Simpson v. McGuirk

194 S.W. 979, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 438
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 5, 1917
DocketNo. 7873.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 979 (Simpson v. McGuirk) 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
Simpson v. McGuirk, 194 S.W. 979, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 438 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

The appellee, T. J. McGuirk, instituted this suit in the district court of Van Zandt county on the 15th day of February, 1917, to enjoin appellants, W. E. Simpson, Jim Wilson, Charlie Wilson, and A. L. Tisdale, from interfering by suit or otherwise with appellee’s possession and rightful enjoyment of certain lands and improvements described in Ms petition until the bearing and determination of a suit filed by tbe appellant W. E. Simpson against the ap-pellee on tbe 2d day of January, 1917, in said district court, to try the title and right of possession to said land and premises.

The allegations of'the petition for the injunction herein prayed for are, in substance, that W. E. Simpson owns the land involved in the suit; that the appellant Jim Wilson is tile said Simpson’s agent in Van Zandt county to look after said land; that Charlie Wilson, one of the appellants, is the son of the said Jim Wilson; that for the last five years appellee has occupied as the tenant of the said Simpson the said land; that in August, 1906, appellee entered into a contract with the appellant Simpson whereby tile said Simpson for a valuable consideration rented to appellee for the year 1917 said land; that under said rental contract appellee was in possession of said land and preparing to eul- *980 tivate it during tte year 1917; that he had made valuable improvements on the land upon the faith of said rental contract, and intended to use and occupy it during the year 1917 under said contract; that after appel-lee had rented the land for the year 1917, and after it was too late to- secure another place, the appellants W. E. Simpson, Jim Wilson, and Charlie Wilson came to appel-lee’s home together, and notified appellee that he must vacate the land in question; that W. E. Simpson, the other appellants herein' being present and acting with him, served a written notice upon appellee to give possession of the premises, at the time stating that he wanted Charlie Wilson to occupy it for the year 1917; that Charlie Wilson made no demand on appellee for the possession of the premises, but acquiesced in the notice served by W. E. Simpson, the owner of the land; that subsequent thereto, and after January 1, 1917, W. E. Simpson sued appel-lee in the district court of Van Zandt county for possession of the land, there being no question about the title thereto, and after he had sequestered the land, and appellee at great expense to himself had made a large replevin bond, entitling him to occupy the land and retain possession thereof during the pendency of the suit of W. E. Simpson v. T. J. McGuirk, fully and in all-things protecting the plaintiff in the rents, hires, and revenues of the land; that after the execution of the bond, and the delivery back of the possession of the property to appelle'e by the sheriff: of Van Zandt county, he qt once continued to put the land in a state of cultivation, breaking it, plowing it, cleaning it up for his crop for 1917; that in February following one of the defendants, Charlie Wilson, served a written notice upon appellee to vacate the premises and to deliver the possession over to him, Charlie Wilson.

The petition further alleges that Jim Wilson is the general agent of W. E. iSimpson in Van Zandt county, who owns a large body of land; that A. E. Tisdale is the lawyer representing W. E. Simpson and Jim Wilson; that Charlie Wilson is the son of Jim Wilson, and, after they failed to retain possession of the land under the suit of W. E. Simpson, Charlie Wilson entered into a conspiracy and agreement with W. E. Simpson, liis father Jim Wilson, and A. L. Tisdale, in which they had agreed and conspired together to further harass and annoy appellee in the possession of his land by another suit and otherwise; that they had in pursuance of said conspiracy served a written notice upon him to vacate the premises, and that they were harassing and annoying him in his enjoyirifent and occupancy of the premises; that W. E. Simpson was the real plaintiff, that he was paying all .the expenses and attorney’s fees, and was simply prosecuting the second suit in the name of Charlie Wilson to harass and annoy your petitioner, or was threatening to prosecute the said suit. The petition further charges that appellee had at large expense to himself made a re-plevin bond in the first suit of W. E. Simpson against him through a bonding company, paying $50 therefor, that the land that he occupied and involved in the suit was his homestead for the year 1917, and that if another suit was filed he would be unable to make another replevin bond to retain, possession of the land, and that he would be ousted from possession of the same, together with his family, and that irreparable hurt and injury would be done him, if this course was permitted to be pursued.

The petition has attached to it all the papers in the said suit of W. B. Simpson against appellee. It also has attached the notices served on appellee for possession of the premises. There is no denial of the facts. The petition of the appellee for the injunction sought was presented to Hon. J. R. Warren, judge of the district court of Van Zandt county, who, in chambers and upon an ex parte hearing, directed, by his fiat indorsed upon the petition, the issuance of the temporary injunction as prayed for, upon the ap-pellee filing bond in the sum of $100 conditioned as required by law. On the 15th day of February, 1917, the bond required was filed, and the writ of injunction thereafter issued. ’ The appellants filed an appeal bond, and, within the time prescribed by statute, caused a transcript of the proceedings had in the case filed in this court.

The appellants have not attempted to comply with the rules respecting the briefing of cases on appeal, as they were not required to do so in this character of case, but, without assignments of error, have contented themselves with the statement of certain propositions for which they contend, the enforcement of which they say, in effect, requires a reversal of the judgment of the district court. These propositions are as follows:

(1) “An injunction so broad as to deny defendant in such order relief in all courts of the land should not be granted out of district courts, as it infringes on the jurisdiction of justice of the peace and county courts.”
(2) “An injunction will not be granted to restrain a party from filing suit against plaintiff until a pending suit between plaintiff in injunction and a third party is decided, where the cause of action in the two proceedings are not the same.”
(3) “An injunction will not be granted by district court to enjoin bringing an action of forcible entry and detainer in justice court.”
(4) “Appellee, to entitle himself to the equitable interposition of the district court, must have shown such facts to have existed as would liavo prevented him from making his defense at law in any court in which appellants might bring an action against him.”
(5) “Since the verification of plaintiff’s original petition for the temporary writ of injunction is made upon the petition being read over to him, and that the facts set forth therein are truo and correct, except those that are stated on information and belief, and those that are stated on information and belief are believed by affiant to be true.”

*981 The general rule under our Constitution seems to be:

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 979, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-mcguirk-texapp-1917.