Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Ames

284 S.W. 315, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 939
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 4, 1926
DocketNo. 123.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 315 (Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Ames) 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
Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Ames, 284 S.W. 315, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 939 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

'PANNIUL, C. J.

Appellees in 1923 brought this action, against appellant for rentals alleged to he due for the year 1919 on an oil and gas lease executed by appellees to appellant on certain lands of the former. Inasmuch as the judgment in this case depends on the validity of a prior judgment between the same parties, a better view of the issues raised on this appeal can be had by stating the occurrences leading up to the present suit in their chronological order.

In 1919, and prior to the time the payment of the rentals accrued, appellant filed in the Eighty-Eighth district court of Eastland county a bill impleading appellees and certain other parties, alleging that appellees and the other defendants to such bill were claiming the rentals soon to become due, and that appellant did not know to whom to pay, alleging a tender of the money into court, and that the respective claimants be brought into court, and the rights of the parties to said rentals determined. The petition contained allegations seeking a recovery of amounts overpaid, but these allegations are not believed to be material, as the determination of the ownership of the rentals was a distinct object of the bill. The rentals so tendered were not deposited contemporaneously with the filing of the petition, nor was any preliminary order of the court authorizing the deposit of the money with the clerk obtained. Within a few days, appellant sent to the clerk a check for the amount so tendered. The clerk duly receipted for the amount and deposited the cheek to his personal account in the only bank where the clerk kept an account. Within 30 days after receiving appellant’s check, the clerk’s account at the bank was overdrawn, and was so continuously thereafter.

At a subsequent term, after the money was deposited, appellant sought and obtained an order from the court authorizing the withdrawal of part of the funds. This order recited that the money was then on deposit in the registry of the court. At the time this order was entered, the proceeds of the check of appellant had been withdrawn from the bank by the clerk as stated. Thereafter ■on February 24, 1920, the suit of appellant was tried and judgment entered in favor of appellees, against appellant and certain other interpleaded defendants for the rentals which the judgment recited had been deposited by appellant in the registry of the court. The judgment was appealed by those inter-pleaded defendants, cast in the suit. While the appeal last referred to was pending, and in the early part of 1921 the clerk absconded and fled from justice, and has since been a fugitive from justice.

The facts, the substance of which have been recited, are conceded by appellant and were admitted by it without proof by admissions duly entered in the record. The appeal by the losing defendants in the inter-pleader suit was decided in favor of appel-lees, and they then brought suit in the Ninety-First district court against appellant and the sureties on the official bond of the clerk; to recover the amounts decreed to them. The original petition declared for debt and contained no allegations attacking the judgments now in controversy. Appellant answered pleading such judgments as res ad-judicata. Whereupon appellees filed a supplemental petition dismissing the bondsmen and attacking the judgments pleaded as being void, alleging that the money was deposited with the clerk without a previous order, and that the money was abstracted before the judgments decreeing the same to be a fund in court had been entered, and therefore' the court was without jurisdiction to adjudge that the money tendered was in court and that the orders of the court so reciting were entered under a mistake as to the true facts.

The trial court upon the admitted facts found that the money was never a fund in court, and had been embezzled by the clerk before the orders decreeing it to be in the registry of the court were entered. That said funds were never actually placed in the registry of the court. That none of the parties to the first suit knew of the conversion of the funds by the clerk until after judgment in that case was rendered. That ap-pellees were not negligent in failing to discover that the funds had not been deposited in the registry of the court. That appellant’s plea of res adjudieata was not a defense. There was no finding that the judgments pleaded are invalid. Decree was entered for the appellees for the amount of rentals sued for, but the decree does not mention the orders in the former proceeding.

The instant appeal is based on three propositions : That orders entered in the first case bar the present. That appellees elected to pursue the money deposited with the clerk and are bound by their act in so doing. That the evidence is insufficient to show that the funds so deposited were abstracted by the clerk before the orders in the first case were made.

The propositions will be discussed in their inverse order. The last will be overruled, for the reason that the admission that the money was withdrawn from the bank a sort time after it was deposited, and a comparatively short time thereafter the clerk became and’ still is a fugitive from justice, is sufficient to sustain the trial court’s finding against the contention now under consideration. No default of the clerk is shown from which he would flee, except the charge of embezzlement attributed to him in this case.

The doctrine of election does not apply. The appellees pursued the course they *317 did under a misapprehension of the facts, without negligence. 20 C. J. pp. 20, 21, 22, and 23; Tullos v. Mayfield (Tex. Civ. App.) 198 S. W. 1073; Sullivan v. Ramsey (Tex. Civ. App.) 155 S. W. 580; Wilson v. Carroll (Tex. Civ. App.) 50 S. W. 222. The case of T. & N. O. Ry. Co. v. McFaddin, 105 Tex. 19, 142 S. W. 1162, is relied on. In that case a garnishee deposited funds in his hands with the clerk, and at a time when the fund was in court, the parties with full knowledge proceeded to litigate over the fund, and the Supreme Court held that a party, having made an election at a time when the fund was in court, wa.s bound thereby. Obviously that rule cannot be applied. The facts do not bring this case within the rule. The money was not in the registry of the court. '

The question of res adjudicata is one of great difficulty on account of the unusual state of the record. If the testimony tending to impeach the orders in the first suit had been objected to by appellant, a proper solution of this appeal would be an easy task.

The attack of appellees being made for the first time in a supplemental pleading is collateral. Crawford v. McDonald, 88 Tex. 626, 33 S. W. 325; Pearson v. Lloyd (Tex. Civ. App.) 214 S. W. 759 (writ denied).

Where the' judgment of a court of general jurisdiction is assailed in a collateral proceeding its validity can only be determined from the record. Stockyards Rational Bank v. Presnall, 109 Tex. 32, 194 S. W. 384.

The decrees being under assault in a collateral proceeding and reciting facts showing jurisdiction, such recitals may not be contradicted by evidence aliunde the record. Heck v. Martin, 75 Tex. 469, 13 S. W. 51, 16 Am. St. Rep. 915; Letney v. Marshall, 79 Tex. 513, 15 S. W. 586; Crawford v. McDonald, supra; Martin v. Robinson, 67 Tex. 368, 3 S. W. 550.

Appellees rely on decisions holding that funds deposited with the clerk without an order of the court are not in legal custody, such as T. & P. Ry. v. Walker, 93 Tex. 611, 57 S. W. 568; People v. Cobb, 10 Colo. App.

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284 S.W. 315, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-coal-oil-co-v-ames-texapp-1926.