257 S.W. 697 | Tex. App. | 1923
Appellant sued appellee W. D. Benson and one S. F. Tubbs, in the district court of Travis county, for damages in the sum of $2,500, and for a rescission of a contract of exchange of equities in certain real estate, by which appellant received certain described Lubbock county lands charged with a lien to secure certain notes assumed in the transaction by appellant, and appellee received certain equities of appellant in Travis and Reagan counties lands; alleging that the contract of exchange of equities in lands and the assumption of the payment of the notes against the Lubbock county land was induced by the false and fraudulent representations, in Travis county, of appellee and S. F. Tubbs, who is alleged to be acting for himself and as agent of appellee in a conspiracy to defraud appellant. Appellant further alleged that the lands conveyed by him to appellee had been transferred to innocent purchasers, and a rescission could not be had as to it, but that appellee and Tubbs were liable for its value, which was alleged to be $2,500; and asked for a rescission of the deed to him of the Lubbock county lands and the assumption agreement to pay the notes against said lands.
The defendant S. F. Tubbs and appellee answered separately — Tubbs filing a formal answer of a general demurrer and general denial, while appellee filed a plea of privilege to be sued in Lubbock county. Appellant filed a controverting plea to appellee's plea of privilege, so as to bring the action within the purview of article 1830, subdivision 7 of the Revised Statutes 1911, relating to venue in actions for fraud. The issue of fact on the plea of privilege was submitted to a jury, who returned a verdict against appellee, and the court thereupon overruled the plea of privilege, to which action appellee *699 excepted and gave notice of an appeal. Appellee then filed, for the first time, his plea in abatement of the pendency of another suit between the parties concerning the same subject-matter then pending in the district court of Lubbock county. Appellant filed a motion to strike out the plea in abatement and several exceptions thereto, all of which were overruled by the court; and the plea having been filed on the last day of the term, the case was continued without prejudice thereto until the next term of the court; at which term appellant again presented his motion to strike out the plea in abatement and the several special exceptions thereto, which the court overruled, and sustained the plea in abatement, and dismissed the suit as to appellee, W. D. Benson; to which action appellant excepted and gave notice of appeal and by proper appeal here now presents the matter for our determination.
No appeal was perfected by appellee from the order overruling his plea of privilege, but he seeks to have the action of the court thereon reviewed in this appeal by cross-assignment of error, based upon his exception to the action of the court at the time same was overruled.
We are of the opinion that the court erred in refusing to sustain the motion to strike out the plea in abatement and to sustain the exceptions thereto, because the same was not filed in due order of pleading as complained of by appellant's first proposition of law. A plea in abatement is a dilatory plea. Dilatory pleas must be filed in due order of pleading, and those not so filed are waived. A plea in abatement on account of the pendency of another suit filed after a plea of privilege has been filed, presented, and overruled, is not filed in due order of pleading, and is thereby waived.
No case has been found by us presenting exactly the same state of facts as the case at bar, but the statutes and the rules of district and county courts concerning this question, by analogy, sustain our conclusion herein. The portions of articles 1902, 1909, Revised Statutes, and of rules 6 and 7 of district and county courts are as follows:
"Art. 1902. * * * The defendant may also plead as many several matters either of law or equity as he may think necessary for his defense, and which may be pertinent to the cause, provided that he shall file them at the same time and in due order of pleading. * * *"
"Art. 1909. Pleas shall be filed in the due order of pleading, and shall be heard and determined in such order under the direction of the court."
"Rule 6. The answer of defendant shall consist of an original answer, and such supplemental answers as may be necessary, in the course of pleadings by the parties to the suit, to enable the defendant to state all of the exceptions and facts, presenting his defense, as contained in his original answer, or his cross-action, if one be set up in the original answer, and such other facts as may be required to rebut the facts that may be stated in the original and supplemental petitions as pleaded by the plaintiff. The original answer and the supplemental answers shall be indorsed, so as to show their respective positions in the process of pleading, as `original answer,' `defendant's first supplemental answer,' `defendant's second supplemental answer,' and so on, to be successively numbered, named and indorsed.
"Rule 7. The original answer may consist of pleas to the jurisdiction, in abatement, of privilege, or any other dilatory pleas; of exceptions, general and special; of general denial and any other facts in defense by way of avoidance or estoppel, the same being pleaded in the due order of pleading, as required by statute. * * *"
The due order of pleading, in so far as it relates to this case, is fixed by our statutes and the rules of practice, and is as follows: (1) Pleas to the jurisdiction. (2) Pleas in abatement. (3) Plea of privilege.
