129 S.W. 156 | Tex. App. | 1910
This case has been once before appealed and will be found reported in
In a general way the action was to recover from Donley County a strip of land claimed by it as a public road and to recover from the county and the sureties on Sheriff Oliver's official bond damages for wrongfully cutting plaintiff's fences, thus opening his farm and exposing his crops to the depredation of cattle. On the last trial the court sustained Donley County's demurrers to plaintiff's claim for damages on the ground that the same had not been first presented to the Commissioners' Court for allowance. The court also sustained the general demurrer of the sureties on the sheriff's bond and dismissed them from the action. As to the strip of land involved the issue was submitted to a jury and a verdict rendered in favor of the county upon which judgment was entered which the plaintiff in error seeks to revise.
Some days ago we overruled defendants in error's motion to strike from the docket this cause based on the contention that service of the writ of error had not been shown. We now have before us defendants in error's motion for rehearing of this matter in which they insist that the decision in Vineyard v. McCombs,
As to the citation in error served on the attorneys, Madden Trulove, we think it was in compliance with the statute, although it was not endorsed "Alias Citation," since it did "indicate how many *213 previous citations" had been issued. Its command was: "You are therefore commanded, as you have one time before been, to summon the said H. V. Rowe, G. A. Lattimer and I. E. Jones," etc. It will be noticed that this is the only positive requirement with respect to the contents of the citation made by article 1397.
It is also insisted that the service on the county was insufficient because her county judge, J. H. O'Neal, upon whom the service was had, was one of the attorneys for plaintiff in error. We have no evidence of the fact that Judge J. H. O'Neal, county judge of Donley County, is the J. H. O'Neal of counsel for plaintiff in error. Besides, if this were true, we are not prepared to hold that plaintiff in error would be deprived entirely of his right to perfect his writ of error by service on the county judge, this being the only method recognized by law for obtaining service.
We think the facts stated by us distinguish this case from the case of Vineyard v. McCombs, and so believing, we overrule defendants in error's contention that the cause should be stricken from the docket for insufficient service. We also refuse permission to defendants in error to file their briefs tendered in this court only after the submission of the cause.
On the merits of the appeal we have concluded that no other judgment should have been rendered than one in favor of plaintiff in error for the strip of land in controversy. The opinion of the Supreme Court on the former appeal (
The decision of Norwood v. Gonzales County,
With respect to the contention that the court erred in sustaining the general demurrer of the sheriff's sureties, it is sufficient to say that plaintiff in error's petition did not make a case of liability against them for an excessive use or abuse of legal process, as was intimated by this court on the first appeal; but on the other hand alleges that the sheriff and other defendants, under color of their official positions and in excess of their legal powers and jurisdiction, *214
cut, removed and destroyed his boundary fences, etc. And the sheriff by the exercise of his official power and position coerced, threatened and intimidated plaintiff from rebuilding the same, thus falling short, we think, of charging such an official act as would make the sheriff's bondsmen liable. If the sheriff did no more than he was commanded by the Commissioners' Court to do, and the plain inference of the petition is that he did not, then the writ would be a protection to him and his bondsmen. Rice v. Miller,
In accordance with the view here expressed the judgment of the District Court is reversed and here rendered for plaintiff in error for the land in controversy, but upon the issue of damages as to all of the defendants in error the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed in part and reversed and rendered in part.
Writ of error refused.