290 S.W. 871 | Tex. App. | 1927
On June 19, 1926, we reversed the judgment below in this cause, and remanded the cause to the trial court. On October 16, 1926, appellees' motion for rehearing was overruled. On December 4, 1926, appellee's motion to require issuance of mandate without payment of costs came on to be heard, and, as there was no contest over the motion, and no reply thereto, we granted the motion. Appellant then filed a motion for rehearing, and urged, inasmuch as the judgment below was in part payable to appellee's attorneys, and in his petition appellee had pleaded the contract with his attorneys for one-third of the recovery, and the supersedeas bond was made payable to the appellee and to his attorneys, and there was no affidavit that the attorneys were insolvent, and were not able to pay any part of the costs, that we erred in granting appellee's motion to require the *872 issuance of the mandate without payment of the costs. We sustained appellant's motion, vacated the former order, and declined to grant the issuance of the mandate without the payment of the costs. Thereupon appellee tiled this motion for a rehearing.
In our holding that we were not authorized to require the clerk to issue the mandate in the absence of affidavits by the lawyers, parties to the record, as above shown, we relied in part on the holding in Watts v. Texas Employers' Insurance Association, 264 S.W. 189, in which this court, through Justice Dunklin, said:
"Since the defendant R. Loftin was claiming an attorney's fee as compensation to be * * * allowable to Watts, under the act, and since he filed a pleading asserting that claim and praying for a judgment thereon, we overrule his contention that the court erred in rendering a judgment against him jointly with Watts for costs of the suit.
"We think the case is clearly distinguishable from such decisions as Ft. W. Denver City Ry. v. Carlock,
In the Watts Case, supra, Watts, the employee, recovered before the Industrial Accident Board, and the Texas Employers' Association filed a suit in the district court to set aside the award, making Watts and B. Loftin, his attorney, parties defendant. Loftin had evidently been allowed an attorney's fee by the Industrial Accident Board for prosecuting the claim. See section 7c, part I, under art.
Appellees cite several cases, urging that they are in point. In Winston v. Masterson et al.,
"No judge shall sit in any case wherein he may be interested, or where either of the parties [italics ours] may be connected with him either by affinity or consanguinity, within such a degree as may be prescribed by law."
In this opinion, written by Chief Justice Stayton, and adopted by the court during his last illness, it was said the words "party or parties" have a technical meaning, and include those, and those only, who are either parties plaintiff or parties defendant. In Oriental Inv. Co. v. Barclay,
In the reversal of the judgment, we adjudged all costs of appeal against the defendants T. L. Davidson and his attorneys. The attorneys would be personally benefited by the issuance of the mandate without the payment of costs.
The motion for rehearing is overruled.