65 S.W.2d 410 | Tex. App. | 1933
The points on appeal are: (1) There was no oral proof offered on the hearing of *411 the plea of privilege; (2) the allegations alone of the plaintiff's petition cannot be considered as constituting prima facie evidence and prevail as against defendant's verified plea of privilege; (3) the controverting affidavit did not meet the requirement of averment, of adopting the allegations of the plaintiffs original petition or by reference or as an exhibit.
It is first required of the trial judge upon the hearing of a plea of privilege to refer to the plaintiff's original petition to determine the character of the action pleaded and the county of trial pointed out by statute for that class of cases. Considering alone the averments of the present petition, as must be done for the purposes stated, the two things must be determined as affirmatively appearing that: (1) The plaintiff had instituted a suit against the defendant, not in the county of its domicile, but in a county elsewhere than the county of the defendant's residence; and (2) that the character or nature of the suit must be deemed legally that of damages for conversion or an act of trespass to personalty. As aptly stated in Koch v. Roedenbeck (Tex.Civ.App.)
Although, as above stated, the original petition of the plaintiff must be considered in the first instance by the court for the purpose of determining the legal nature or character of the suit, yet, as against a plea of privilege, the allegations alone of the original petition cannot, as decided, be relied upon by the plaintiff as constituting prima facie proof, as devolves upon him to make, of his right to bring the suit in the first instance in a particular county alleged. World Co. v. Dow,
The order is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with instructions to transfer the case to the county court at law of Harris county, Tex.; the cost of the appeal to be taxed against appellee.