delivered the opinion of the Court.
The controlling question in this venue case as it reached the Court of Civil Appeals was whether the trial court, after sustaining the plea of privilege of one defendent, erred in refusing to transfer the entire cause to county of residence of such defendant. S. L. Stedman and James A. Miller, respondents, filed suit in Liberty County against International Harvester Co., L. M. Fawcett and L. L. Karli, petitioners, to recover damages for false representations and the breach of warranties, covenants and agreements alleged to have been made by petitioners in connection with the sale of a hay baler to respondents. International Harvester and Fawcett, the latter of whom is alleged to reside in Liberty County, answered on the merits, but Karli filed a plea of privelege to be sued in Angelina County, where he resides. Respondents did not controvert the plea of privilege but filed their written consent for the case to be transferred to Angelina. County. International Harvester and Fawcett insisted, that the action in. so far as it concerns them should remain in Liberty County. The trial court ordered the case transferred only as to Karli, but the Court of Civil Appeals reversed
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and directed that the entire cause be transferred to Angelina County.
When the application for writ of error was granted, it was our tentative view that the trial court had entered a proper order and that the case fell within the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. Upon further consideration, however, it is our opinion that we were mistaken in the latter conclusion, and the application for writ of error will now be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Under the provisions of Articles 1728 and 1821, Vernon’s Ann. Texas Civ. Stat., our appellate jurisdiction over interlocutory orders such as the one involved here is limited to cases in which the judges of the Court of Civil Appeals disagree upon a question of law material to the decision, or in which the holding of the Court of Civil Appeals on a question of law conflicts with a prior decision of another Court of Civil Appeal's or of this Court. See State v. Wynn,
Petitioners say that the holding of the Court of Civil Appeals in this case conflicts with the following decisions: Comer v. Brown, Com. App.,
“The rule seems to be that, where one of several defendants files a plea of privilege to be sued in the county of his residence, and the plea is sustained, if the cause of action is a joint action growing out of joint liability of all the defendants, the suit must be transferred as an entirety to the county of the residence of the defendant whose plea is sustained. On the other hand, if the cause of action against the several defendants is severable, or joint and several, the court should retain jurisdiction over *596 the action in so far as it concerns the defendants whose pleas of privilege have not been sustained, ,and should transfer the suit in so far as it concerns the defendant whose pleas is sustained.”
In holding that the present case must be transferred as an entirety to Angelina County, the Court of Civil Appeals reasoned: (1) that if the allegations of the petition are sustained, respondents will be entitled to a joint judgment against International Harvester and Fawcett or against Karli and Fawcett, and that such a judgment cannot be obtained unless the defendants whose liability is established are parties to the proceedings; and (2) that a transfer of the cause as to Karli only would violate the rule forbidding a multiplicity of suits. The decisions cited above demonstrate that a suit is not necessarily a “joint action growing out of joint liability” simply because the plaintiff might be awarded a judgment against the defendants jointly if all remained parties to the same proceeding, and that the avoidance of a multiplicity of suits is not always a consideration in determining whether the entire cause must be transferred when the plea of privilege of one defendant is sustained.
It is well settled, however, that for this Court to have jurisdiction under Subdivision 2 of Article 1728, the conflict must be such that one decision would operate to overrule the other in case they were both decided by the same court. As stated in Garrity v. Rainey,
Comer v. Brown, supra, recognizes that a suit against an unincorporated joint stock company and its individual stockholders for the recovery of partnership debts is severable and that the court does not lose jurisdiction of the action against the defendants properly before it when the pleas of privilege of other defendants are sustained. In so far as they are pertinent here on the question of conflict, the Tunstill, Kelley, Stand ard Accident Insurance Company and Winter cases were tort actions for the recovery of damages, arid in each instance it *597 was held that the action was severable, or joint and several, within the meaning of the rule mentioned above. Johnson v. First National Bank of Brenham, supra, holds that a suit to recover on a note and foreclose a chattel mortgage is sever-able as to defendants who did not execute the note and mortgage but were alleged to be claiming an interest in the mortgaged property.
If this were simply a tort action to recover damages for which the defendants are jointly and severally liable, or a suit on a partnership obligation or to foreclose a lien on personal property in which Karli merely claims an interest, the conflict and our jurisdiction would be clear. Respondents do seek a recovery in tort for fraud, but they also sue for breach of a contract which the petition alleges, at least in the alternative, was made by the three petitioners jointly. The cases cited above are not, of course, conclusive that an action for breach of a joint contractural undertaking is severable as to the defendants when the plea of privilege of one is sustained, and they do not hold that a suit should be transferred only as to the defendant whose plea is sustained if at least one of the causes of action alleged is severable or joint and several. On the contract phase of the case, petitioners cite Miller v. Sullivan,
The order granting the application for writ of error is set aside as having been improvidently granted, and the application is dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Opinion delivered May 20, 1959.
Rehearing overruled June 17, 1959.
