Rosenfield v. Campbell

276 S.W. 728, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 834
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 12, 1925
DocketNo. 8611.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 728 (Rosenfield v. Campbell) 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
Rosenfield v. Campbell, 276 S.W. 728, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 834 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, O. J.

This is an application for mandamus, presented by relator, to require the respondent, who is judge of the district court of the Eightieth judicial district to hear and determine a motion for contempt filed in the case of Rosenfield v. Seif-ert, which is pending in the district court for the Sixty-First judicial district, and presented to respondent for hearing.

The following are in substance the allegations of the application which is duly verified by the oath of the relator. In a suit brought by relator against J. W. Seifert and M. W. Seifert in the Sixty-First district court for Harris county, the plaintiff asked for, a temporary injunction restraining the defendants, until final judgment.could be rendered in the cause, from further violation of a contract executed by them, and upon the alleged breach of which plaintiff’s cause of action was based. The trial court refused to grant the injunction. From the order refusing the temporary injunction, the plaintiff, relator herein, appealed to this court.

In disposing of that appeal, on April 18, 1925, we rendered the following judgment:

“This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record, and the same being inspected, because it is the opinion of this court that there was error in the judgment, it is therefore considered, adjudged, and ordered that the judgment of the court below be reversed, and because it is further the opinion of this court that an injunction in the terms indieáted below should have been granted by the trial court, and this court here now proceeding to render such judgment as should have been rendered by the court below on the application of the plaintiff, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the district clerk of Harris county, upon the filing with him of a bond in the sum of $1,500, executed in the terms of the law, do issue an injunction restraining the defendants, J. W. Seifert and M. W. Seifert, their agents and employés, during the pendency of this suit, unless otherwise ordered, from conducting any factory or business for the manufacture of dry tumblers or from selling any dry tumblers of the kind manufactured by the plaintiff, M. H. Rosenfield, under the patent right purchased by him from the defendants within the following territory. (Here follows designation of the territory.) The states of Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky, New Mexico, Arizona, Georgia, Mississippi, Florida, Arkansas, Tennessee, and that part of the state of California south of the town of Bakersfield in said state, Oklahoma, and the Republic of Mexico.
“It is further ordered that the appellees, J. W. Seifert and M. W. Seifert, pay all costs incurred by this proceeding and this decision be certified below for observance.”

The bond required by this judgment was duly executed and filed, and thereafter, on the 23d day of April, .1925, a writ of injunction was issued by. the clerk of the trial court restraining the defendants Seifert, in the terms of the judgment above set out. This writ was duly served upon said defendants on the.day it was issued.

Thereafter, on May 12, 1925, the defendants, Seifert, filed in the district court for the Sixty-First distinct, in which said cause is pending, an amended answer to plaintiff’s petition and a plea in reconvention for damages against plaintiff, and also a motion to dissolve the temporary injunction. Upon a hearing on the motion to dissolve, on May 27, 1925, the court sustained a plea in abatement presented by the plaintiff, relator herein.

On June 3d, the relator filed a motion and affidavit in the district court for the Sixty-First district, charging defendants, Seifert, with disobeying the injunction theretofore issued and served on them by continuing to manufacture and sell in the prohibited territory the machines or appliances described in the judgment granting said ifijunction, and in the writ issued thereon, and praying that said defendants be cited to appear and show cause why they should not be held in contempt for violating the injunction issued out of said court.

On June 8th, the defendants filed and presented the following answer to the contempt proceeding:

*730 “In the District Court of Harris County, Texas. Sixty-First Judicial District.
“M. H. Rosenfield y. J. W. Seifert et al.
“No. 113633. .
“Now come J. W. Seifert and M. W. Seifert, defendants and respondents in the above-styled cause, and respectfully represent to the court that they are in no manner guilty of contempt of any order, decree, or action of this honorable court or either of the district courts of Harris county, Tex., or of any other court, and demur to the complaint filed herein by plaintiff, M. H. Rosenfield, and say that same is wholly insufficient and should be abated and dismissed for want of jurisdiction of this honorable court to entertain the same, or of jurisdiction of any other court to entertain this contempt complaint or any such other complaint that may be filed herein for the reason that such writ of injunction which plaintiff claims these defendants have violated was issued by the Court of Civil Appeals for the First supreme judicial district of Texas, at Galveston, and not by any trial judge of either of the district courts of Harris county, Tex.; and that said Court of Civil Appeals has vested, itself of jurisdiction and has transmitted its mandate to the Sixty-First judicial district court of Harris county, Tex., all of which facts are here now called to' the attention of the court and are apparent of record herein.
“Wherefore, these defendants and respondents pray that plaintiff’s complaint and application that they be held in contempt of this court be abated and dismissed.”

This plea of the defendants was sustained by the respondent on June 9, 1925, and the contempt proceedings were abated and dismissed. This application for mandamus named the defendants, Seifert, as corespondents.

The attorney of record for the defendants, Seifert, in the original suit, and on the hearing of the contempt motion, has filed an answer in this court as attorney for the respondent, Roy Campbell, and as amicus cu-rise. The answer of the respondent, Campbell, is as follows:

“Now come respondent, Roy Campbell, presiding judge of the district court of Harris county, Tex., and Homer E. Stephenson in the capacity of amicus curte, in answer to relator’s application for mandamus herein, and in answer to same would show that the trial judge declined to entertain the contempt proceeding referred to in relator’s application, for the reason and upon the theory that the district court had not jurisdiction, and! that such contempt proceeding' should be entertained by the honorable Court of Civil Appeals which rendered the judgment under which such contempt proceedings are alleged to have arisen. Further than this, the Honorable Roy Campbell, district judge, has no further answer to make.”

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 728, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosenfield-v-campbell-texapp-1925.