Weatherly v. Pena

335 S.W.2d 434, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 2205
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1960
Docket13587, 13602
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 335 S.W.2d 434 (Weatherly v. Pena) 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
Weatherly v. Pena, 335 S.W.2d 434, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 2205 (Tex. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

BARROW, Justice.

By order of this Court, the above causes have been consolidated for hearing and disposition.

The appeal in Cause No. 13587, being Cause No. 586 in the District Court of Zapata County, is by Gerald Weatherly from a judgment sustaining the plea in abatement of the defendant, Alberto Pena, Jr., and dismissing the cause.

The appeal in Cause No. 13602, being Cause No. 3157 in the District Court of Starr County, is from a final judgment that plaintiff, Consuelo Madrigal Pena, take nothing as against the defendant, Alberto Pena, Jr.

The facts pertaining to both cases are as follows:

On July 12, 1946, Consuelo Madrigal Pena obtained a divorce judgment against her then husband, Alberto Pena, Jr., and a settlement of their property rights then existing. This judgment was duly rendered by the District Court of Starr County, Texas. On October 1, 1958, Consuelo Madrigal Pena and her present husband, Raul Pena, filed Cause No. 3157, in the same court, to set aside said property settlement and reopen and equitably and fairly re-adjudicate the rights of the parties.

The defendant, Alberto Pena, Jr., was duly cited but his answer was not filed, for reasons that need not be discussed herein. On November 7, 1958, default judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff Consuelo Madrigal Pena against Alberto Pena, Jr., setting aside the former judgment and awarding judgment in favor of Consuelo Madrigal Pena for the sum of $14,000, with interest thereon from and after July 10, 1946, and, among other things, fixing a lien upon certain property in Zapata Couniy, *436 Texas, in accordance with the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition. The -decree contained other provisions not material here.

Thereafter on November 10, 1958, the defendant, Alberto Pena, Jr., duly filed his motion for a new trial in said cause. On December 8, 1958, said motion was presented to the court and hearing thereon begun, whereupon the following agreement by plaintiffs and defendant was executed and filed:

“By this written agreement of the parties in the case, Cause No. 3157, in the District Court of Starr County, Texas, styled Consuelo Madrigal Pena et vir, Plaintiffs, vs. Alberto Pena, Jr., Defendant, it is stipulated and agreed by and among the parties in the case, as to defendant’s motion for new trial, heretofore filed and remaining on file in this cause, that the proponent thereof,1 — to-wit, said defendant, — did present the same to the Court within thirty (30) days after the same was filed, that the hearing on said motion has been duly and timely begun that said hearing is now hereby recessed by agreement of the parties, plaintiffs and defendant, until eleven o’clock a. m. January 17, 1959, that the decision of the said motion is hereby postponed to a later date, — that is, to January 17, 1959, or thereafter, as suits the convenience of the Hon. Cullen W. Briggs, the Judge who is handling and hearing said motion — that the time in which the said motion must be determined is hereby extended accordingly, and that said motion may be acted upon, according to this stipulation, within the next term of Court, — to wit, the January, 1959, Term of the District Court of Starr County, Texas, — agreeable to the provisions of Rule 329-b of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.
“Witness our signatures this eighth day of December, A.D. 1958, at Rio Grande City, Starr County, Texas:
“Gerald Weatherly, 510 Grant St., P.O. Box 1386, Laredo, Texas,
Luther E. Jones, Jr., 338 Laurel Drive, Corpus Christi, Texas,
Arnulfo Guerra, Roma, Texas, Plaintiffs’ Attorneys and Counsel,
by /s/ Gerald Weatherly of Counsel.
/s/ Magus F. Smith
Defendant’s Counsel.”

On said date an order was entered by the trial court postponing the hearing on said motion until eleven o’clock a. m. January 17, 1959. On January 17th, an order was entered, by agreement of counsel, vacating and holding for naught the aforementioned default judgment and granting a new trial, and also granting leave to all parties to amend pleadings as they might see fit.

On November 12, 1958, there was filed among the papers in the case an instrument executed and acknowledged by Consuelo Madrigal Pena and husband, Raul Pena, whereby they transferred and assigned to Gerald Weatherly and Arnulfo Guerra, their attorneys in said cause, an undivided one-third interest in the default judgment aforesaid.

On July 22, 1959, Gerald Weatherly filed suit, being Cause No. 586, in the District Court of Zapata County, against Alberto Pena, Jr., Consuelo Madrigal Pena, Raul Pena and Arnulfo Guerra, seeking as against Alberto Pena, Jr., an accounting of all property and assets of a certain business then conducted by Alberto Pena, Jr., and alleged to be a part of the foregoing community estate, seeking to establish and foreclose a lien on certain real estate in the Town of Zapata, Zapata County, Texas, and to divide the proceeds of such recovery between himself and the defendants Consuelo Madrigal Pena and Arnulfo Guerra. In substance, this suit was brought by Weatherly to recover his interest in the *437 property mentioned in the aforesaid divorce judgment.

The defendant, Alberto Pena, Jr., plead in abatement the pendency of the suit in Starr County, Texas, involving the property sought to be recovered in the Zapata County suit, which plea in abatement was on October 15, 1959, sustained by the court and said suit was dismissed.

On November 16, 1959, the Starr County case, styled Consuelo Madrigal Pena et vir v. Alberto Pena, Jr., was duly called for trial, whereupon the plaintiffs filed what has been denominated a petition “By Way of Protestation,” urging that a final judgment had theretofore been entered in said cause and that the court’s action in granting a new trial was void in law.

The decision and disposition of the appeals in both of these causes involve the validity and sufficiency of the agreement of counsel postponing the hearing of the motion for new trial in Cause No. 13602, being Cause No. 3157 in the trial court.

There is no question that the proceedings were regular and in strict conformity with the requirements of Rule 329-b, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, up to the entry of the aforesaid agreement and the order of the court pursuant thereto. There is no question that the postponement must be predicated upon an agreement of the parties in the case to postpone the hearing and that a fixed or certain date for hearing be set out in the agreement. Pierce v. Loyd, 131 Tex. 401, 114 S.W.2d 867; Moore v. Decuir, Tex.Civ.App., 286 S.W.2d 471.

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Bluebook (online)
335 S.W.2d 434, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 2205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weatherly-v-pena-texapp-1960.