afforded during the hearing which lasted perhaps 2 or 3 hours.”

The consideration that we have given the case indicates that a number of questions are presented Involving more or less intricacy and requiring a search of the authorities, and we are of the opinion that under the circumstances the plaintiffs should have been afforded the due notice expressly provided for in such cases by article 4664.

We think it also clear under the authorities that the court erred in dismissing the plaintiffs’ petition. It has been long held that when an injunction is dissolved in chambers the judge has no authority to also dismiss the suit. Price v. Bland, 44 Tex. 145; Grant v. Chambers, 34 Tex. 573; Aiken v. Carroll, 37 Tex. 73; Coloman v. Goyne, 37 Tex. 552. This is true even in cases where the temporary injunction has been dissolved on the filing of an answer swearing away the equities of the bill. It has been held that it is error to dismiss, though the plaintiff made no request for the trial on the merits. Pullen v. Baker, 41 Tex. 419: Fulgham v. Chevallier, 10 Tex. 518; Burnley v. Cook, 13 Tex. 586, 65 Am. Dec. 79; Dearborn v. Phillips, 21 Tex. 449; Texas Land Co. v. Turman, 53 Tex. 623.

Appellees, as we infer, attempted to answer the exception to the court’s dismissal of the petition by a contention to the effect that the case is one only cognizable under chapter 8, tit. 49, of the statutes relating to contests of an election, and that the contest here, if it may be construed as a contest, of the election held on December 4, 1923, comes too late, in that it appears from the allegations in plaintiffs’ petition that notice of the contest was not given within 30 days after the return day of the election, as provided in article 3051 of said chapter. But we do not think we can dispose of appellants’ objection to the court’s dismissal of the suit on this ground, for, if it be conceded that the plaintiffs’ petition, so far as the plaintiffs seek to set aside the election referred to, amounts to no more than a contest of the election of December 4, 1923, there are, nevertheless, other allegations of the petition clearly maintainable in this suit. To illustrate, among other things, it is alleged in the petition, in substance, that by virtue of the election of December- 4, 1923, the defendants on December 12, 1923, undertook to authorize and direct the sale of coupon bonds for and in behalf of the city of Lamesa to the extent of $40,000, and levy a tax of 30 cents on the $100 valuation of taxable property in said city with which to pay the interest of 6 per cent, on said bonds and provide a sinking fund for street improvement purposes, and that said levy of 30 cents is in excess of the constitutional tax limit,- etc.

The plaintiffs further allege, in substance, that—

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Related

Meyers v. Walker
276 S.W. 305 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
Walker v. Meyers
266 S.W. 499 (Texas Supreme Court, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 314, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-walker-texapp-1924.