Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Co. v. Rayzor

172 S.W. 1103, 106 Tex. 544, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 102
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1915
DocketNo. 2341.
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 1103 (Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Co. v. Rayzor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Co. v. Rayzor, 172 S.W. 1103, 106 Tex. 544, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 102 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the Second District has certified for our determination the question appearing at the close of their certificate, which is here copied:

“The above entitled cause is now pending before us on a motion for rehearing and we deem it advisable to certify to your honors the question hereinafter stated arising from the following state of facts:
“On the 5th day of October, 1907, appellee J. FT. Eayzor filed his original petition in the County Court of Denton County complaining of the Pecos & FTorthern Texas Bailway Company and the Fort Worth & Denver City Bailway Company because of negligence and resulting damages to a shipment of pianos from Denton, Texas, over the railway lines of the companies named to Hereford, Deaf Smith County, Texas. It ivas alleged in said original petition that said pianos tvere delivered to said defendants on the 12th day of September, 1906, and, after alleging the negligence relied upon and making other necessarir averments, it was further charged that The said pianos were so carelessly and negligently handled and managed by the said defendants and each of them that they were broken and defaced, and otherwise injured in so *546 much that the value was reduced in the sum of eight hundred and fifty dollars, and the plaintiff was put to the further cost and expense in repairing and handling the said pianos in his endeavor to lessen the damage as much as possible in the sum of one hundred and twenty-five dollars and that the plaintiff was thereby damaged in the sum of nine hundred and seventy-five dollars. That in the manner and by the means aforesaid, the defendants and each of them, became justly indebted to. the plaintiff in said sum of nine hundred and seventy-five dollars, and though the same is long since due and the plaintiff has often demanded payment thereof, the defendants and each of them, have wholly failed to pay the same or any part thereof and still fail and refuse so to do to plaintiff’s said damage in the said sum of nine hundred and seventy-five dollars. Wherefore, plaintiff prays that the defendants be cited to answer this petition, and that on the trial hereof he have judgment for his said damages in the sum of nine hundred and seventy-five dollars, with legal interest thereon, for costs of suit and for general relief/ On January 4, 1908, appellee filed his first amended original petition which sets forth the negligence relied upon and the manner and extent of damage in substantially the same terms as was used in the original petition. A trial thereon before the court without a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of appellees for the sum of seven hundred dollars. On appeal from the judgment referred to it was reversed and the cause remanded by us on the ground that the damages stated in the petition exceeded the County Court’s jurisdiction as will more fully appear from the opinion in the case reported in 135 S. W., 619. Thereafter on April 35, 1910, appellee filed his second amended original petition in all material respects averring negligence and claiming damages in manner and total amount as in his- said two former petitions, but with the following further allegation and prayer, viz: ‘That the plaintiffs herein have never sued for or sought to recover interest upon the damage suffered by them as aforesaid, except from and after the rendition of a final judgment in this cause and have not sought to recover either by way of damages, interest or otherwise, any sum exceeding the sum of nine hundred and seventy-five dollars, but they have laid their damages at said sum of nine hundred and seventy-five dollars to cover the full amount herein sued for, including their damages and such interest as they may be entitled to from and after the rendition of the judgment herein/ And the prayer, so far as material, was for ‘judgment for his (appellee’s) said damages in the said sum of nine hundred and seventy-five dollars, with legal interest thereon from the rendition of the final judgment herein and no more/ To this second amended original petition the defendants, among other things, for the first time interposed the plea of the two years statute of limitation. The trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for seven hundred and fifty dollars, equally apportioned between the appellants herein. The present appeal is from this latter verdict and judgment and substantially the only question presented on this appeal is whether appellee is precluded from a recovery by virtue of the two years statute of limitation. On a former *547 day of this term the majority concluded that he is, Conner, Ch. J., dissenting, as will more fully appear by the opinion then rendered to be transmitted herewith.
“We, accordingly, certify to your honors for determination the question whether under the allegations and statements hereinbefore made, appellee is barred by the two years statute of limitation from all recovery.”

If the County Court was without jurisdiction of the cause of action declared upon in the original petition, the filing of the petition was not the “commencement and prosecution of a suit,” and -did not operate as an interruption of limitation. Ball v. Hagy, 54 S. W., 915; International & G. N. R. R. Co. v. Flory, 118 S. W., 1116; Sweet v. Light Company, 97 Tenn., 252, 36 S. W., 1090. We think that is evident. BTothing is better settled than that in a suit which the court is inherently without the power to hear and determine, any judgment rendered and all proceedings had in its relation are mere nullities. Under this fundamental rule, with the court destitute of all authority to give to the suit any cognizance, it is difficult to conceive that the filing of the petition could have any legal effect. To constitute the proceeding “a suit” or.“action,” in any legal sense, it is essential that it rest in a court with the power to hear it. Without such a forum it is not “a suit,” since it lacks that which is as necessary to make it a suit as the petition itself. That which the law denominates as a wholly vain proceeding can hardly be characterized “a suit” or “action.” If it will support nothing, and can affect nothing, how can it count for anything?

There is no adjudication of which we are aware that supports the view that, in the absence of a saving statute, the filing of a petition interrupts limitation where the court was without jurisdiction of the cause of action alleged. In volume 25, Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure, page 1299, there is a general text to the effect that a want of jurisdiction in the court in which the action is brought, does not operate to prevent the interruption of limitation. But this is a loose and misleading statement. The cases cited in support of it are from the Georgia and Louisiana courts. We have not deemed it necessary to review all of them, but an examination of the latest case cited from each court reveals that in each instance the decision was rested upon a saving statute. In the Georgia case, for illustration (119 Ga., 781, 47 S. E., 366), the original action was instituted in a court having jurisdiction of the subject matter, but not of the person of the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 1103, 106 Tex. 544, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pecos-northern-texas-railway-co-v-rayzor-tex-1915.