Thomas v. Mullins

175 S.W.2d 276
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 1943
DocketNo. 5571.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 175 S.W.2d 276 (Thomas v. Mullins) 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
Thomas v. Mullins, 175 S.W.2d 276 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

Sometime during the year 1937, J. M. Mullins and his wife filed a suit in the District Court of the 72nd Judicial District in and for Lubbock County against the appellants herein, J. M. Thomas and R. L. Thomas, and also H. L. White, H. G. Lawson, and W. C. Brown, three of the appel-lees here, the case being numbered 7474 on the docket of the district court. In that suit they alleged that the plaintiff, J. M. Mullins, and the defendants in that case owned and were operating a partnership *277 business known as the Texas Auction & Commission Company, and prayed for a dissolution of the partnership, an accounting of its affairs, and that a receiver be appointed to take charge of its assets pending the final disposition of the suit. On February 20, 1938, an order was entered by the court appointing Dave Peters receiver, who took possession of certain assets of the partnership, and on February 24, 1938, a written contract was entered into by all of the parties in which the matters in dispute were adjusted and finally settled. The contract provided that it might be entered by the court as an agreed judgment, and on February 28, 1938, a judgment embracing the contract was entered by the court, in which it was stated that all of the parties to the suit, naming them, appeared by their respective attorneys and announced in open court that they had mutually settled and ■compromised all differences between them in the manner and form set out and stipulated in the contract, and that such contract and the rights of the parties might be adjudged and determined by the court in accordance with the terms and conditions of the contract.

On March 17, 1938, during the same term -of the court, another judgment was entered in the same cause, which differed in some respects from the first judgment, and on March 19, 1938, the appellants herein, who were defendants in that case, filed a motion in which they prayed that both of the judgments entered by the court be set aside and they be granted a new trial. The motion was overruled and appellants perfected an appeal to this Court from the second judgment, no appeal being perfected from the first judgment. The case was disposed of in this Court on March 13, 1939, by an opinion reported in 127 S.W.2d 559, in which this Court held that the second judgment entered by the court did not have the effect of vacating the first judgment and, no order having been entered by the court vacating or setting aside the first judgment at the time the second judgment was entered, the second judgment was a nullity. For the reasons set forth in the opinion, this Court reversed the first judgment entered by the court below and remanded the case for another trial. The appellees in that case applied to the Supreme Court for a writ of error, which was granted, and that Court likewise held that the second judgment was null and void but dismissed the appeal because no appeal had been perfected from the first judgment. Mullins v. Thomas, 136 Tex. 215, 150 S.W.2d 83. (Incidentally, that question was not, in any manner, presented to, nor passed upon by, this Court.)

On February 5, 1942, appellants, J. M. Thomas and R. L. Thomas, filed the instant suit in the 72nd District Court of Lubbock County against the appellees, J. M. Mullins and his wife and H. G. Lawson, Dave Peters, I. D. Walker, Claude Keeton, L. A. Howard, W. C. Brown, and H. L. White, who now compose the partnership known as the Texas Auction & Commission Company, the suit being in the nature of an equitable bill of review, in which they alleged that the contract of settlement entered into by them with the other partners on February 24, 1938, was procured by fraud, and sought to set aside both of the judgments entered by the court in Cause No. 7474 on February 28 and March 18, 1938, and to have an accounting of the profits accumulated from the operation of the business of the Texas Auction & Commission Company, of which they alleged their share was at least the sum of $500,-000.

Appellees filed an answer in which they leveled a number of special exceptions at the petition, one of which, numbered 2(c), was, in effect, that there were no allegations to the effect that appellants had exhausted their legal remedies by a motion for a new trial, appeal, or writ of error from the first judgment entered by the trial court in Cause No. 7474, and no legally sufficient allegations of any excuse for their failure to do so, and that without such allegations they were not entitled to maintain this proceeding in the nature of a bill of review to set aside that judgment. The court sustained all of the special exceptions and, appellants having declined to amend their pleading, the case was dismissed. Appellants duly excepted to the order of the court sustaining the special exceptions and dismissing the case and have perfected an appeal to this Court where they assail the judgment of dismissal upon a number of grounds.

We think the vital and controlling question in the case is presented by the contention of appellants that the court erred iri sustaining appellees’ special exception No. 2(c), and that a proper disposition of that question makes it unnecessary to pass upon the other assignments of error. The rec *278 ord shows that appellants signed the contract of settlement of February 24, 1938, and were represented by attorneys when the judgments were entered in Cause No. 7474, both on February 28, 1938, and on March 18, 1938, and that they appeared by such attorneys. They alleged in their petition in the instant case that they employed another attorney, a member of the Bar at Lubbock, to represent them in further proceedings in that case, and that he filed a motion for a new trial directed to both the judgment dated February 28, 1938, and the one dated March 17, 1938, but that when it became necessary to perfect an appeal from the order of the court overruling the motion, their attorney inadvertently selected the wrong judgment. We take this to mean that the attorney representing them appealed only from the second judgment in that cause, which was held, both by this Court and the Supreme Court, to be a nullity, and that he did not perfect an appeal from the first judgment. They alleged further that such error on the part of their attorney in selecting the wrong judgment from which to perfect the appeal was excusable and one for which neither they nor their attorney should be held negligent, because such error was invited by the action of appellee, L. A. Howard, who at that time was the attorney representing the defendants in the suit other than these appellants, in having entered and placed of record the second judgment and in having an execution issued thereon as though the same were a valid and subsisting judgment. They alleged that L. A. Howard was an attorney of great legal ability and much experience and that other attorneys were entitled to rely upon his conception of what was a final judgment. They alleged it was only after the case was decided by the Supreme Court that it was discovered, either by them or their attorney, that the second judgment entered by the trial court was a nullity, and that immediately upon making such discovery they instituted the instant suit and, therefore, they should not be charged with negligence in failing to appeal from the first, and only valid, judgment that was entered in Caus-e No. 7474.

We are unable to agree with appellants in these contentions.

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175 S.W.2d 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-mullins-texapp-1943.