W. T. Wilson Grain Co. v. Louis Tobian & Co.

247 S.W. 906
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 1, 1923
DocketNo. 772.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 247 S.W. 906 (W. T. Wilson Grain Co. v. Louis Tobian & Co.) 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. Wilson Grain Co. v. Louis Tobian & Co., 247 S.W. 906 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

Appellee, Louis To-bian & Co., filed this suit in one of the county courts at law of Dallas county against the appellant, W. T. Wilson Grain Company, praying a recovery of damages in the sum of $850, because of .appellant’s alleged breach of contract to receive and pay for 200 tons of prime loose cotton seed hulls, which appellant had agreed to buy from appellee at the price of $9 per ton, f.. o. b. San Antonio or Beeville, Tex. It was alleged substantially, that the contract was in writing and was made September 4,1919, and that it provided for the shipment of the seed during the month of January, 1920, according to shipping instructions to be furnished by appellant. It was alleged that this contract of sale and purchase was made subject to the rules of the Texas Cotton Seed Crushers’ Association, and that the rights and liabilities of the parties in this transaction were to be governed by those rules, a copy of which was attached to appellee’s petition. Appellee alleged that in due time, before shipment of the seed was to be made, it requested shipping instructions of appellant, and several times repeated such request, but that each time appellant failed and refused to comply with such request, and that finally appellant, on January 10, 1920, absolutely declined to furnish shipping instructions, and expressly refused to comply with its contract to take and pay for the seed. Appellee alleged that it then gave notice to appellant, under the rules of the Texas Cotton Seed Association, that it would resell the 200 tons of seed for the account of appellant, which it proceeded to do on January 15, 1920, and further alleged that the seed were sold for the highest market price at that time, which was $5 per ton, and that this was $4 per ton less than the contract price to appellant, making a loss to ap-pellee in the aggregate of $800, to which was added 25 cents per ton as the brokerage charge for resale, as was fixgd by the contract of the parties.

Appellant, claiming its domicile in the county of Nacogdoches, filed its plea of privilege to be sued in that county, and the plea of privilege being sustained by the Dallas court, the venue was ordered changed to the county court of Nacogdoches county. The plea of privilege was acted upon at the May term of the Dallas court, 1921, but the cause was not actually transferred and placed upon the docket of the county court of Nacogdoches county until the 10th of November, 1921, which was only a few days before the November term of the Nacogdoches county court convened. In the meantime, the July term of the county court of Nacogdoches county had convened and adjourned before the transcript and papers in the case had been forwarded by the clerk of the Dallas court to the clerk of the Nacogdoches county court, but the May term of the Dallas county court did not adjourn until about the middle of September, after {he plea of privilege was 'sustained in May. After the cause was placed upon the docket of the Nacogdoches county court, appellant, W. T. Wilson Grain Company, filed a motion praying the court to strike the cause from the docket, on the ground that the prosecution of *907 the suit had been abandoned by the plaintiff, Tobian & Go. This motion was-heard by the court and was overruled, and from that ruling appellant appealed to this court, which dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction. That proceeding will be found reported in 230 S. W. 426..

After its motion to strike the cause from the docket of the Nacogdoches court, appellant answered by a plea to the jurisdiction, by general demurrer, and several special exceptions, none of which are called in question here, by general denial, and by other special pleas, unnecessary to specifically mention. A jury was taken in the case, but at the conclusion of the evidence the lower court peremptorily instructed the jury to bring in a verdict in favor of the appellee, Louis Tobian & Co. for $850.

• After its motion for new trial was overruled. the case was properly appealed to this court, and five propositions advanced in appellant’s brief upon which reversal of the judgment is sought. As we construe the first four of appellant’s propositions, they all raise practically the same legal question. It is insisted by appellant that its plea to the jurisdiction and its motion to strike the case from the docket should have been sustained, because the clerk of the Dallas court did not make a proper certificate showing the orders made by that court while the cause was pending there, and that, therefore, there was no proper transcript in the case from the clerk of the Dallas court showing the orders of that court sent to the clerk of the Nacog-doches court, as is by statute required, and that, therefore, the Nacogdoches court was in error in proceeding to take jurisdiction and try the cause in the absence of such certificate by- the clerk of the Dallas court. We do not understand that it is appellant’s contention, in its amended brief now before us, that the prosecution of the cause was abandoned by the appellee, as was its contention on the former appeal, and will not, therefore, further mention that matter, except to say that if we are mistaken in this, nevertheless, it is clear to this court that there was no abandonment of the suit by the appellee.

Article 1833, Complete Texas Statutes, or Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, art. 1833, prescribes the duties of the clerk where a plea of privilege is interposed and sustained. The article reads as follows:

‘Whenever a plea of privilege to the venue, to be sued in some other county than the county in which the suit is pending, shall be sustained, the court shall order the venue- to be changed to the proper court of the county having jurisdiction of the parties and the cause; and the clerk shall make up a transcript of all the orders made in said cause, certifying thereto officially under the seal of the court, and transmit the same, with the original papers in the cause, to the clerk of the court to which the venue has been changed; provided, that nothing. herein shall prevent an appeal from the judgment of thfe court sustaining a plea of privilege.”

The only order made, by the Dallas court, so far as shown by the certificate of the clerk of that court, was the judgment sustaining the plea of privilege filed by the appellant, Wilson Grain Company, in that court, and ordering that the venue be changed to the county court of Nacogdoches county, and directing the clerk .to make up a transcript of the orders of that court and to certify thereto oflicially and to transmit the same, together with the original papers in the cause, to the clerk of the county court of Nacogdoches county. The clerk’s certificate to this order and judgment of the Dallas court reads as follows:

“The State of Texas, County of Dallas.
“I, W. S. Skiles, clerk county court, Dallas county at law, No. 2, Dallas county, Texas, do hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a true and correct copy of the judgment rendered in the above styled and numbered cause transferring said cause to the county court of Nacogdoches county, Texas, as the same appears of record in volume 2, p. 433, Records of Civil Minutes of the County Court, Dallas County at Law, No. 2, Dallas County, Texas.
“Witness my 'hand and the official seal of said court this the 8th day of November, A. D. 1920. W. S. Skiles, Clerk County Court, Dallas County at Law, No. 2, Dallas County, Texas. By H. G. Hight, Deputy. [Seal.]”

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 906, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-t-wilson-grain-co-v-louis-tobian-co-texapp-1923.