67 S.W.2d 450 | Tex. App. | 1933
Roby State Bank sued E. T. Bramblett and Sam T. Redwine as partners, both alleged to be residents of Taylor county, to recover damages for the alleged conversion of 20 bales of cotton valued at $602.65. In the same suit, plaintiff also sought recovery against Planters' Gin Company, an alleged resident of Nolan county, for damages for the alleged conversion by the latter of 9 bales of cotton valued at $164.16. The total damages claimed against all defendants was *451 limited to the amount of a certain judgment held by plaintiff against one A. L. Chance in the principal sum of $337.42, with interest and costs for the security of which a lien was claimed on the cotton alleged to have been converted. Bramblett and Redwine each filed separate pleas of privilege. Plaintiff controverted said pleas, alleging, as to Bramblett, that the venue was "governed by two exceptions to the general rule of venue, to-wit, subdivision 4 and subdivision 9 of article 1995." It was further alleged:. "That the cotton alleged to have been converted by the defendant E. T. Bramblett in the above entitled and numbered cause was converted in the county of Fisher, State of Texas, being the same county in which suit was brought. * * * That the defendant Planters' Gin Co., Inc., is a resident of Fisher County, Texas, said county being the same county in which the aforesaid suit was brought, and being a different county from that of the residence of E. T. Bramblett defendant herein." The quotations are from the controverting plea in answer to the plea of privilege of E. T. Bramblett. The controverting plea in answer to the plea of privilege of defendant Redwine was the same if we substitute the name of Sam T. Redwine for that of E. T. Bramblett.
The trial court overruled exceptions to the controverting pleas, and, after hearing the evidence, overruled the pleas of privilege, to review which action Bramblett and Redwine have appealed.
There was neither pleading nor evidence sufficient to maintain the venue in Fisher county under subdivision 4 of said R.S. 1925, art. 1995. As a pleading, the controverting affidavit was insufficient to sustain venue under subdivision 4, for two reasons, viz.: (1) It alleged no cause of action against the resident defendant Richardson v. D. S. Cage Co.,
Without determining whether, if the cotton was converted in Fisher county, that necessarily constituted a trespass committed in that county, we shall assume that it did. It has many times been held that a conversion constitutes a trespass. Palmer v. Pinkston (Tex.Civ.App.)
Looking to the controverting plea alone, it is readily seen that plaintiff at most alleged a legal conclusion omitting to allege the facts showing the commission of a trespass in Fisher county. It is necessary that a controverting plea allege the facts showing that the case comes within one or more exceptions to the general rule of venue, and the allegation of mere conclusions is insufficient. Cook v. Guzman (Tex.Civ.App.)
The evidence, we think, was sufficient to sustain the venue in Fisher county had the controverting pleas been sufficient. Instead of directing a transfer of the case, we will reverse and remand, with direction that, unless the pleas are so amended to state the facts showing that a trespass had been committed, and upon another trial evidence is produced to sustain that issue, the case be transferred to the county court of Taylor county. See Cassidy-Southwestern Commission Co. v. Chupick Bros. (Tex.Civ.App.)