Pierce v. Willson

263 S.W. 581, 114 Tex. 136, 1924 Tex. LEXIS 100
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1924
DocketNo. 3924.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 263 S.W. 581 (Pierce v. Willson) 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
Pierce v. Willson, 263 S.W. 581, 114 Tex. 136, 1924 Tex. LEXIS 100 (Tex. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge POWELL

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

In the Court of Civil Appeals, Mrs. J. K. Pierce was the appellee and O. C. Sewell the appellant. The nature of this cause has been correctly stated by the Court of Civil Appeals in the following language:

"‘Appellee owned 150 acres of land in Hopkins County, which she rented to one E. E. Sewell for the year 1920. In February, March and June of that year she loaned money to said Sewell to enable Mm, she claimed, to make a crop en the land, taking his promissory notes *138 therefor and a mortgage on the crop and on other personal property to secure the payment of the notes. In February, 1921, she commenced- a suit against said Sewell in the District Court of Hopkins County to recover a sum she claimed to be due her as rent and $864.83 she claimed to be due and unpaid on the notes, and to forclose the mortgage lien and a landlord’s lien which, she asserted, existed on the property, including the seven bales of cotton in controversy here, valued at $350. At the time she instituted the suit appellee sued out a writ of sequestration which was levied on the seven bales of cotton. Appellant claimed to be owner of the cotton, and filed a claimant’s affidavit and bond to try the right of property therein as provided by the statute. (Arts. 7769 to 7795.) The claim affidavit and bond were returned to the county court, and the case made thereby was tried by that court on issues made up as directed by the statute. (Art. 7780.) After hearing the testimony the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for appellee, and, the jury having complied with the instruction, • rendered judgment in her favor against appellant and the sureties on his claim bond for $364, the value of the cotton and interest thereon, and for $35, being ten per cent, of such value, as damages she was entitled to by force of the statute. - (Art. 7747.)”

It will be observed that the cause under consideration is between the relator and a son of the original tenant who rented thirty acres of this land through his father.

Three opinions were written by the Court of Civil Appeals in this case, each by Chief Justice Willson. The first opinion concluded as follows:

“The mortgage E. E. Sewell made to appellee is not in the record sent to this court, but it appears that it covered only the cotton grown by E. E. Sewell, on the land. Therefore it may be said it appeared as a matter of law that appellee had no claim on the cotton in controversy by virtue of the mortgage. It follows that the court, erred when he instructed the jury to find for the appellee and rendered ■judgment in her favor for the value of the cotton, for the fact, if it Was a fact, that appellee had a landlord’s lien on the cotton did not warrant the judgment, as mere lienor without right to possession, 'the only relief appellee was entitled to as against appellant was a foreclosure of the lien and a sale of the property in a proper proceeding for that purpose.

“The judgment will be reversed and judgment in appellant’s favor will be rendered here, but without prejudice to any right appellee may have against him, predicable on the relationship of landlord and tenant.”

Counsel for Mrs. Pierce then filed a motion for rehearing, which' was granted, and the judgment of the trial court thereupon affirmed. *139 This second opinion can be found in 244 S. W., 1034. In this latter opinion, the court withdrew its first opinion from the files. Hence, it was not published. In this second opinion,- the court said:

“We are still of the opinion, after further consideration of the record in connection with appellee’s motion for a rehearing now pending before us, that the cotton in controversy, for the reason stated, was not subject 'to the mortgage, but think we erred in concluding that appellee could not in such a proceeding assert a landlord’s lien on the cotton, if she had one as against appellant.”

Upon the rendition of this second opinion, counsel for O. C. Sewell filed a motion for rehearing, which was granted, and the judgment of the trial court reversed and rendered in favor of the said Sewell See: 245 S. W. R, 745.

Thereupon, counsel for Mrs. Pierce again filed a motion for rehearing and in the alternative a request that certain questions be certified to the Supreme Court. Both of these motions were overruled in due course.

Whereupon, upon proper petition, the Supreme Court permitted petition for mandamus to be filed by Mrs. Pierce against the justices of the Court of Civil Appeals at Texarkana and 0. C. Sewell. Therefore, this is an original petition for mandamus to require aforesaid Court of Civil Appeals to certify, to the Supreme Court certain questions determined by the former, upon the allegation that the holdings of the Court of Civil Appeals in the instant case are in conflict in the respects hereafter mentioned with those of other Courts of Civil Appeals. Article 1623, Vernon’s Sayle’s Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, 1914.

When does the “conflict” of decisions authorize the writ of mandamus to issue under aforesaid Article of our statutes Í We refer to a few decisions of our Supreme Court upon this point.

In the case of McCurdy v. Conner, 95 Texas, 246, 66 S. W., 664, Chief Justice Gaines says it must appear that “practically the same issue of fact” was presented upon the trial of each of the cases. Further, that “substantially the same proposition of law” must be involved in the two cases.

Our Supreme Court, in the later case of McKay v. Conner, 101 Texas, 313, 107 S. W., 45, speaks as follows:

“It is evident from the foregoing statement, that in neither of the cases cited to show a conflict was the point involved which was decided in the case in which it is sought to compel the Court of Civil Appeals to certify the question. When one court decides a question one way, and another court makes a contrary ruling upon the same question, there is a conflict. Hence, unless the question be the same, there can be no conflict. But counsel have labored in argument strenuously to show that the principles announced in the *140 cases cited necessarily lead to a conclusion adverse to that arrived at by the Court of Civil Appeals in the present case. But we do not think that such is the fact. Besides we are of opinion that the conflict must be upon the very question decided and not in the reasoning by which the conclusion is reached.”

In the very recent case of Garitty v. Rainey, 112 Texas, 369, 247 S. W., 825, Chief Justice Cureton says:

“The conflict in decisions of Courts of Civil Appeals which will authorize this Court to issue a writ of mandamus and require certification must be upon a question of law involved and determined, and such that one decision would overrule the other if both were rendered by the same court. The conflict must be well defined. An apparent inconsistency in the principles announced, or in the application of recognized principles, is not sufficient. The rulings must be so far upon the same state of facts that the decision of one case is necessarily conclusive of the decision in the other.

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Bluebook (online)
263 S.W. 581, 114 Tex. 136, 1924 Tex. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierce-v-willson-tex-1924.