Robertson v. Work, Dist. Judge

270 S.W. 1006, 114 Tex. 461, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 100
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1925
DocketNo. 4225.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 270 S.W. 1006 (Robertson v. Work, Dist. Judge) 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
Robertson v. Work, Dist. Judge, 270 S.W. 1006, 114 Tex. 461, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 100 (Tex. 1925).

Opinion

Mr. Judge BISHOP

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

William F. Robertson, on May 12 1924, filed suit in the District Court of the 68th Judicial District of Dallas County, against Henry E. Caswell, C. R. DeLeach, F. D. Blount, J. G. Foley, D. Jones, S. B. Carpenter, J. Horsner, J. N. McCollum, Chas. R. Carter, R. H. Wester, S. E. Moss, and Earl Beeler, each of whom resided in the state of Florida, except S. E. Moss, who resided in Dallas County, Texas, and Earl Beeler, who resided in Eastland County, Texas, for $8,000, alleged to be due him by the defendants for a certain leasehold estate conveyed by him to them, and for $2,000 for services rendered by him to defendants under a contract therefor. On May 16, 1924, citations were served on defendants Carter and Wester in Dallas County, Texas, requiring them to appear in said cause and answer the plaintiff’s petition at or before *10 o’clock A. M., on Monday, June 9, 1924. They have filed no answer. Citation was also served on ■S. E. Moss, and on May 30, 1924, he filed answer consisting of general demurrer and general denial.

Thereafter on June 11, one Chas. A. Rasbury, as amicus curies, filed a suggestion of lack of sufficient service on Carter and Wester, as follows:

“It is respectfully suggested to your Honor that the service to obtained would not support a judgment by default or any other character of judgment entered upon such service for that both of said deféndants were served with citation at a time when they were •exempt and immune from service of civil process issuing from this Honorable Court, in that both said defendants are non-residents of the State of Texas, and were at the time of the service of said writs non-residents of the State of Texas, each having their residence in the State of Florida; that at the time of the service of said citations the defendant Charles R. Carter was present in the State of Texas to attend the trial of a cause in the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of Texas at Dallas, which had been theretofore removed from the 14th Judicial District Court of Dallas County, Texas, and that said R. H. Wester was present at the time of the service of said citation, as a witness in said proceeding in the District Court of the United States, the said cause being styled No. 3390, W. F. Robertson v. Charles R. Carter et al. and which had been *465 as aforesaid, removed from the State Court to the said United States District Court.

“That on the morning of May 16 1924, after the plaintiff W. F. Robertson, had announced ready for trial in said cause, he took a 'non-suit and had an order of dismissal entered therein and at which .time the said Charles R. Carter and the said R. H. Wester were served in the corridor of the Federal Building in Dallas, Texas, with citations in this suit requiring them to appear, as aforesaid, and which new suit is but a re-hash and a re-filing of the original suit so removed to the District Court of the United States.

‘1 That at the time each of the defendants herein were served with citations as above recited, they were in the State of Texas and in the County of Dallas for the sole and only purpose of attending the trial of the suit so pending in the United States District Court; that said Carter as defendant and the said Wester as a witness, was notified ■by the undersigned of the setting of said cause and that they and each of them came into the State of Texas for the sole and only purpose of attending the trial of said case, and arrived in Dallas for said purpose on the morning of Tuesday, May 13, 1924, said ease having been set for trial on May 14, 1924; but not having been reached on the assignment until May 15, 1924; that as soon as said case was non-suited and dismissed by the plaintiff in the United States District Court both said Carter and the said Wester immediately left for their homes in the State of Florida.

“It is therefore respectfully suggested to your Honor that both the defendant Carter and the witness Wester, under the rules of law in such cases, had a reasonable time to come to the trial of said cause and to return therefrom and that while so doing and while in attendance upon the trial were immune from the service of process issued by the State Courts and such process is void and will not support a judgment of any sort.’’

To this written suggestion was attached affidavits of Carter and Wester to the facts set out in the suggestion, and the court having given consideration thereto, made and caused to be entered the following order:

“This day came on to be heard the suggestion of Charles A. Rasbury, a practising attorney of this bar, as amicus curia, that the service heretofore had upon the defendants Charles R. Carter and R. H. Wester was void, for the reason that said Carter was served with citation herein while in attendance upon the Federal Court in a suit filed by the plaintiff herein against said Carter and others, and for the reason that said Wester was served with citation while in attendance upon said suit in the Federal Court as a witness for said Carter; and the court, after considering said suggestion of said *466 amicus curies and the affidavits of said Carter and said Wester, presented to the Court in connection therewith, is of the opinion that the service of citation upon both said parties under the circumstances recited in said affidavits is void and invalid and should be quashed and held for naught.

“It is therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that said citations served both upon said Carter and said Wester are invalid, void and of no force and effect and are not sufficient to require said defendants to answer in this proceeding and are insufficient to support any character of judgment and are hereby quashed and held for naught; to which action of the Court plaintiff excepted, etc.”

Thereafter on October 2, 1924, plaintiff Robertson presented to the court his motion theretofore filed requesting that all of the defendants be dismissed from the cause except Carter, Wester, and Moss; that interlocutory judgments by default be rendered and entered against Carter and Wester; and that said cause be set for trial for as early a date as the business of the court and condition of the docket would permit in order that trial be had and final judgment rendered. The. court dismissed from the cause the defendants as requested, but refused to render judgment by default against Carter and Wester and to set the cause for trial, by an order entered of record as follows:

“For the reasons heretofore stated in an order entered in the cause ‘as of June 9, 1924’, quashing and setting aside the purported service upon the defendants Charles R. Carter and R. H. Wester upon the suggestion of Honorable Charles A. Rasbury, amicus curies, and because of said prior order, plaintiff’s motion for the entry of interlocutory judgments by default against said Charles R. Carter and against said R. H. Wester, defendants, be, and the same is hereby, overruled, and the entry of such judgment by default be, and the same is hereby, refused, — to which action of the court the plaintiff, in open court, duly excepted.

“For the reasons given in the last preceding paragraph hereof above, and because the suit has not been dismissed as against said Charles R. Carter, and said R. H.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W. 1006, 114 Tex. 461, 1925 Tex. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-work-dist-judge-tex-1925.