W. T. Carter & Bro. v. State

139 S.W.2d 661, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 282
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1940
DocketNo. 8959
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 139 S.W.2d 661 (W. T. Carter & Bro. v. State) 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
W. T. Carter & Bro. v. State, 139 S.W.2d 661, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 282 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

BAUGH, Justice.

The question presented on this appeal is one of conflict of jurisdiction between the District Court of Travis County, Texas, ■and the District Court of Polk County, [662]*662Texas. Appeal to this court is from an order of the District Court of Travis County-refusing- to dissolve a temporary injunction, granted ex parte, by the Travis County Court against-the plaintiffs in two Polk County suits, enjoining them from further prosecuting the Polk County suits or taking any further steps therein than to dismiss same.

The history of this litigation is already largely of record in reported cases. Briefly summarized it is as follows: Sometime prior to June 9, 1937, Short, Gholson, Ses-sums, and Smith applied to the Commissioner of the General Land Office for an oil and gas lease on some 3,000 acres of land in Polk County as unsurveyed public free school land belonging to the State. A portion of this land was at the time occupied by W. T. Carter & Brother, V. A. Collins, and B. E. Quinn under claims of grants from the State as a part of the Andres Morales League, titled in 1835. For convenience, the latter named parties will be referred to as occupants; and the parties first above named will be referred to as applicants. Ón June 9, 1937, the occupants sued the applicants and the Land Commissioner in the District Court of Polk ' County to enjoin the Land Commissioner from executing to the applicants a mineral lease on said lands on the grounds that the occupants owned them. This injunction was granted by the trial court before the Land Commissioner had acted on their applications ; affirmed on appeal therefrom by the Court of Civil Appeals, 121 S.W.2d 486; writ granted by the Supreme Court and these judgments reversed and the injunction dissolved. See 126 S.W.2d 953. Meantime, on june 17, 1937, the State filed suit in the District Court of Travis County in trespass to try title to all of these lands against' some 300 defendánts, including both appellants and appellees herein, subject to whatever rights the applicants might have to a mineral lease thereon. This suit was filed 'at the instance of the applicants who were made defendants.

After the decision of the Supreme Court on the appeal from the original Polk County suit, some of the occupants of said lands (appellants here), under their construction of the opinion of the Supreme Court in that case, filed two'suits in the District Court of Polk County on March 9, 1939, against the ■four applicants above named — Short, Ghol-son, Sessums and Smith — for -damages for alleged slander and disparagement of the occupants’ title. To these suits the applicants and the State interposed pleas in abatement of the State’s suit against them then pending in the District Court of Travis County. These pleas were overruled by the District Court of Polk County. Thereupon, the District Court of Travis County, upon application of the State and of the four named applicants, issued the ex parte temporary injunction here involved. The plaintiffs in those suits filed their motion to dissolve that injunction which was overruled; hence this appeal.

The first question, briefly stated, therefore, is: Does the suit by the State in-Travis County in trespass to try title to, and possession of, all of these lands against some 300 or more defendants preclude the appellants, who had for many years occupied, used and claimed title to á part of said lands under asserted grants from the State, and paid taxes thereon, from suing the named applicants in Polk County, Texas, for damages for slander of their titles?

The general rule is well settled that when a court has properly acquired jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter of a controversy, it can retain that jurisdiction to the exclusion of all other courts of concurrent jurisdiction; and can protect such jurisdiction so first acquired by injunctive process. Cleveland v. Ward, 116 Tex. 1, 285 S.W. 1063; Conn v. Campbell, 119 Tex. 82, 24 S.W.2d 813; Way v. Coca Cola Bottling Co., 119 Tex. 419, 29 S.W.2d 1067; 1 Tex.Jur., Secs. 67-71, pp. 93-101; 11 Tex.Jur. Sec. 59, p. 787. In general it may be said that the essential basis for this rule is identity of parties and of subj ect matter in the two suits; and whether the judgment in the suit first filed will be res adjudicata of the matters involved ins a subsequent suit. Though the identical issues may not be involved in the two suits, if the issues involved in the suit last filed! are entirely dependant upon and concluded! by the issues to be adjudicated- in the suit, first filed; then the second suit,should beheld in abeyance until the first suit is disposed of. Tidewater Oil Co. v. Railroad Com., Tex.Civ.App., 76 S.W.2d 553. Ap-pellees contend that such is the situation; presented in the instant suit.

The Travis County suit is by the State as sole plaintiff. It seeks recovery of' title to said lands against all defendants,, subject to whatever rights the named applicants may have to a mineral lease thereon. The superior title of the State could be: [663]*663adjudicated without establishing the rights of the defendant applicants. to a mineral lease thereon. That question could be then left to the determination of the Land Commissioner who has not acted upon their application, and whose duty it is to first pass upon these matters. Short v. W. T. Carter & Bro., Tex.Sup., 126 S.W.2d 953; Art. 5421c, Sec. 8, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.Tex. Stats.

Though the State is the sole plaintiff in the Travis County suit, it is not controverted that its suit was brought at the instance of the named applicants. While they are nominally defendants, it appears that they are in effect plaintiffs, and that the Attorney General is relying upon them not only to defray the expenses of the State’s suit, but to secure the evidence upon which it is to be tried. They likewise joined in the application for the injunction here involved, manifestly, among other things, to avoid the necessity of defending the suits against them in Polk County. Regardless of this, however, and of the policy of the Attorney General, necessitated by lack of sufficient appropriations to prosecute the State’s suits otherwise, to rely upon private parties to pull the laboring oar in the State’s lawsuits on the prospect that they also may profit thereby, these matters are not decisive of the issues here presented.

It is urged by appellants herein that neither the parties nor the subject matter of the Polk County . suits are identical with those in the Travis County suit; that the State is, not a party to the Polk County suits; that the Polk County suits involve only a private controversy between the parties to those suits, a. determination of which would not be res adjudicata against the State; and consequently that no such conflict of jurisdiction exists which would warrant the Travis County District Court in enjoining the prosecution of the Polk County suits. Appellants rely particularly upon the case of Prairie Oil & Gas Co. v. State, Tex.Civ.App., 214 S.W. 363, affirmed by the Supreme Court in 231 S.W. 1088; and the language of the Commission of Appeals in Short v.

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139 S.W.2d 661, 1940 Tex. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-t-carter-bro-v-state-texapp-1940.