Appellant sued appellee to recov-
er on an accident policy the sum of $2,500 and attorney’s fees, alleged to have accrued by reason of the loss by accident of one of his feet. Appellee pleaded its privilege to be sued in Dallas county, alleging that it has its principal office in the city of Dallas, in that county; that “as a condition precedent to and a part of the consideration for the issuance of „ a certificate of membership to plaintiff by this defendant, and as a part of the contract between the plaintiff and defendant for the issuance of the certificate to plaintiff herein sued upon by him, the plaintiff agreed to be bound by the by-laws of this defendant in force and effect at the time of the issuance of such certificate, and further agreed to be bound by such amendments and changes in said by-laws as might be made after the ■ issuance of said certificate.” It was further alleged “that at the time of the accident and injury to plaintiff, if any, there existed and still exists a bylaw of this defendant, which provided and still provides ‘that all suits against this defendant shall be filed in the city and county of Dallas, and state of Texas.’ ” The court sustained the plea of privilege, and ordered that a transcript of all orders and the original papers be transmitted to the district clerk: of Dallas county.
It appears from the certificate of membership that by accepting the same appellant agreed “to be bound by such amendments and changes in said by-laws as may hereafter be made.” The certificate was of date July 4, 1905, and on July 8, 1908, a by-law was adopted which provided, “All suits against the association must be filed in the city and county of Dallas, state of Texas,” and was first published on December 12, 1908, about two months after the accident to appellant. It might have been surmised that it was dated back to cover accidents, had not the secretary and treasurer sworn that it was passed in July, 1908.
There is a cogent reason for permitting suits like this to be instituted in the county of the residence of the injured person; for in many instances it would be a virtual denial of the right to enter the courts at all, if a man could be required to sue in a court that might be, as in the case of a resident of El Paso county, for instance, hundreds of *818 miles from his home. In laws as to the venue of suits, the individual citizen, and not the corporation, is favored. The right is a substantial one of fundamental importance to the citizen, and one which he cannot be deprived of by any authority, except that of the Legislature of the state of Texas. The right given by statute to sue corporations in certain counties would be of little benefit, if a creature of the law could repeal the statute and set up a by-law of its own in its ■stead.
This question is fully discussed by Chief Justice Shaw, of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, in Nute v. Hamilton Mutual Insurance Company,
When appellant contracted for by-laws, enacted in the future, to enter into and become a part of his contract, he must have had in contemplation only such by-laws as a corporation has the power to pass; that is, such by-laws as were reasonable and consistent with the rights guaranteed to him by the statutes of his state. 1-Ie could never have contemplated that the association would attempt to repeal a statute and deprive him of a valuable statutory right. Gray v. Portland Bank,
Appellee cites the cases of Greve v. Insurance Co.,
In the case of Parish v. N. Y. Produce Exchange,
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
