Wright v. Swayne

140 S.W. 221, 104 Tex. 440, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 176
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1911
DocketNo. 2320.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 140 S.W. 221 (Wright v. Swayne) 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
Wright v. Swayne, 140 S.W. 221, 104 Tex. 440, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 176 (Tex. 1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ramsey

delivered the opinion of the court.

On July 25, 1911, a petition for mandamus was presented to this court in the above cause during vacation. The petition was directed to be filed, and the clerk was ordered to issue citation to respondent, requiring him to answer on the first day of the present term of the court and show cause, if any he had, why the writ of mandamus should not issue as prayed for.

The respondent made answer at some length, as will hereinafter appear, and the question was argued at the bar of this court by both relator and respondent, and able and exhaustive briefs were filed by counsel representing both parties.

We have concluded that under the case as made the petitioners are not entitled to the writ asked. In view of the importance of the question, however, as well as out of respect to learned counsel, we have thought it proper to write our views at some length, and, in order to make the opinion of value as a precedent, as well as to make it easily *442 understood, it is necessary to give some detailed statement of the case, the questions involved and how they arose.

The controversy arose in cause No. 28,337 in the Seventeenth District Court of Tarrant County, entitled L. A. Wright et al. v. Cornelius Wright et al. The suit, as the issue finally developed, mainly involved 320 acres of land near Fort Worth, known as the Thomas McCann survey, the plaintiffs in the suit in the District Court claiming that the said land was the community of James I. Wright and his third wife, Julia (McKassen) Wright, while the defendants in the said suit contended that said land was the separate property of their father, James I. Wright. There were three trials of the case in the District Court, all resulting in a finding substantially in favor of the defendants therein and that the property was the separate property of James I. Wright. The first of said trials was had in October, 1909, and a new trial was granted on the motion of plaintiffs, assigning many errors of law committed by the court during the trial, on the ground that the findings of the jury were contrary to and unsupported by the evidence, and also because of newly discovered testimony. The case was again tried in June, 1910, with the assistance of a jury, with the same result. Again the plaintiffs filed their motion for a new trial in which they urged that the court had, in the course of the trial, committed many errors of law to their prejudice and also made the contention that the verdict of the jury in respect to many of the issues submitted to them was against the weight, or unsupported by the -evidence. ' This motion was granted. On the third trial had in the spring of this year the same result, in effect, was reached. For the third time plaintiffs filed their motion for a new trial. This motion is both lengthy and elaborate and presented, as grounds for a new trial, not less than thirty specifications of error claimed to have been committed by the court, and, as a basis for the new trial requested, also attacked the verdict of the jury. This motion, as the other two had been, was stoutly resisted by the defendants. Among other things they urged, as they now claim, that the trial court, having already granted two new trials, was without authority to grant a third motion, and upon this the petitioners base their contention that the act of the court in undertaking to grant said third motion for a new trial was not only wholly unauthorized, but that such action was without authority of law and that same was and is void. They further aver that since a judgment was by the court on the findings of the jury on the third trial entered of record in the minutes of said court that the court should have granted their application thereafter made to name commissioners to partition Die property in accordance with the rights of the parties as therein adjudged and proceed to execute said judgment and this proceeding is, in substance, a petition to this court to direct, by mandamus, the District Court so to proceed. The order of the court on the first amended motion for a new trial is general and merely directs and orders that same be granted. The order of July 2, 1910, granting the second motion for new trial, recites, among other things, that “the court being of the opinion that the jury erred in the matter of the law and that their verdict in reference to the Thos. McCann *443 survey is unsupported by any evidence and contrary to the law. It is ordered that the motion be granted.” The order granting the third motion is quite general and merely recites that the court “after hearing said motion and being fully satisfied,” etc., the motion is granted. The petitioners further aver that if said last action of the trial court ■be sustained that it would operate as a total denial of the rights vouchsafed to them under the Constitution and laws of this State; that they have no remedy by appeal against such unauthorized action, and that such action of the court in continually granting new trials is a gross injustice and hardship upon them, which it was the purpose of the law to prevent, and that said last order purporting to grant a new trial is a nullity, and that under the law there remained nothing for the trial court to do except to execute and carry out the judgment rendered and entered by it on such third trial; that commissioners to partition the property not having been appointed and named at the time of the entry of the original judgment and the said court having then and later refused to do so on proper application, it is within the power, and on the case made, it is the duty, of this court by peremptory mandamus to direct that same should be done.

James W. Swayne, judge of the Seventeenth District Court, who is complained against, filed his answer in due time and resisted the granting of the mandamus sought. In his answer he interposed a formal general demurrer and two special exceptions, in substance, as follows:

(1) That the petition shows on its face that the trial court had granted the new trials- because of error committed by said court in the introduction and admission of testimony of J. W. Wright concerning transactions of his deceased father, James I. Wright.

(2) That the motion to appoint commissioners to partition said property was filed at a subsequent term .of the court to that at which the motion for new trial was granted and that the granting of the motion to appoint commissioners' necessarily required the setting aside the order granting a new trial, which, having been entered at a former term, became final and beyond the control of the court.

In addition to a general denial the said Swayne further answered, in effect, that he. had granted the third new trial because on a full discussion and a more careful consideration he had become convinced that he had committed error in admitting certain testimony complained of in the motion for a new trial as to transactions with James I. Wright, the original owner of the property in suit, and that such error was in respect to a material issue in the case and one which materially influenced the jury against the plaintiffs, and that his action in granting such third new trial was not in contravention of article 1372, Devised Statutes, which provides that “not more than two new trials shall be granted to either party in the same cause, except when the jury have been guilty of some misconduct or have erred in matter of law.”

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.W. 221, 104 Tex. 440, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-swayne-tex-1911.