Miller v. Kountze Corporate School Dist.

35 S.W.2d 1076
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 19, 1931
DocketNo. 2051.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 S.W.2d 1076 (Miller v. Kountze Corporate School Dist.) 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
Miller v. Kountze Corporate School Dist., 35 S.W.2d 1076 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

The plaintiffs are E. J. Miller and J. H. Yentzen. The defendants are: (1) Kountze Corporate School District (sometimes called Kountze Independent School District), which is incorporated under the laws of the state of Texas and has all the powers of such a corporation; (2) J. B. Hooks (president of said Kountze Corporate School District, or president of the board of trustees of said school district), and Thos. B. Coe, Bud Hooks, Nick Matthews, Frank Crews, James F. Parker, J. C. Alsup, and W. R. Robertson, all members, of said board of trustees, and all of the foregoing parties being sued in their capacity as officials of said Kountze Corporate School District and individually; (3) J. O. Fountain, former president of the defunct Hardin County State Bank; (4) E. M. Pitts, E. D. Adams, *1077 and L. M. Adams, sureties on a certain depository bond executed by tbe Hardin County State Bank for tbe purpose of guaranteeing tbe safety of tbe proceeds of school building money; and (5) W. B. Livesay and N. E. Wiedmann. Tbe two defendants last named were and are residents of Jefferson county, J. C. Alsup-was a resident of Harris county, and tbe remainder of said defendants were and are residents of Hardin county.

As plaintiffs, appellants filed tbis suit against appellees as defendants on October 22, 1928, in Jefferson county, Tex. In January, 1929, plea of privilege filed by appellees was sustained and tbe case ordered transferred to tbe district court of Hardin county. At tbe time tbis order was made, tbe district court of Hardin county was in session. Tbe next term of tbe district court of Hardin coupty convened on May 20, 1929. In tbe meantime, on Eebruary 15, 1929, tbe district clerk of Hardin county, answering an inquiry from appellants in regard to tbis case, wrote: ‘Tbis ease bas not been transferred as yet, that is tbe papers bave not reached tbis office.” On May 9, 1929, tbe district clerk of Hardin county again addressed a note to appellants to tbe effect that tbis case bad “not been transferred, therefore, its not in tbis court.” No effort was made by appellants to transfer tbe case until after adjournment of the May term nor until August 7, 1929, when tbe transfer was perfected.

On June 5,1930, when tbe case, as it was on tbe docket of tbe district court of Hardin county, was called for trial, appellees’ motion to dismiss on tbe ground that appellants bad not exercised due diligence' in transfer-" ring tbe case was presented and in all things sustained. Tbe case was also dismissed on tbe ground that appellants’ cause of action was barred by limitation. Tbe order of dismissal was as follows:

“No. 4981
“E. J. Miller et al. v. Kountze Corporate School District et al.
“June 6th, 1930.
“Defendants Motion to Dismiss and plea of Limitation sustained, to which plaintiffs, in open court, excepts, gives notice of appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals of tbe 9th Supreme Judicial District of Texas, at Beaumont, Texas, and plaintiffs are allowed 80 days in which to file statement of facts and bills of exception.”

• Against tbis order appellants duly filed motion for a new trial, which was overruled. Appellants thus summarize their answer to tbe motion to dismiss, bringing forward tbe facts upon which they sought to justify their delay in transferring tbe ease:

“As appears from plaintiffs’ reply to defendants’ motion to dismiss and tbe exhibits attached thereto, plaintiffs believed that defendants would attend to the securing of tbe transfer of said cause to, Hardin County.
“Although plaintiffs bad until tbe 9th or 10th of Eebruary in which to perfect their appeal from said order of transfer and tbe January term of tbe district court at Kountze ended by provision of law on or prior to Eeb-ruary 2,1929, and although tbe next term did not commence until tbe 20th of May, as shown by Exhibit A and A-l attached to said reply, counsel for plaintiffs wrote both tbe district clerk and tbe district judge, said letters indisputably evidencing tbe fact that plaintiffs were diligently active in attempting to secure a qualified court to try said causfe.
“Though tbe district clerk at Kountze promptly advised that said cause had not then been transferred, be stated in such reply that the matter of having tbe disqualification of Judge Coe certified to tbe Governor so that a qualified judge might-be appointed would be attended to as soon as tbe papers were received by him, counsel for plaintiffs still believed that defendants would secure tbe transfer of said cause and relied upon defendants doing so. It was not until counsel received a copy of tbe settings of cases for the May term that they became aware or bad reason to believe that defendants bad not secured tbe transfer of said cause and counsel also noticed from said settings that no qualified judge bad been assigned to the court at Kountze 'for said May term and that no time was set aside during said term for tbe trial of causes in which Judge Coe was disqualified. In fact tbe record shows ‘that during tbe January, May and August terms, 1929, of tbe District Court of Hárdin County, no, other Judge exchanges benches with Judge Coe, and that Judge Coe presided over tbe district court of Hardin County, Texas, during all of tbe time of all of those terms of tbe district court of Hardin County, Texas.’
“Having finally ascertained, or at least concluded, that defendants did not intend to attend to tbe transfer of said cause, plaintiffs on or about August 17,1929, completed tbe transfer of said cause and though tbe district clerk, in accordance with bis promise previous mentioned, bad Judge Coe, prior to tbe beginning of tbe August term, note bis disqualification therein and further order same to be certified to tbe Governor, said form being tbe one mentioned in plaintiffs’ letter of Eebruary 13, 1929 and having been sent to tbe district clerk at that time, for reasons never known to plaintiff, even to tbis day, tbe Governor did not appoint a qualified judge until April of 1930.
“Several weeks prior to tbe date hereinafter mentioned, at which time counsel for all parties received notice of same, tbis cause was duly set (such setting being tbe first and only setting ever made) for tbe week beginning June 2, 1930, and Judge Geo. O’Brien, who was designated to try said cause, informed counsel that be would take the same up June 5, 1930.”

*1078 Opinion.

One of the reasons advanced by appellants for not dnly transferring the ease was as follows, to quote from tbeir brief:

“Plaintiffs believed that defendants would attend to the securing of the transfer of said cause to Hardin County.”

That same excuse was offered by appellants in Hinkle v. Thompson (Tex. Civ. App.) 195 S. W. 311, 316, where Mr. Chief Justice High-tower, overruling appellants’ proposition, said:

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Related

Miller v. Kountze Corporate School Dist.
54 S.W.2d 344 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1932)

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35 S.W.2d 1076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-kountze-corporate-school-dist-texapp-1931.