145 S.W. 1098 | Tex. App. | 1912
The above-entitled cause is now pending before us on appeal from an order, made by the judge of the Thirty-Second judicial district, granting a temporary writ of injunction restraining the removal of appellant's general offices, machine shops, etc., from the town of Sweetwater, and forbidding, among other things, an amendment of the appellant company's charter, fixing the place of the location of such general offices, etc., at San Angelo, Tex. On February 24, 1912, after due submission, we vacated the temporary writ and set aside the order granting the same, as will be seen from our opinion written by Justice Dunklin, and filed on the date above named. Appellees thereafter, on February 26th, filed their motion for a rehearing and to set aside the decree so made by this court; but in the interim, viz., on the 26th day of February, at an hour prior to the filing of the motion for rehearing, appellant caused an amendment of its charter to be filed with the secretary of state, fixing its general offices, machine shops, roundhouses, and other divisional facilities at San Angelo, Tex., and appellees thereupon, on the 27th day of February, instituted an original proceeding before us, complaining that the temporary writ of injunction issued by the district judge had been thus violated. We thereupon entered fines nisi as for contempt against the appellant railway company and against A. E. Stillwell, its president, H. C. Hord, its general attorney, and other officers named in the complaint, requiring their appearance before us to show cause why such fines should not be made final. The parties named in the complaint were duly cited and have made due answer.
The answer of respondents is duly verified, and, after first disavowing any purpose to violate the lawful orders of either this court or of the judge of the trial court, in effect admit the procurement of the amended charter as alleged, and which is also otherwise clearly established, but defend upon two grounds: First, it is insisted that our judgment, dissolving the temporary writ of injunction, was immediately effective, and that in legal contemplation the temporary writ of injunction had no operative force until after the filing of appellees' motion for rehearing; and, second, that the order of the trial judge, granting the temporary writ. was void, on the ground that he was interested in the cause, contrary to the provisions of our Constitution and statutes on the subject.
Respondents have presented forceful reasoning and authority in favor of their first proposition; but we will pretermit a discussion of this subject, and for the time being will pass the formal determination of the question, for the reason that our conclusion on the second question presented effectually disposes of this proceeding, and for the further reason that in the case of N. G. Buchanan v. T. C. Barnsley, not for publication, from Ector county, under similar circumstances, we made final a nisi judgment as for contempt for the violation of a temporary writ of injunction. The point here first presented, however, was neither raised nor *1099
considered in that proceeding, and need not, therefore, necessarily be binding upon us, although, until further consideration, we now choose to follow the precedent and rest our conclusion in this proceeding upon a determination of the second question. As preliminary thereto, however, we should notice complainants' exception to our consideration of the question; the contention being that it cannot be raised on appeal, citing the opinion of our Supreme Court, on motion for rehearing, in the case of City of Austin v. Nalle,
This brings us to a consideration of the second question, and, as relating thereto, the answer of the respondents shows, and the fact is not denied, that the judge of the district court who granted the temporary writ of injunction under consideration was at the time the owner of lots 10, 11, and 12, in block 63, in the Orient addition to Sweetwater, Tex., for which he paid the sum of $250, as evidenced by due conveyance by the trustees for the Orient Land Company, dated the 14th day of April, A.D. 1911. Our Constitution (article 5, § 11) provides, so far as here pertinent, that "no judge shall sit in any case wherein he may be interested," and we have been unable to avoid the conviction that the judge ordering the issuance of the writ of temporary injunction was interested in the case, within the meaning of the constitutional provision cited. The plaintiffs, in the petition for injunction, and appellees in this court, present voluminous allegations, from which we will not undertake to quote at large; but it may be stated briefly that as grounds for the injunction it is alleged that a contract had been made with the city of Sweetwater by the appellant railway company, as also a like contract by the lawful predecessors in franchise rights of the appellant company with certain bond and stock holders of such prior companies who are parties to the petition, and which had been ratified and confirmed by the appellant corporation, for the permanent location of appellant's general offices, roundhouse, etc., in said city, all of which will more clearly appear from the opinion of Justice Dunklin, before referred to. It is clear from the averments of the petition that the suit was instituted for the benefit of the citizens and property owners of Sweetwater generally, as well as for the individual bond and stock holders joining in the petition. The petition shows the present location of the appellant's general offices in Sweetwater in accordance with the alleged contracts, and charges that the investments of the petitioners were made upon the faith of the appellant's representations, made by and through its authorized officers, that such location would be permanent, and complain that "it would be unjust, inequitable, and injurious to each and all of the plaintiffs, and would operate as an outrage and fraud upon them and their rights, and would cause them irreparable injury, for which they have no adequate remedy at law, if the defendant should now or hereafter remove its general offices, machine shops and other divisional facilities from the city of Sweetwater." We think it must be admitted that the injuries of legal cognizance, if any at all, to the petitioners and to the citizens and property owners of the city of Sweetwater shown by the petition must be that which would arise by reason of depreciation in value of lots, among other things, situated in Sweetwater in event the general offices, machine shops, etc., should be removed as threatened. The element of injury or damage to the petitioners is as essential to the sufficiency of a petition for injunction as the establishment of a contract or right for a breach of which the action lies; and it seems to us from the averments of the petition it must be assumed that every property owner in the city of Sweetwater is interested in the case made by the petition referred to, and that this interest is of that direct character which disqualifies. The line of distinction between the interest which is so direct as to disqualify and that which is too remote and indirect to do so is sometimes shadowy and difficult of determination.
The case of State v. City of Cisco, 33 S.W. 244, was an action attacking the validity of the municipal corporation which, it was alleged, was threatening the levy of certain taxes upon the property situated within the municipality. After the trial, which resulted in a judgment sustaining the validity of the corporation, it was discovered that the trial judge (who, it happens, was the *1100
writer hereof) owned certain unimproved real estate of little value, but upon which he had paid all taxes, situated within the corporate limits of Cisco. When the question of his disqualification on the ground of interest in the cause was presented on appeal to this court, in an opinion written by Associate Justice Stephens, now of counsel for appellees and complainants herein, it was held that the interest of the trial judge was such as to disqualify him from trying the case, citing with approval, among other cases, that of Wetzel v. State,
The distinction last noted is illustrated by the case of the New Odorless Sewerage Co. v. Wisdom,
Relators herein cite the case of Nalle v. City of Austin,
We think the case here, however, is different. Whatever the result of the case now pending before us, the final decree must affect the property of the trial judge who issued the writ in precisely the same way and to the same extent as it will the property of any other citizen situated in the city of Sweetwater. If we are right in this conclusion, it must follow that the judge's action in granting the temporary writ of injunction herein was a nullity. In 23 Cyc. p. 599, the rule is thus stated: "In the absence of statute positively prohibiting a judge from taking jurisdiction of a cause in which he is disqualified, the general rule is that his acts therein are only voidable, whether his disqualification arises from interest, from relationship, from having been counsel, or from having presided at a former trial; but there are courts which hold that the acts of a judge, disqualified by interest or by having been counsel, are void, independent of any statutory provisions. Where a judge is by statutory inhibition deprived of authority to act, any proceeding before him is absolutely void, although the parties may agree to waive objection to his jurisdiction and consent that he try the case." Numerous cases are cited in notes to the text, among others a number from Texas, including *1101
Burks v. Bennett,
It follows that the fines nisi heretofore entered must be set aside and respondents discharged; and it is ordered accordingly.