The following cases, we think, sustain our opinion: T. P. Ry. Co. v. Lynch (Tex.Civ.App.)
In the case of Hoffman v. Bldg. Loan Ass'n,
Appellee insists that the statute and rules as to due order of pleadings are only directory, and that a strict enforcement of such would work a hardship in many instances. We do not agree with either contention. The statute and rules requiring pleadings to be filed in due order are mandatory. The hardship, if any, is alleviated by other portions of the statutes and rules, as well as decisions of the court, whereby it is provided and held that it is within the discretion of the trial judge to permit a pleader to withdraw pleadings filed out of due order and file them in due order; or, upon proper motion and showing, permit the filing of pleadings theretofore not filed, which might necessarily be filed out of due order because of the procedure already had in the case; or under rule 27 pleadings may be filed out of due order as trial amendments. An abuse of this discretionary power in the trial judge may be reviewed and relieved upon an appeal by the appellate courts. Appellee is not entitled to the relief above provided, because he did not in the first instance file his pleading in due order, nor make any effort to comply with the provision of the rules and decisions. Rutledge v. Evans (Tex.Civ.App.)
We are also of the opinion that the court erred in refusing to sustain the motion to strike out the plea in abatement of the pendency of another suit, and to sustain the exceptions thereto because the same was filed separately and not as a part of appellee's answer along with the other defenses and at one time. Article 1902, supra; De Witt v. Jones,
"The object of the statute is to require the defendant to disclose as early as practical all of the grounds of his defense to enable the plaintiff to prepare at once to meet and rebut them, and thus to avoid unnecessary prolixity and delay in the conduct and trial of the cause." Sayles Pleading (New Ed.) § 419.
"The statutes secure to the defendant the right to interpose all the defenses he may have. There are only two express restrictions on this right: First, they must be presented at the same time; and, second, in due order of pleading." Townes Pleading, p. 514.
We are of the opinion that the statute requires all dilatory pleas by a defendant to be filed before the trial of the case upon its merits at the same time and in due order so as to inform plaintiff of the nature thereof, and enable the court to hear and dispose of them promptly before the trial upon the merits. However, the same discretionary power is given the trial judge to permit the filing of belated pleadings as is given him to pass upon matters filed in due order of pleading out of their due order, which discretionary power is subject to review on appeal. It would be a very obnoxious system of pleading which would permit the pleader to file one plea which, if overruled, then *701 file another, and then another without limit. Under such system a plaintiff could never know what issue he had to meet, nor could he prepare to meet the same.
By the disposition of the first two propositions we have practically disposed of this case, but, in view of the fact that the two remaining propositions go to the merits of the plea in abatement, we will pass upon them. The essential facts are to be determined from the pleadings filed in the two cases, and we copy appellant's statement as it clearly and correctly states the entire proceedings in each case. It is as follows:
"(1) On November 22, 1921, W. D. Benson sued S. R. Fulmore in Lubbock county on latter's assumption of vendor's lien notes of S. F. Tubbs and to foreclose lien on Lubbock lots. S. F. Tubbs, maker of the notes, was not a party to the suit.
"(2) On December 10, 1921, S. R. Fulmore sued S. F. Tubbs and W. D. Benson in Travis county for $2.500 damages on account of fraud perpetrated by them in Travis county whereby said S. R. Fulmore lost the value of his equities in Travis county and Reagan county lands, said fraudulent representations being part of the same transaction in which said S. R. Fulmore assumed said S. F. Tubbs' notes.
"(3) On February 6, 1922, S. R. Fulmore amended in his said Travis county action, and not only sought recovery of the $2,500 damages, the value of his equities in Travis and Reagan county lands, but also sought rescission of the assumption agreement, wherein said S. R. Fulmore assumed the said S. F. Tubbs notes. This action for both damages and rescission was against both S. F. Tubbs and W. D. Benson.
"(4) On February 15, 1922, W. D. Benson amended in his said Lubbock county case, making S. F. Tubbs, maker of the vendor's lien notes, for the first time a party, and seeking judgment against both S. F. Tubbs and S. R. Fulmore for the amount of said notes and for foreclosure."
Although the common-law doctrine which authorized the abating of a second suit because of the pendency of another former suit involving the same cause or causes of action between the same parties has never to its full extent been recognized in Texas, yet, as a matter of comity between courts, in order to avoid the expense and annoyance of a multiplicity of suits, and to that end the rule has been invoked by the more recent authorities to the extent that the last suit filed will be abated. C.J. vol. 1, p. 46, and cases cited. Phillips v. Phillips (Tex.Civ.App.)
