Wells Fargo & Co. v. Guilheim

169 S.W. 1053, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 833
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1914
DocketNo. 5400.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 169 S.W. 1053 (Wells Fargo & Co. v. Guilheim) 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
Wells Fargo & Co. v. Guilheim, 169 S.W. 1053, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 833 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

JENKINS, J.

This is an appeal from an order dissolving a temporary injunction. Appellants’ petition alleged that appellee Guilheim had 43 pretended claims against it for damages, by reason of the alleged fact that turkeys shipped by appellant for appel-lee were dead when delivered, and that he had filed 43 separate suits in the court of appellee Johnson, a justice of the peace, for the recovery of such damages, and had caused citation to be issued thereon in each suit; that said claims were from 95 cents to $18.-48, and aggregated $208.37; that each of said claims involved issues of fact and questions of law identical with each other; that said suits were separately filed for the purpose of vexing and harrassing appellant, and that the costs therein would amount to the sum of $300; that the county court had jurisdiction of the aggregate amount of said claims, and that a suit for same could be tried in the county court at comparatively small trouble and expense; that appellant has a legal defense to said claims, in that it holds receipts from appellee showing that none of the turkeys were dead when the same were delivered to appellee; that appellant has no adequate remedy at law, in that neither of said suits is appealable from' justice’s court, by reason of the fact that neither of them involves an amount exceeding $20, and that he cannot have said suits consolidated in the justice’s court for the reason that the aggregate amount in controversy exceeds the sum of $200; that “appellant has no reason to expect, anticipate, or hope for the proper determination of its just and legal rights in the trial of said suits in the said justice court, for the reason that the said defendant M. M. Johnson, justice of the peace aforesaid, is not a lawyer learned in the law, and that a jury in the justice court, although with no knowledge whatever of the law or the application of legal principles to facts, are the exclusive judges of the facts and the law, with no appeal whatever from their decision, and, such jury being wholly ignorant of the law, and wholly incapable of applying any legal principle to any state of facts, your petitioner could not hope for any consideration or determina *1054 tion of its legal rights in the trial of said suits in said justice court than such as the prejudice and whims of said jury might dictate.” Appellee demurred generally to appellant’s petition, and specially in that it appeared that appellant’s alleged legal defense involves a question of fact, and that the justice court had obtained exclusive jurisdiction to try the same. He alleges that his claims for damages involved are valid, and have arisen from the fact that appellant shipped for appellee a large number of turkeys from various points at different times, and that one or more of the turkeys in each of said shipments were dead when delivered to appellee; that appellee had furnished appellant a full statement as to his several claims for such damages, and that appellant failed and refused to pay the same or any part thereof; that appellee notified appellant long before said suits were filed, to wit, on March 26, 1913, that if said claims were not paid he would file separate suits thereon, and that said suits were not filed until May 1, 1913; that by refusing to pay said claims and by failing to take any action to prevent or restrain appellee from so filing said suits, appellant invited appellee to file the same, by reason of which it is estopped from receiving the relief claimed herein. Ap-pellee denies that said suits were brought for the purpose of vexing or harrassing the appellant, or that the defense to same involves the same issues, but alleges, on the contrary, that each shipment was at a different time, of turkeys purchased from different parties, and that the facts that may be shown upon trial in one case will not be in any wise material in determining the facts at issue in any other of said cases; that the costs in said cases will be only what the law allows, and that if appellant establishes a legal defense it will not have tq pay the same. On March 25, 1914, the court heard the motion to dissolve the temporary injunction, “the same having been submitted on the plaintiff’s petition and the defendant’s demurrers and motion,” and entered a decree that “said injunction heretofore granted in this cause is hereby in all respects dissolved.” The appellant, having duly excepted to the order dissolving said injunction, prosecutes this appeal under article 4644, R. S.

. Opinion.

The court found that appellant was estop-ped from prosecuting its suit herein for injunction, for the reason that it was “made known to the court that the facts set forth in the answer of the defendant Ohas. S. Guilheim, to the effect that the said defendant presented all of said claims to the plaintiff, Wells Eargo & Co. long before suits were filed in justice’s court, and that payment of said claims was declined, and that said defendant Guilheim notified the plaintiff that he would bring separate suits on same, had not been denied, and would not be denied, by the plaintiff, Wells Eargo & Co.” .

[1] As to whether or not the equitable relief of injunction will be granted in a given case rests, to a certain extent, in the discretion of the judge, which discretion is reviewable on appeal, and should be upheld, unless some abuse of such discretion is shown. If appellant was entitled to enjoin the separate prosecution of appellee’s claims, and knew that it was appellee’s purpose to so prosecute said suits, it might not be inequitable to hold that it should have done so before appellee had incurred the expense of filing such suits, which presumably included an attorney’s fee in each of them. Such course would have prevented incurring the costs, which is one of the grounds of appellant’s complaint here, and for which, even should injunction be granted, it has already rendered itself liable by reason of its delay herein, unless it should clearly appear that such suits were brought for the purpose of vexing and harrassing the appellant. However, we do not rest our opinion on this reason of the court for dissolving the injunction. If the judgment is correct for any other reason apparent of record, it ought to be upheld.

[2] We are of the opinion that appellant’s petition for injunction was bad upon general demurrer. It appears from said petition that each of the suits in the justice’s court grew out of shipments of turkeys by appellant for appellee, and that appellee’s claim for damages is that some of thé turkeys so shipped were dead when delivered to appellee. The only alleged defense to such claim is as follows:

“Tour petitioner alleges and charges the fact to be that it has a fuü and complete legal defense in each and all of said 43 suits, and is in no way liable to the said defendant Chas. S. Guilheim in any damages or sum whatsoever, in that it holds a receipt from the defendant Chas. S. Guilheim for each and every shipment sued on without exception, and none dead within knowledge of plaintiff.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 S.W. 1053, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-fargo-co-v-guilheim-texapp-1914.