Noble v. Empire Gas & Fuel Co.

20 S.W.2d 849
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 20, 1929
DocketNo. 1879.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 S.W.2d 849 (Noble v. Empire Gas & Fuel Co.) 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
Noble v. Empire Gas & Fuel Co., 20 S.W.2d 849 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

In the case of H. Taylor et al. v. Higgins Oil & Fuel Co. et al., on the docket of the district court of Liberty county, on the 18th day of August, 1924, appellants Lynd and Noble, defendants in that suit, recovered judgment against their codefend-ant, the appellee here, Empire Gas & Fuel Company, for the sum of $15,679.12, together with certain other relief set out in the judgment. That suit as instituted was an action in trespass to try title by H. Taylor and others against Houston Production Company and others, to recover a small tract of 1.27 acres of land off the east end of the 10-acre tract held under lease by the Houston Production Company. Immediately west of that tract was a tract of 5 acres owned by the appellants, who had leased it for oil development to appellee. Houston Production Company made the claimants of this 5 acres parties defendant, and in the event they lost to plaintiffs claimed the same amount off the east end" of the 5-acre tract. Plaintiffs had brought in a producing oil well on the tract they were suing for, and the Empire Gas & Fuel Company, as lessees under appellants, had brought in a producing oil well on the small tract put in controversy by the action of the Houston Production Company against them. On similar pleas the owners of the tracts lying west of the 19-acre tract and the 5-aere tract were made parties defendant in that case. In the final judgment rendered therein on the 18th day of August, 1924, the plaintiffs lost to the Houston Production Company, and judgment was entered against them on the issue of title and also on the issue of improvements made in good faith.

The Houston Production Company having recovered against the plaintiffs, it followed that they had no cause of action against Lynd and Noble and Empire Gas & Fuel Company on its cross-action, and that none of the other defendants had causes of action against their codefend'ants on their cross-actions. The judgment in favor of Lynd and Noble against Empire Gas & Fuel Company was in response to their plea asking for an accounting for the oil produced by it from the well on their lease. H. Taylor et al. appealed from the judgment against them to this court, where the judgment was in all things affirmed, except on the issue of improvements in good faith between them and-Houston Production Company. On that issue the case was remanded for a new trial. The judgment of the trial court in that case was very lengthy, and by express recitations adjusted the claims of all the parties to all the land that 'had been brought in by cross-action. The plaintiffs, in appealing, superseded the judgment of the trial court, and in affirming the judgment as between the plaintiffs and the Houston Production Company this court affirmed the judgment as rendered between all the other parties to the suit. Writ of error was denied by the Supreme ’Court against our judgment. Our opinion is reported in 2 S.W.(2d) 288, Taylor v. Higgins, to which we refer for a more particular statement of the claims of the various parties and the relative location of the several tracts of land put in controversy in that suit.

After writ of error was denied, Lynd and Noble called upon Empire Gas & Fuel Company to pay their judgment against it. After continued negotiations, payment was refused. Lynd and Noble then sued out execu *851 tion on their judgment, and this suit was brought by appellee, Empire Gas & Fuel Company, against appellants Lynd and Noble and their attorney, and the sheriff to whom execution had been delivered, praying that the judgment against it in favor of appellants be annulled and canceled, and that appellants be forever enjoined from enforcing it. By its preliminary allegations appellee pleaded. in detail all the circumstances leading up to the judgment against it, which circumstances are reflected in our statement, as made supra. As grounds for relief against the judgment it raised the following issue by appropriate allegations (this summary is taken from its brief):

“(1) No citation was ever issued or served against the Empire Gas & Fuel Company on the purported cross-action filed against it by Lynd and Noble; no waiver of such service of citation was ever given by the Empire Gas & Fuel Company, and the Empire Gas & Fuel Company never, at any time, entered any ■ appearance in said cause of H. Taylor et al. v. Higgins Oil & Fuel Co. et al., with respect to said purported cross-action of the said Lynd and Noble.
“(2) That the district court of Liberty county is a court of record, and any judgment rendered in said court must be supported by pleadings, and the purported cross-action .filed by the said Lynd and Noble against the Empire Gas & Fuel Company nowhere alleged any conversion by the Empire Gas & Fuel Company of the royalty oil belonging to Lynd and Noble, or alleged that Said royalty oil was otherwise handled than called for in the oil, gas, and mineral lease from the said Lynd and Noble to the Empire Gas & Fuel Company and contained no prayer for any money judgment against the Empire Gas & Fuel Company.
“(3) That the judgment on said purported cross-action against the Empire Gas & Fuel Company was entered non obstante veredicto, and the district courts of this state are without power to enter Such judgment.
“(4) That the purported judgment was wholly unsupported by the evidence, the only evidence that was introduced in support of said cross-action affirmatively showing the quantity of oil that was run to the credit of the said Lynd and Noble by the Humble Pipe Line Company and the amount of money which the said Lynd and Noble were entitled to receive from the Humble Pipe Line Company by reason thereof and there .being not one scintilla of evidence in the record in any wise indicating that the Empire Gas & Fuel Company had converted to its own use said royalty oil or any part thereof or had received the proceeds from the sale thereof or any part of such proceeds, and that by reason of each, and all of the foregoing undisputed facts the judgment entered in said cause was void ab initio.
“But, in the event each and all of the four propositions above asserted were overruled, then the Empire Gas & Fuel Company said:
“(5) The judgment rendered in this cause on said purported cross-action was .rendered on the 29th day of August, 1924, and was not appealed from by either the Empire Gas & Fuel Company or the said Lynd and Noble, and no execution having been issued thereon within the one year provided by law, said judgment, was dormant, and by reason of such dormancy, the Empire Gas & Fuel Company was entitled to enjoin the issuance and levy of execution thereunder.”

These contentions are advanced by appel-lee as counter propositions in support of the judgment in its favor.

The appellants answered by general and special denial and by special pleas to the effect that appellee in fact knew of the answer filed against it, or in law was visited with notice of that fact; that it was present by attor-.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.W.2d 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noble-v-empire-gas-fuel-co-texapp-1929.