182 S.W.2d 994 | Tex. | 1944
This suit was instituted by Hugh Henderson, non compos mentis, through Orson H. Lee as next friend, to set aside an oil and gas lease and a sale of a mineral interest in land owned by him. Various relatives of Hugh Henderson, not parties to the litigation, as well as one of the parties thereto, filed motions praying for a decree that Orson H. Lee was not a fit and proper person to prosecute the suit as next friend and further praying that the proceeding be dismissed or, in the alternative that the Court appoint a fit and suitable person to act therein as next friend. After a hearing the Court decreed that Lee was not a suitable or proper person to act as next friend and further decreed that "* * * said Orson H. Lee be and he is hereby removed as next friend of said Hugh Henderson and he will not be permitted to conduct this litigation on behalf of the said Hugh Henderson." In the same order the Court appointed J. Willard Gragg to act as such next friend and instructed said Gragg "to advise himself in the premises, and to take further action, if any, as the true interests of the said Hugh Henderson may require." From this order Orson H. Lee prosecuted an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals at Fort Worth. That court held that the order was reviewable on appeal and considered the assigned errors, but finding that no reversible error was committed by the trial court, it affirmed the case, one of the justices dissenting on rehearing.
Writ of error was granted by this Court, not to review the rulings of the Court of Civil Appeals on the questions discussed in its opinion, but because this Court was of the tentative opinion that the appeal should have been dismissed for want of jurisdiction. That tentative opinion has become our fixed opinion.
1, 2 This case has never been tried on its merits. So far as we are advised it is still pending in the trial court. The real party plaintiff is Hugh Henderson, non compos mentis, and not Orson H. Lee. Safeway Stores v. Rutherford,
Respondent Shell Oil Company contends, in effect, that, as between Orson H. Lee and the defendants, the judgment is as final as it will ever become, but that the appeal should be dismissed on the ground that an order removing a next friend is never reviewable on appeal. It has been held that such an order is not reviewable. State ex rel Barnard v. Superior Court of King County,
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals affirming the case is reversed and the appeal is dismissed.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court October 25, 1944.
Rehearing overruled November 22, 1944.