Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. State of Texas

106 S.W. 326, 107 Tex. 1, 1907 Tex. LEXIS 305
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1907
DocketMotion No. 1774.
StatusPublished
Cited by97 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 326 (Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. State of Texas) 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
Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. State of Texas, 106 S.W. 326, 107 Tex. 1, 1907 Tex. LEXIS 305 (Tex. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice BROWN

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this opinion we will give our reasons for the disposition made on a former day of this term of a motion presented by the Waters-Pierce Oil Company on substantially the following statement of facts:

The Waters-Pierce Oil Company is a corporation created under the laws of the State of Missouri, which had been admitted by the authorities of this State to transact business in Texas under a permit duly issued. The State instituted suit in the District Court of Travis County against the said oil company to forfeit its permit to do business in this State, and also to recover’ from it penalties for the violation of the anti-trust statutes of the State of Texas. Dpon a trial in the District Court the State recovered judgment for $1,623,*000 as penalties, and declared the permit of the company to do business in this State, forfeited. On a subsequent day to the judgment, and during the term, the judge of the District Court, upon motion of the State, appointed Robert J. Eckhardt receiver for the said corporation. After a motion for new trial had been overruled in that proceeding, and also in the main case, the oil company gave notice of appeal in the original case, as well as in the proceedings for appointment of receiver, and executed a bond in the main case according to law in double the. amount of the judgment, and in the proceedings under the motion of the State for appointment of receiver, a bond was given in the amount prescribed by the *3 judge of the District Court, conditioned as required by law for a supersedeas bond. Two records were filed in the Court of Civil Appeals— one embracing both the main case and the motion for the appointment of a receiver, and the other embracing only the proceedings upon the motion of the State for the appointment of a receiver. In the Court of Civil Appeals the' Waters-Pierce Oil Company moved to consolidate the cases, which motion was by that court denied, and the judgment of the District Court, appointing a receiver, was affirmed. Motion for rehearing of that judgment in the Court of Civil Appeals was filed in due time and by the' court overruled. On the same day a mandate was issued by the clerk of the Court of Civil Appeals and transmitted to the clerk of the District Court of Travis County,' Texas. The judge of the District Court entered an order directing Eekhardtto proceed as receiver to discharge his duties. The Waters-Pierce Oil Company filed in the Court of Civil Appeals and presented to this court within the time prescribed by law a petition for writ of error, which is now pending before this court. The Waters-Pierce Oil Company filed in this court a motion setting up the facts before stated and praying that this court enter an order directing the clerk of the Court of Civil Appeals to recall the mandate sent by him to the clerk of the District Court, and also directing the judge of the District Court to vacate an order which he had entered upon receipt of that mandate directing the receiver to take charge of the property. At a former day of this term, on hearing the motion, this court directed the clerk of the Court of Civil Appeals to recall the mandate sent down by him to the District Court, and also directed the honorable judge of the District Court to set aside the order made by him upon receipt of the said mandate.

After this court granted the motion to recall the mandate issued by the Court of Civil Appeals to the District Court, the State of Texas, by her Attorney General, filed in this court a motion reciting the facts before stated and added the following grounds upon which the motion rested: (1) That it was adjudged by the District Court that the Waters-Pierce Oil Company was conducting its business in violation of the law, and that the said judgment canceled the permit of the company to do business in this State. (2) That judgment had been entered in favor of the State of Texas against the said company for $1,623,000. (3) That the State has a lien upon all of the property of the said company within this State to secure payment of the said judgment. (4) That conducting the business of the Waters-Pierce Oil Company by that company or its agents in the State would be in violation of the penal laws of this State. (5) That in a proceeding in the United States Circuit Court, wherein Bradley W. Palmer, one of the stockholders of the company, was the plaintiff, C. B. Dorchester was appointed receiver for said company and took possession of the property, and that upon appeal by the State the Circuit Court of Appeals of the United States decided that the Circuit Court did not have jurisdiction and ordered the Circuit Court to discharge the receiver. (6) The motion sets out the facts of the proceeding of the Circuit *4 Court of the "United States, which are not necessary to this statement. It is alleged in the said motion that the property, while in the hands or Dorchester and under the orders of the Circuit Court of the United States, was applied to the payment of the expenses of that administration and the debts contracted by the receiver, and the other property or proceeds thereof would be hereafter'so applied, to the detriment of the State and the impairment of its lien; that in case the property should be returned to the possession of the Waters-Pieree Oil Company it would be liable to be wasted or removed from the State. The motion also set up that the judge of the Circuit Court of the United States had declared that he would discharge the receiver in accordance with the mandate of the Circuit Court of Appeals of the United States, and that in case he should do so there is no person to receive the property and take control of it and transact the business, as the operation of the business by the Waters-Pieree Oil Company in this State would be unlawful. The motion concludes then with the following language: “That it is necessary for the preservation of the property of the WatersPieree Oil Company, for the preservation of the security of the State of Texas, for the prevention of the violation of the laws of the State of Texas, for the safety of the persons in charge of the property of the Waters-Pieree Oil Company, and for the prevention of the conduct of a business in violation of the laws of the State, that the property and business of said Waters-Pieree Oil Company be taken into actual control of this court. Wherefore, the State of Texas prays that this court revoke the order recalling the mandate of the Court of Civil Appeals, or direct that Robert J. Eckhardt take actual and physical possession of the property of the Waters-Pieree Oil Company and conduct the business of said corporation under such orders as this court may make pending the final disposition of this cause in this court, and for general relief.”

Upon the hearing of the motion of the Waters-Pieree Oil Company to recall the mandate of the Court of Civil Appeals from, the District Court it was objected by counsel for the State that if the WatersPieree Oil Company be correct in its contention that this was not an independent suit but only an incident of the main controversy, a writ of error could not be separately prosecuted, and, therefore, the case was not properly before this court. It is sometimes the case that there may be more than one appeal in the same case, when orders are made at different times, which finally dispose of the subject matter of that particular order. A familiar instance is a case of partition, wherein there may be a decree which determines the rights of the parties in the property and is a final judgment upon the merits of the case.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 326, 107 Tex. 1, 1907 Tex. LEXIS 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waters-pierce-oil-co-v-state-of-texas-tex-1907.