286 S.W. 477 | Tex. App. | 1926
This is a companion case to the case of Tomerlin et al. v. Krause, decided by this court on November 6, 1925, and reported in
We refer to the case of Tomerlin et al. v. Krause, supra, for further statement and discussion of the chief issues raised, except as to the additional contention herein made, and above referred to. This contention is that appellee's claim, being for only $200, was not within the jurisdiction of the district court, and that the claims of his 12 assignors, which varied in amounts from $100 to $500 each, sounded in tort, and each arose from a separate and distinct transaction, constituted a separate cause of action, and could not be joined in one suit. Appellants have cited us to no authority sustaining their proposition. After a careful investigation, we have concluded that this contention cannot be sustained.
Though the various claims or choses in action arose from fraud, they were assignable and appellants cannot attack such assignment, if made in good faith and for a valuable consideration. This they do not undertake to do. See 5 C.J. 891; G. H. S. A. Ry. Co. v. Freeman,
There is no doubt but that appellee's assignors could have filed separate suits on their respective claims. If they had, two of them, being for $100 each, must have been filed in the justice court. The county court of *478
Comal county, however, has no civil jurisdiction except probate. Act March 16, 1883; 9 Gammel's Laws of Texas, p. 330. All the other suits would therefore have been filed in the district court. We are of the opinion that, had appellee filed such suits separately, the district court had the discretion, under article 2182, R.S. 1911 (article 2160, R.S. 1925), to have consolidated such suits. If the court could have consolidated them, certainly there was no error in joining all of them in a single suit. Such matters are vested largely in the discretion of the trial court, and will not be reviewed on appeal, unless there has been manifest injury. Pena v. Baker (Tex.Civ.App.)
Though the claims assigned to appellee in this case grew out of separate transactions between appellants and the assignors, there was nevertheless a common element relating to all. Substantially the same material false representations were made to each, and induced the purchase of stock by each. Each subscriber purchased on condition, and with the understanding that a branch bank was to be established at New Braunfels. Hence such claims were to that extent all parts of the same transaction. In view of these common elements, the law's abhorrence of a multiplicity of suits, and the failure of appellants to show that any injury was done them by joining said claims in a single suit, we think the trial court did not err in permitting appellee to do so. 1 C.J. 1074. 1096; Texas Brewing Co. v. Bisso,
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.