41 S.W.2d 294 | Tex. App. | 1931
The Bishop Babcock Sales Company sued Paul Pavlidis and Sam Katsidonis, partners conducting the Lyric Cafe at Houston, Tex., on a series of 20 notes aggregating $475.90, and to foreclose the lien of a chattel mortgage on a soda fountain, given by defendants to secure payment of the notes. Defendants in due form pleaded their privilege to be sued in Harris, the county of their residence. Plaintiff controverted the plea, contending that the notes executed by defendants were payable in Dallas county, and that venue was properly laid under subdivision 5 of article 1995, R.S. 1925. On trial of the contest, plaintiff was permitted, over an appropriate objection urged by defendants, to introduce in evidence, without proof of execution, the notes and chattel mortgage sued upon. Defendants' plea of privilege was overruled; they appealed, and by appropriate assignments and propositions present for our consideration the questions discussed below.
The contention of defendants is that their plea of privilege operated as a sworn denial of the alleged execution by them, or by their authority, of the notes and mortgage, and put plaintiff upon proof by extrinsic evidence, of their execution; hence the court erred in admitting same over their objection.
At the time this case was submitted, April 18, 1931, there was pending in the Supreme Court, unanswered, this precise question, that arose in Berry v. Pierce Petroleum Corporation,
The Supreme Court, in ironing out the conflict, inferentially adopted the view theretofore expressed by the Fort Worth court, in Ray v. W. W. Kimball Co. (Tex.Civ.App.)
Appellants contend, however, that the writing relied upon by plaintiff to fix venue in Dallas county is against public policy, and void; that it is an attempt, by contract, to fix venue determinable by subsequent events under the control of appellee, and therefore is not a contract to perform an obligation in a particular county within the meaning of subdivision 5 of article 1995.
The obligation, in each of the notes relied upon to fix venue in Dallas county, after naming the date of maturity, proceeds: "For value received the undersigned promise to pay to the order of The Bishop Babcock Sales Company, either at its branch office at 1107 Jackson Street, Dallas, Texas, or at its principal office, 4901-4915 Hamilton Avenue, in the City of Cleveland, Ohio," etc.
In support of their contention, appellants cite General Motors Acceptance Corporation v. Christian (Tex.Civ.App.)
Venue, under subdivision 5 of article 1995, results from an agreement to perform obligations in a particular county. Gottlieb v. Dismukes (Tex.Civ.App.)
The judgment is reversed because the court erred in admitting in evidence, without proof of execution, the notes and mortgage sued upon, but, in view of the unsettled status of the procedure arising from conflicting decisions of our appellate courts, we do not render judgment, but remand the case for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.