San Jacinto Oil Co. v. Culberson

101 S.W. 197, 100 Tex. 462, 1907 Tex. LEXIS 259
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1907
DocketNo. 1676.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 197 (San Jacinto Oil Co. v. Culberson) 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
San Jacinto Oil Co. v. Culberson, 101 S.W. 197, 100 Tex. 462, 1907 Tex. LEXIS 259 (Tex. 1907).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

On the 16th day of January, 1903, in the District Court of Tarrant County the property of plaintiff *464 in error, The San Jacinto Oil Company, was placed in the hands of George W. Armstrong, as receiver, tó be administered and distributed in payment of its debts. On the 7th day of March, 1903, a master in chancery was appointed, whose duties were defined in the order of appointment. He was directed, among other things, to ascertain- and report all claims and demands against the company, the priority and validity of the same; to examine and report upon all interventions then or thereafter filed, stating his conclusions of law and fact thereon and the proper disposition to be made thereof; and all such interventions and the claims of all persons were referred to the master for such investigation and report. It was further ordered that, “said master in chancery shall file his report herein from time to time as he may complete the same and that any party or parties interested in this suit, may and shall be heard upon exceptions to the same, provided that such exceptions shall have been made before the master in chancery upon the rendition by him of his conclusions in the premises covered by his report, and upon the failure of any or all of the parties interested in any of the matters pending before said master to take exceptions to his conclusions or report before him, then upon the filing of any such report by the master the same shall stand confirmed. Notice of the hearing of all matters referred to the master and considered by him, shall be given to all of the parties interested, of the time of the consideration by him of said respective matters. All exceptions and objections to the master’s report made and entered before the master, as above provided, and filed in this court, shall be by the clerk entered in the motion docket, and shall be heard by this court without further notice, as soon as the same may suit the convenience of the court.”

Thereafter on April 14, 1903, the action now before us was instituted by intervention in the receivership proceeding, whereby the interveners, J. J. Culberson, The Paris Oil and Cotton Company, The West Cotton Oil Company, The Ladonia Cotton Oil Company, The Celeste Cotton Oil Company, The Waxahachie Cotton Oil Company, The Decatur Cotton Oil Company, The Corsicana Cotton Oil Company, The Rosebud Cotton Oil Company, and The Shreveport Cotton Oil Company sought to establish a liability against the San Jacinto Oil Company for damages for breach of a contract made by it with Culberson as the common agent of the other interveners for their several benefits, whereby the San Jacinto Oil Company upon specified -terms had agreed to furnish to them oil to be used as fuel in running their oil mills.

No answer of the receiver to this petition of intervention, and none of the San Jacinto Oil Company prior to March 23, 1905, after the return of the master’s report hereinafter stated, appear in the record.

No special order referring this intervention to the master seems to have been made, but it is to be presumed that he entered upon the investigation of it under the general authority above stated. He made a report upon it August 12, 1904, and in his statement of the case, he refers to an answer of “the defendant” setting up defenses of the same nature as those set up in the answer afterwards filed by the San Jacinto Oil Company above referred to, and finds that such defenses, as to some of the -interveners were not sustained, and that those interveners *465 are entitled to recover amounts stated by him. He found that The West Cotton Oil Company, The Corsicana Cotton Oil Company, and The Decatur Cotton Oil Company were not entitled to recover anything, and those companies do not appear to have further prosecuted their claims. No report of the evidence taken appears to have accompanied the report, but it is apparent that testimony had been taken and the parties heard. On the day this report was filed the defendant filed exceptions to it in which a number of the conclusions of fact were specifically contested. The record shows no further proceedings until the filing of the defendant’s answer on the date before given.

On the 23d day of March, 1905, the cause was tried by a jury, and verdict and judgment were rendered for the amounts as found by the master.

The assignments of error complain of the ruling of the trial court in admitting in evidence the master’s report, and of the charge giving to it the effect of prima facie evidence and placing upon the defendant the burden of proof upon the contested issues of fact. The Court of Civil Appeals were inclined to hold that these rulings were erroneous, but thought they could not avail the appellants because under the facts stated they were not entitled to a trial by jury. .The Court of Civil Appeals held that a jury should have been demanded before the cause was referred to the master, and that in acquiescing in such reference by appearing before him and participating in the contest they had waived the right to a jury; and further that, in order to entitle themselves to object in court to the action of the master, exceptions thereto must have been reserved before him and embodied in those presented to the court; and that, as such objections were not made before the master, it was the duty of the court to approve the report and render judgment for the amounts allowed by it. Hence, it was concluded there was .nothing to try when the cause was submitted to the jury.

We think a sufficient answer to this position would be that, as it does not appear affirmatively from the record that the demand for a jury was not timely made, nor that the objections to the conclusions of the master were not presented before him, the presumption, from the action of the trial court in allowing a jury, should be that all that was essential to entitle the defendant thereto had been done. The parties were certainly entitled either to action upon the report of the master by the court, or to a trial by jury, and when the former 'course was not taken, but the latter ordered, the natural conclusion, from the record, is that the conditions existed to make it proper.

But wo do not rest our decision on so narrow a proposition. The defendant was entitled to a trial by jury of the contested issues of fact although it had not demanded a jury before the cause went to the master, and had not res.erved its exceptions before him. The question whether or not the proceeding was legal or equitable is wholly immaterial. The combined effect of sections 8 and 10 of article 5 of the Constitution is to give the right in “all causes” and “without regard to any distinction between law and equity” upon demand and payment of the prescribed fee. The time for the demand, as fixed by the Legis *466 lature, is the first day of the term at which the cause is to be tried (Rev. Stats., art. 3189); and a jury trial at one term is not waived by the failure to demand it at preceding terms, as is made plain by the provision that at each term the docket is to be called to give parties the opportunity to make the demand. (Id., art.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 197, 100 Tex. 462, 1907 Tex. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-jacinto-oil-co-v-culberson-tex-1907.