22 S.W. 959 | Tex. | 1893
This case comes to us upon a question certified for our decision by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second Supreme Judicial District.
Francis Granger, the appellee, brought suit against the appellant, the Weatherford, Mineral Wells Northwestern Railway Company, upon an account for services rendered. In stating his cause of action he alleged in his petition, "that heretofore, to-wit, during the months of June, July, August, and September, and on divers days before that time, in the year A.D. 1889, the plaintiff, in his business as an attorney at law, at the request of said defendant, did and performed certain labor and services in and about the drawing divers contracts, bonds, charters, and agreements, making divers journeys, and giving attendance about the business of said defendant, and in and about the raising of certain subsidies and bonuses and right of way from citizens of Parker County and Palo Pinto for said defendant, its agents and officers, as specified in the account annexed and made a part of this petition," etc.
The exhibit referred to is as follows:
Weatherford, Mineral Wells Northwestern Railway Company, To Francis Granger. Dr.
To services in raising subsidy at Weatherford ....... $1,000 00 Examination of charter and correction of same .... 100 00 Drawing subscription contract in June, 1889 ...... 100 00 Drawing bond for $40,000, railway company to directors Commercial Club ...................... 250 00 Consultation and opinion and advice to said company upon various questions under the law of corporations and the Texas railway act during the months of July, August, and September, 1889 ................................ 500 00 ---------- Total .......................................... $1,950 00
The defendant filed the following demurrer to the petition:
"Comes the defendant herein by its attorney, and excepts generally to plaintiff's petition, and says the same is not good in law, wherefore the defendant prays judgment of the court. And for special exception the defendant says, the petition does not show the items of service claimed by the plaintiff with sufficient certainty and particularity to require the defendant to plead thereto, and of this he prays judgment of the court."
There was also an answer. The court overruled the demurrers, and after a trial upon the facts gave judgment for the plaintiff. *577
The cause having been appealed, the Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the District Court, upon the ground that the special demurrer ought to have been sustained. A motion for a rehearing was filed in the Court of Civil Appeals, challenging its ruling upon the action of the trial court upon the demurrers. The question now submitted to us is, "Was the action of the court below correct or incorrect in overruling the exceptions above set forth?"
We are of the opinion that the demurrers were correctly overruled. The petition is undoubtedly good upon general demurrer. The case is unlike that of Caldwell v. Haley,
We think, however, that some of the items shown in the exhibit to the petition are not stated with sufficient particularity as against a proper special exception, notably the first and probably the last. The others we think definite enough to answer every reasonable requirement of the law.
But this brings us to the question, whether the special demurrer is sufficient to meet such a case. It does not particularize each item and say that the allegations in reference to it are too indefinite, but says that the averments as to all the items are uncertain. It can not be sustained as to the whole. Should it be sustained as to some of the items and overruled as to the others? The old rule at common law seems to have been, that if the demurrer be too large — that is to say, if the pleading which is demurred to be good in part and bad in part, and the demurrer be to the whole, the demurrer should be overruled as a whole. But latterly the doctrine seems to have been questioned, if not overruled. Hurd v. Gray, 1 M. G., 201, note; Briscoe v. Hill, 10 M. W., 740; Yeates v. Tearle, 62 B., 283. The equity practice was in accordance with the old rule.
We are of opinion, however, that the question should be determined by the rule of this court, laid down for the government of the District *578
Courts, which reads as follows: "A special exception shall not only point out the particular pleading excepted to, but it shall point out intelligibly the obscurity, inconsistency, duplicity, generality, or other insufficiency in the pleading objected to. The general expression, that it is vague, uncertain, and the like, alone shall be regarded as no more than a general exception." Rule 18:
As we have before said, our opinion is that the trial court did not err in overruling the demurrers to the petition, and it will be so certified.
Delivered June 15, 1893.