Appellee filed his suit in Lubbock county first, and thereby obtained jurisdiction over appellant; so, if there is an identity of causes of action and an identity of parties to the two suits, under the rule of comity the court was correct in sustaining the plea in abatement. However, we are of the opinion that there is a lack of both identity of causes of action and identity of parties to the two suits.
The cause of action in Lubbock county for debt and foreclosure filed by appellee against appellant is not the same cause of action as the one filed by appellant against appellee in Travis county for damages for a fraud committed on him in the latter county, even though the two suits grew out of the same transaction. A suit on a note and for a foreclosure of a lien on real estate given to secure the payment of the note, which note was assumed by the defendant in such suit in a transaction of exchange of equities between plaintiff and defendant of certain real estate, is not an identical cause of action with one filed by the defendant in the former suit against the plaintiff in the former suit for damages for fraud inducing the contract in which the assumption of the note was agreed to, although such latter cause of action for damages might be set up by cross-action in the defense of the first suit. The question of venue is a very material right, and is vital to this case. A defrauded party has the statutory right to a hearing upon the issue of fraud where the same was committed, so, where a part of a contract in exchange of real estate is an assumption agreement of notes against the real estate received by the defrauded party in the exchange, and the whole contract is induced by fraud, the defrauded party has a material right to sue for damages for such fraud where it was committed. To require such defrauded party to go to another forum merely because he might set up such fraud as a defense to a suit there filed against him on the assumption agreement would deprive him of a material right guaranteed by law. The record shows that the subject-matter of the Lubbock county suit was debt and foreclosure, and involved Lubbock county lands, while the Travis county suit was for damages, and involved Travis and Reagan counties lands. The following authorities are pertinent to this issue: Standefer v. Aultman,
On the question of lack of identity of parties to the two suits involved, the record shows that Benson is plaintiff in the Lubbock county suit, and Fulmore and R. L. Rather are defendants at the time Fulmore filed his suit in Travis county. He later amended and made S. F. Tubbs a party, but this cannot affect the issue, for, if Fulmore's *702 action was properly brought at the time of filing, no subsequent act of the defendant thereto will deprive him of the right to maintain the suit properly filed. Fulmore is plaintiff in the Travis county suit, and Benson and Tubbs are defendants. Tubbs is a necessary party to Fulmore's suit by the pleadings. He is not a necessary party, though a proper one, to Benson's suit, because he was the maker of the note sued upon by Benson.
A plea in abatement of the pendency of another suit is not well sustained where the record discloses a want of identity of parties to the two causes of action. Tubbs was not a party to Benson's suit at the time Fulmore filed his suit. He is a party to Fulmore's suit, and a necessary one; therefore a want of identity of parties exists in the two suits, and the court erred in sustaining the plea in abatement of the pendency of another suit between the parties. Goggan v. Morrison (Tex.Civ.App.)
We are also of the opinion that Tubbs was a necessary party to Fulmore's suit on the plea of rescission of the assumption agreement and on the plea for the cancellation of the notes, he being the maker thereof. This portion of Fulmore's suit was not in the original suit filed, but came by amendment on February 6, 1922, while Tubbs was not made a party to the Lubbock county suit until the 15th of February, 1922. The maker of certain notes is a necessary party to a suit seeking a rescission and cancellation of such notes. For a fuller statement, we adopt appellants proposition on this point as our own:
"Where holder of vendor's lien notes sues purchaser assuming said notes, and then such purchaser in another county sues the maker of said notes and the holder for rescission and cancellation of said notes, and, after the latter suit, the plaintiff in the former suit by amendment makes the maker a party to his suit, in such case the rescission suit, being filed prior to the amendment, becomes and remains the dominant suit in the litigation." Bragg v. Bragg (Tex.Civ.App.)
Appellee by cross-assignment of error complains of the action of the trial court in overruling his plea of privilege. Appellee under the procedure in this case waived his right to have this alleged error passed upon by failing to perfect his appeal thereon, as authorized by article 1903, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. Supp. 1918. The Supreme Court through section A, Commission of Appeals, in an opinion not yet published, in the case of Smith Grain Co. v. Windsor Stanley, which case is stated in full by the Court of Civil Appeals,
The trial court erred as above stated, and the cause is therefore reversed and remanded for a trial upon the merits.
Reversed and remanded.