Ward v. Hubbard

62 Tex. 559, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 291
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1884
DocketCase No. 1578
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 62 Tex. 559 (Ward v. Hubbard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Hubbard, 62 Tex. 559, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 291 (Tex. 1884).

Opinion

Watts, J. Com. App.

In this case the record is voluminous, containing one thousand and fifty-three pages; owing to that fact, as a matter of convenience each proposition presented by counsel of appellants which is deemed material will be considered in the order presented.

Appellants’ first proposition under their first and second assignment of errors is as follows:

“ It appearing affirmatively from the face of the appellee’s pleadings that no one of the parties sued are residents of Travis county, where the suit was brought, and that the contract or obligatic sued on was to be performed at Huntsville, in Walker county, Texas, and not in Travis county, the district court of Travis county had no jurisdiction to hear the case, and the special exceptions of the appellants’ pleading and setting forth this defect of jurisdiction, apparent on the face of the appellee’s pleadings, should have been sustained.

To that proposition it can be answered, in the first place, that the act of 1876, providing for the resumption of the penitentiary by the state, authorized either the state or lessees, or both, to institute suits [562]*562in the district court of Travis county “ for the enforcement or adjustment of any right or claim or the recovery of any balances between the state and said lessees.” Gen. Laws 1876, p. 194, sec. 4.

If that act had been passed after the cause of action accrued, still it would not have been violative of the constitution. Generally, remedies are subject to legislative control; and so long as an ample remedy is furnished, the obligation of the contract is not impaired by any change of remedy. McMillan v. Sprague, 4 How. (Miss.), 647; Wade on Retroactive Laws, sec. 203, and authorities cited.

In the second place, the bond which in part formed the basis of the suit was by express terms payable “at the treasury of said state.” By the provisions of the constitution and statutes the treasurer of the state is required to reside and keep the treasury at the capitol of the state. And we judicially know that the capital of the state was at the time of the execution of the bond, and still is, at the city of Austin in Travis county.

And in the third place, as was recited in the order of the court, made and entered May 24,1880, appellants “ waived and abandoned all general and special exceptions to plaintiff’s petition theretofore made.” Thereafter no such exceptions were taken or acted on by the court.

We conclude, therefore, that the above proposition cannot be maintained.

As their second proposition under the first and second assigned errors, appellants present the following:

“The act of 22d March, 1871, under which the contract of lease and bond was executed, prescribed the character of obligation required by the state of the lessees; the bond under consideration not being payable to the corporation known as the state of Texas, as expressly required by the above act, was not a statutory bond drawn in accordance with the provisions of the law providing for its execution, and being payable to another corporation known as the governor of Texas, could not be sued on by the appellee by virtue of his being the executive of the state of Texas; but he must show a title to the bond by assignment or otherwise, before he could maintain an action on it, the bond upon its face being payable to another person, and no assignment from that person being alleged or shown, and no statute being shown authorizing the execution of a bond in the form in which this bond is executed, and no law being shown authorizing a suit on such a bond.”

True, the act which authorized the governor to lease the state [563]*563penitentiary also required him to take a bond with,security, payable to the state of Texas, in amount and conditioned as therein specified, Gen. Laws 1871, p. 15, sec. 1.

The bond taken was payable to “ Edmund J. Davis, as governor of the state of Texas, and to his successors in office, at the treasury of said state.”

This suit was brought in the name of E. B. Hubbard, governor of the state of Texas, for the use of the state, and based upon the bond and written lease. As heretofore shown, appellants waived and abandoned all general and special exceptions to the petition. Hence, the real question for consideration is this: Will the suit as brought be considered as so defective as not to sustain the judgment? The allegations in the petition, as well as the accompanying exhibits, very fully show the whole transaction, and the several acts of the legislature under which the successive steps had been taken, which had resulted in the suit.

In Commonwealth of Ky. v. Dennison, Governor, etc., 24 How.97, Chief Justice Taney said: “In the case of Madrazo v. The Governor of Georgia, 1 Pet., 110, it was decided that in a case where the chief magistrate of a state is sued, not by his name as an individual, but by his style of office, and the claim made upon him is entirely in his official character, the state itself may be considered a party on the record. This was a case where the state was the defendant; the practice where it is plaintiff has been frequently adopted of suing in the name of the governor in behalf of the state and was indeed the form originally used, and always recognized as the suit of the state.” See, also, Benton v. Woolsey, 12 Pet., 29.

Here the action is in the name of the governor for the use of the state; the bond was made payable to the governor in his official capacity, and he executed the lease in the same way. The beneficiary interest of the state is fully disclosed by the petition and exhibits attached.

Ordinarily such suits should be brought in the name of the state of Texas; but when, as in this case, the apparent legal right is in the name of another, while the state is the real party at interest, there is no rule of law known to the court which would inhibit suit from being brought in the name of such party for the use of the state. Ho injury is shown to have resulted to appellants from the manner in which the suit was brought. They were allowed the full benefit of all their defenses, the same as if the suit had in the first instance been brought in the name of the state.

[564]*564Wherefore we conclude that this proposition is not maintainable.

For a third proposition under the first and second assigned errors, appellants assert the following:

The appellee shows no cause of action against appellants, as it is apparent from the face of the pleadings of the appellee that this suit was filed before the expiration of the time fixed by the lease for its termination, and there is no averment in the pleadings that the lease had been forfeited or had been terminated by the failure or neglect of appellants, after written notice from the governor of the state, to do any act whatever required of them by the terms of said lease; nor is there any sufficient allegation of any kind showing how or in what manner the conditions of the contract have been violated or how a forfeiture of the lease has occurred; nor is there any averment of the happening of any event specified in the lease as a ground of forfeiture, upon which the appellee can have his cause of action; nor is there any allegation of any declaration of such forfeiture by the governor.”

And for a fourth proposition under the same assigned errors they present the following:

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Bluebook (online)
62 Tex. 559, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-hubbard-tex-1884.