Welsh v. Chapman

87 S.W.2d 293
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1935
DocketNo. 4473.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 87 S.W.2d 293 (Welsh v. Chapman) 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
Welsh v. Chapman, 87 S.W.2d 293 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

This case originated in justice court, precinct No. 2, place No. 1, of Gray county. The record contains a transcript from the justice court to the county court of Gray county. No written pleadings appear in the record except the plea of privilege filed by Welsh, asserting his right to be sued in precinct No. 1 of Carson county, Tex., where he alleges he resides and did reside at the time the suit was filed, also the controverting affidavit filed by Chapman. The transcript from the justice court contains only the following entry forming the basis of plaintiff’s action: “Suit upon account for $137.50.” No account appears in the record, nor is there any statement as to when it was made, when it is due, and who, if any one, is indebted to Chapman, and on what account the indebtedness exists.

The justice’s transcript further shows that Welsh filed his plea of privilege on October 19, 1934, and that Chapman’s controverting affidavit was filed the 22d day of October, 1934; that citation was issued October 27, 1934; that plaintiff’s demurrer to the controverting affidavit was filed on November 12, 1934, and was overruled the same day, together with Welsh’s plea of privilege. An appeal bond was filed with the justice on the 19th day of November, 1934, and the case was transferred to the county court for a trial de novo. In that court,’ on December 10, 1934, the plea of privilege was overruled, by the trial judge, after he had heard the evidence, from which order this appeal is prosecuted.

A statement of facts has been filed which shows that the only evidence introduced, in addition to the plea of privilege and the controverting affidavit, was the testimony of the appellee, Chapman. He testified as follows: “My name, is John Chapman. I am also known as J. A. Chapman. I know A. B. Keahey and M. B. Welsh. Mr. Keahey lives in Gray County, Texas and Mr. Welsh lives in Carson County, Texas. We are all three real estate men! I am suing both defendants for my part of the commission which I am claiming in a real estate transaction on the ground that they sold my listing.”

As stated above, the only entry on the justice’s docket which purports to make a statement of the plaintiff’s cause of action is that it is a suit on an open account for $137.50. No account appears in the record. , No other testimony is before us showing the nature of the cause of action except the above-quoted testimony from Chapman. If his action is to recover an interest in the commission which the defendants, as real estate brokers, were withholding from him, he certainly cannot recover upon an account, whether verified ■ or otherwise. Myers v. Grantham (Tex. Civ. App.) 187 S. W. 532; Gerlack-Barlow Co. v. Patton (Tex. Civ. App.) 281 S. W. 242. His cause of action must necessarily be upon a contract, express or implied, if his testimony discloses the nature of his demand.

It is true that the justice of the peace issued a citation which was served, but the citation issued from a justice court *295 is no part of plaintiffs pleadings, and cannot be considered either in the county-court or in this court in determining what issues were presented in either court. Northside Lumber & Bldg. Co. v. Neal (Tex. Civ. App.) 23 S.W.(2d) 858.

There is no statement in the record showing where the services of the real estate brokers, if any, were rendered.

Revised Statutes, article 2390, provides that any suit commenced in the justice court shall, at plaintiffs option, be commenced in the county and precinct in which the defendant, or one or more of several defendants, resides. Subdivision 4 of the article is the only part thereof which could possibly apply to this action. It provides: “Suits upon a contract in writing promising performance at any particular place, may be brought in the county and precinct in which such contract was to be performed, provided that in all suits to recover for labor actually performed, suit may be brought and maintained where such labor is performed, whether the contract for same be oral or in writing.”

It has been held in numerous cases that an action for the recovery of commissions brought by a real estate broker is not “labor actually performed” within the meaning of this statute. Douglass v. Bennett (Tex. Civ. App.) 250 S. W. 237; Felton v. Johnson, 112 Tex. 412, 247 S. W. 837.

The testimony of Chapman fails to show in which county his contract, if in writing, was performable, or was performed.

The principal’ trouble with the record is that no cause of action has been shown, as required by the rules. The statutes relating to pleadings by the parties in the justice court are liberally construed, but, in the absence of written pleadings, the substance of the oral pleadings must be briefly entered upon the docket. The Supreme Court, in Moore v. Jordan, 67 Tex.’ 394, 3 S. W. 317, 318, said: “We do not doubt that pleadings are as essential to make an issue in the justice’s cotirt as in a court of record. The statutes provide, however, that they should be oral (with certain, exceptions), and that a brief statement thereof shall be noted' on the docket. * * ⅜ It is also declared that they may be amended in accordance with the rules governing amendments of pleadings in the district and county courts so far as the same are applicable. * * * These citations are sufficient to show that pleadings in the justice’s court are made essential to the formation of the issues to be tried, and that they are not to be dispensed with.”

In Maass, Ex’x, v. Solingsky, 67 Tex. 290, 3 S. W. 289, Judge Stayton said:

“This cause originated in a justice’s court, and on appeal was tried in the- district court, but from the transcript before us we are unable to ascertain what the cause of action asserted was. The transcript consists of the caption, statement of facts, judgment, appeal-bond, and assignments of error. The pleadings in a cause in justice’s court may be oral, except when otherwise required by statute, but the law requires that ‘a brief statement thereof shall be noted on the docket.’ * * *

“It is from the transcript and papers thus sent up that the county or district court ascertains what the cause of action presented and tried in the justice’s court was, and of this-.it must be informed; for on appeal it can pass on no case other than the one tried in the justice’s court. The cause of action asserted in the justice’s court is the only one that can be asserted in the district court on appeal. When an appeal is taken from any judgment of a district court to this court, it must be informed as to what the cause of action was, either through the pleadings made a part of the transcript, or by an agreed case made as the statute permits. In a case originating in a justice’s court, this must be shown to this court by the entries made on the justice’s docket, by pleadings filed in the case, if any, or by an agreed case; and, if it does not appear what the cause of action was, through a transcript which shows it in some of these methods, this court cannot revise the action of the district court; for unless it knows what was tried, it cannot know whether there was error or not.

“The statement of facts, as presented, is almost unintelligible, but we might infer from it that one of three causes of action was tried in the district court. We are not called upon or authorized to draw inferences of this kind, and to adjudicate cases upon them.

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87 S.W.2d 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welsh-v-chapman-texapp-1935.