Way Way v. Coca Cola Bottling Co.

29 S.W.2d 1067, 119 Tex. 419, 1930 Tex. LEXIS 140
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1930
DocketNo. 5623.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 29 S.W.2d 1067 (Way Way v. Coca Cola Bottling Co.) 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
Way Way v. Coca Cola Bottling Co., 29 S.W.2d 1067, 119 Tex. 419, 1930 Tex. LEXIS 140 (Tex. 1930).

Opinion

*422 Mr. Judge SHARP

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This is an original application for mandamus by W. J. and” K. W. Way, doing business under the name of Way Engineering Company against Hon. S. G. Tayloe, Judge of the 45th District Court of Bexar county, Texas, Hon. J. P. Hill, Judge of the 51st Judicial District Court of Tom Green County, and the Coca Cola Bottling Company, and involves a conflict of jurisdiction between the District Court of Bexar County, Texas, and the District Court of Tom Green County, Texas. W. J. and K. W. Way pray for a writ of mandamus against Judge Tayloe, requiring him to proceed with the trial of a certain cause in his court in Bexar County, No. B-46254, styled W. J. and K. W. Way v. Coca Cola Bottling Company. They also pray for writs of prohibition or injunction against the Hon. J. P. Hill, Judge of the 51st District Court of Tom Green County, to desist from the issuance of any further injunction or the enforcement of any injunction already issued by him in Cause No. 5494, styled Cocoa Cola Bottling Company v. Way Engineering Company, a co-partnership composed of W. J. and K. W. Way, pending in the District Court of Tom Green County, or in any way interfering with the trial of Cause No. B-46254, pending in the 45th District Court of Bexar County, and that the Coca Cola Bottling Company and its attorneys be enjoined or prohibited from attempting to procure any further injunction in said cause against the Way Engineering Company or its attorneys, and that they desist from any further action or effort to try the case pending in Tom Green County, Texas.

For convenience we will describe the parties as plaintiffs and defendant, as they were designated in the trial courts.

The proceedings leading up to this condition of affairs between the two district courts above described will be set out in their chronological order and are briefly stated as follows:

On or about the 1st day of April, 1927, W. J. and K. W. Way, doing business under the name of the Way Engineering Company, filed suit in the 45th District Court of Bexar County, "Texas, in Cause No. B-46254, against L. W. Walker, doing business under the name of Coca Cola Bottling Company, and it was alleged that plaintiffs entered into a sales contract with L. W. Walker, whereby plaintiffs sold to defendant certain machinery for a consideration of $2,499, and for which the defendant paid part in cash and executed an installment note for the remainder.

*423 The note sued upon recited that the purchase price of the machinery was to be paid to the Way Engineering Company’s order at San Antonio, Texas, and was signed Coca Cola Bottling Company by L. W. Walker.

On. May 2, 1927, L. W. Walker filed his plea of privilege to be sued in Tom Green County, the place of his residence, and in his plea of privilege set up the fact that the Coca Cola Bottling Company was a corporation and that if the note sued upon was signed at all, it was for and on behalf of the Coca Cola Bottling Company, a corporation.

On May 4, 1927, plaintiffs filed an answer controverting the plea of privilege and alleged that the allegation in plaintiffs’ petition that the defendant executed a note for $1752 payable to plaintiffs at San Antonio, Texas, was true and was made by plaintiffs because the defendant, L. W. Walker, was doing business under the name of Coca Cola Bottling Company at the time of the execution of the note and that the contract and note were each executed for the benefit of the Coca Cola Bottling Company, under which name L. W. Walker was doing business at the time of the making of the contract, but that if it should appear on the trial of the plea of privilege that L. W. Walker signed said contract on behalf of the Coca Cola Bottling Company and that the Coca Cola Bottling Company was then a corporation, plaintiffs had no knowledge that it was a corporation but understood and believed at the time the note and contract were executed that the defendant was doing business for himself under the name of the Coca Cola Bottling Company, and that if it should be developed on the trial that the Coca Cola Bottling Company was a corporation at the time the contract was made and that L. W. Walker signed it for the benefit of the corporation and not for himself, then the plaintiffs should be permitted to amend said petition so as to make the corporation a party and that the court should retain jurisdiction of the cause of action until plaintiffs had an opportunity to procure the necessary and proper service on the Coca Cola Bottling Company.

On May 19, 1927, plaintiffs filed their first amended original petition, making the Coca Cola Bottling Company, a corporation, a party defendant with L. W. Walker and alleged in substance that at the time of the filing of the original petition plaintiffs had no knowledge that the Coca Cola Bottling Company was a corporation and that they believed that the defendant, L. W. Walker, was doing business for himself under the name of Coca Cola Bottling Com *424 pany, and since the court acquired jurisdiction of the suit by filing of a petition on April 1, 1927, the court had jurisdiction to permit pleadings to be amended and amplified, new parties to be made to determine all the essential questions involved in the suit and to do whatever is necessary to determine the issues involved therein.

On October 3, 1927, the Coca Cola Bottling Company filed its plea of privilege to plaintiffs’ first amended original petition and set up the usual allegations essential to a plea of privilege.

On October 7, 1927, plaintiffs filed a controverted plea to the plea of privilege filed by the Coca Cola Bottling Company.

On June 18, 1928, an order was entered in Cause No. B-46254, in the District Court of Bexar County, dismissing the defendant, L. W. Walker, personally from that suit, and on the same day the Coca Cola Bottling Company’s plea of privilege to be sued in Tom Green County, Texas, was overruled by the court, and an appeal from that ruling by the trial court was made to the Court of Civil Appeals and in due time the Court of Civil Appeals for the 8th Supreme Judicial District of Texas at El Paso affirmed the judgment of the trial court and petition for writ of error was dismissed without jurisdiction by the Supreme Court.

On April 19, 1927, the Coca Cola Bottling Company filed suit in the District Court of Tom Green County in Cause No. 5494 against the Way Engineering Company, involving the same cause of action in controversy in Cause No. B-46254, then pending in the 45th District Court of Bexar County, Texas.

On the 23rd day of May, 1927, the Way Engineering Company filed a plea of the pendency of a prior suit in the 45th District Court of Bexar County, Texas, covering the same cause of action, and set up in detail what had been done in Cause No. B-46254 in the 45th District Court of Bexar County, Texas, in reference to the amendment of pleadings, making new parties, etc., and that the District Court of Bexar County had acquired jurisdiction of the subject matter in controversy and that the District Court of Tom Green County in Cause No. 5494, involving the same subject matter, did not have jurisdiction of this cause and should have nothing more to do with same.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W.2d 1067, 119 Tex. 419, 1930 Tex. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/way-way-v-coca-cola-bottling-co-tex-1930.