46 Tex. 316 | Tex. | 1876
This suit was brought by appellants, citizens of Harrison county, to annul certain proceedings had in the County Court of said county, ordering that bonds of said Harrison county for $300,000 should' be issued and delivered to appellee, the Texas and Pacific Railway Company, as a donation by said county, to aid in the construction of its railway, and to enjoin the clerk of the County Court from attesting said bonds, the chief justice of said county from issuing, and said railway company from demanding and receiving them.
On an application to Hon. M. D. Ector, judge of the sixth judicial .district, in which said county of Harrison is situated, before the filing of the petition, an order was made by said judge in chambers, that an interlocutory injunction, as asked for, should he issued on the petition being filed, and bond for the sum of $100,000 being given by plaintiffs. The
The relief prayed for by the plaintiffs in their amended petition is, in substance, that all the orders and proceedings of the County'Court in the premises be held void and of no effect; that all of said bonds be adjudged and declared null and void, and the special tax levied by said County Court
To the petition as amended, the defendants again excepted, and then* exceptions were sustained; and plaintiffs declining to further amend, final judgment was given by the court against them on the exceptions.
It is altogether unnecessary, in the attitude in which they are presented in this record, for us to consider or undertake to determine the several questions mainly discussed by appellants’ counsel, touching the validity of the bonds, to enjoin the issuing of which the suit was first brought. Whatever conclusion we might be inclined to form as to them, we think it manifestly appears from the petition and amended petition that the parties interested in the subject-matter of the suit are not before the court. If it is conceded that the judgments or orders of the County Court, brought in question by appellants, can be reviewed, and if found to be erroneous or unauthorized, revoked and annulled by an original suit, brought for this purpose in the District Court by an inconsiderable fraction of the citizens and tax-payers of the county, evidently the holders and owners of the bonds are immediately and directly interested in the suit, and should be made parties to it.
Appellants’ counsel do not deny or attempt to controvert this well-established elementary principle. They maintain, however, that it is inapplicable in this case, because, as they say, appellees, the defendants in the court below, were the only parties having or claiming any interest in upholding or maintaining the validity of the judgments, orders, and pro
If the rule of lis pendens is applicable to the persons to whom appellants allege, in their amended petition, these bonds were transferred by the. Texas and Pacific Bailway Company, unquestionably the objection that these parties have not been brought before the court is untenable. It may, however, be well questioned whether there was a lis pendens, such as operated as constructive notice to the purchasers at the time these bonds were transferred. The determination of this point depends upon whether Us pendens begins from the filing of the petition or the service of the citation. This question, as far as.we are aware, has not attracted the attention of this court; but elsewhere it seems to be generally held to commence, unless it is otherwise pro- , vided by statute, from the service of the subpoena and the filing of the bill.
Says Chancellor Kent, who, by his decision in the case of Murray v. Ballou, 1 Johns. Ch., 566, seems to have first grafted this doctrine into American jurisprudence: “ The lis pendens begins from the service of the subpoena after the bill is filed.” And says Mr. Commissioner Earl, in the case of Leitch v. Wells, 48 N. Y., 585: “Itherefore hold that there, is no lis pendens, so as to give constructive notice to strangers, until a summons has been served, and a complaint, distinctly stating the subject of the litigation and specifying the claim
It should be observed, however, that in some of the courts, where it is held that constructive notice of Us pendens dates from the service of the subpoena and filing of the bill, the suit or action is begun by issuing the subpoena, or other process, and not as with us, by the filing of the petition or bill setting forth the cause of action. Hence, a stranger to the action- would have an opportunity of informing himself of the existence and nature of the suit here by the filing of the bill, which would not be afforded merely by service of a subpoena. And it may be that public policy, from which this rule springs, should give it effect with us from the fifing of the suit, if due and reasonable diligence in procuring service and prosecuting the suit is shown.
But, as there is another answer to appellants’ position, that the parties to whom these bonds were transferred pending the suit are subject to the rule of lis pendens, which is conclusive, we need not at present make an authoritive decision as to the time at which, with us, it begins.
And there is not even one solitary exception to the universally recognized rule that negotiable instruments are not within the rule of Us pendens. “ There is no case,” says Mr. Powell, in Ms work on mortgages, (2 vol., 618,) “in which equity has determined the property in goods to be effected by reason of a Us pendens, where possession is the principal evidence of ownersMp, as of personal chattels.” And Mr. Freeman, while he insists that it must be conceded that at tMs day lis pendens applies with equal force to controversies in regard to personal property, as in real actions, and that commercial paper not past due is the only exception to the universal application of the rule, says: “ The necessity of preserving the negotiable character of negotiable paper not due, so as to require no inquiry beyond inspection of the paper itself, in relation to its ownership, has frequently been considered paramount to the necessity of avoiding transfers pendente lite, and that class of paper is the only property not liable to the doctrine of lis pendens.” (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 194; Kriffer v. Ehler, 13 Penn. St., 388; Dia
It is also insisted by appellants, as it is alleged in the petition, that the holders took the bonds with full knowledge of the frauds through which they were procured; and as they hold them by no better title than did the Texas and Pacific' Railway Company before they transferred them, they are open to the same defenses in their hands as in the company’s, and therefore the holders need not be made parties. But this is no answer to the objection that the holders of the bonds should be parties to the suit; for if they have no better title to them than said company, they are nevertheless entitled to be heard before a decree is made in any way affecting their rights.
And even though the parties to whom the bonds were transferred had notice of the fraud by which they were procured, if they were in fact procured by fraud, how can the court know that they will not pass into the hands of innocent parties before the case is tried, and that its judgment will be either inoperative and useless, or injuriously affect the rights of parties who have had no notice of the suit, and no opportunity of being heard in vindication of their rights. “When such paper is the subject of the suit, the court ought to require it to be brought into court, or so placed that the defendant cannot commit a fraud upon the law by making the judgment unavailable.” (Freeman on Judg., sec. 194.) And it would seem, unless the plaintiff will take the necessary steps to have this done, he would have no right to ask the court to render an unavailable judgment. Courts do not sit to determine abstract principles, but to decide practical issues, and settle controversies in which the litigants have a substantial or immediate interest.
It remains to inquire, as it is held that the court did not err in holding that plaintiffs’ petition was insufficient to warrant a judgment annulling the bonds, should it have
That a judgment of this kind is not authorized by anything in the petition, is, we think, too obvious for discussion. To repeal the tax for the payment of the principal and interest of the bonds, would impair the rights of the bondholders, is beyond question. The plaintiffs have no right to ask'the court to require them to accept a different security for the payment of the bonds to that given by law. The judgment asked is of an extraordinary character. It could probably be only made effective through a mandatory injunction, by which the company, under penalty of attachment, would be required to pay to the collector of taxes the amount annually assessed -for the payment of the bonds. The plaintiffs have no interest in this matter beyond the amount of their own assessment. They do not allege how much this is, or that payment of it has been demanded of them; or, if they should be wrongfully compelled to pay said tax, that there is reason to fear that they will thereby suffer irreparable injury. Bor do they show any reason whatever for the interposition of a court of equity, and the granting of the extraordinary and unusual relief asked for.
The judgment is affirmed.
Aeeirmed.