DocketNumber: No. 10542.
Citation Numbers: 260 S.W. 1078, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 334
Judges: Buck
Filed Date: 3/8/1924
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The Inner Shoe Tire Company, a Michigan corporation, filed suit in the .county court of Haskell county, which, under a special statute, has, concurrent jurisdiction with the justice court in civil' cases, on a verified account for $172.80, with ae-< crued .interest from March 1, 1921, against A. and' Eugene Tonn. The defendants on December 28, 1921, answered by way :of a special exception and a sworn denial that the account was just and true in whole or in part. The plaintiff moved to strike out the exception and answer, because, as alleged, it came too late. It alleged that suit was filed April 25, 1922, and citation served on defendants on the 18th and 19th of May, 1922, and that three terms of the court had elapsed since the filing of the suit and before defendants’ answer was filed, and that the cause had been passed and continued at the instance of defendants ¡-.that to permit such answer to be filed and considered at the time would result in another continuance, in order that plaintiff might secure the- needed testimony from its home office in Michigan. This motion was supported by the affidavit of one of plaintiff’s attorneys. On December 29, 1922, plaintiff filed its first amended original, petition, in which it alleged that on or about the 18th of January, 1921, defendants procured and purchased from the plaintiff, in writing,, the goods and wares set forth in its exhibit, and the defendants became obligated to pay the sum of $172.80 therefor. The Tonn Garage was made a party defendant in this petition. An exhibit was attached, showing the same articles as contained in the original verified account. The trial court, on December 29, 1922, rendered judgment for plaintiff against A. and Eugene Tonn, jointly and- severally, for $191.50, and recited in said judgment that the attorneys for defendants were "present in court at the time of the entry of judgment, but would make no answer to the amended petition. The judgment further recites that -the court sustained the special exception of defendants to the original petition- .From this judgment the defendants, the Tonn Garage, A. Tonn, and Eugene Tonn, have appealed.
On the trial the plaintiff introduced L. D. Ratliff, attorney for plaintiff, who testified in part:
“A short time after we received the claim against the defendants'in this suit, and on which this suit is filed, we notified them we had the claim in our hands. In a few days I met A. Tonn, one , of the defendants, on the street, and he told me that he had: received our notice of the claim; that he had bought the ‘damn’ stuff all right and still had it, but that -he was not going to pay for it, and we could just sue. After that we brought this suit. The Inner Shoe Tire Oompany, the plaintiff herein, is a corporation,- duly incorporated, and the Tonn Garage is a copartnership firm composed of A. Tonn and Eugene, Tonn, and has a place of business in Haskell, Haskell county, Tex.”
. The plaintiff then introduced an order for the goods, tires, mentioned in the verified account, addressed to the plaintiff at Grand Rapids, Mich., and apparently signed by the “Tonn Garage.” No testimony was offered by the defendants.
“(1) The court erred in permitting appellee to proceed to trial on its amended petitiori, for the reason that said amended petition abandoned the verified account tljat appellee predicated their case upon in its original petition, and substituted therefor a plea upon a written contract, and made the Tonn Garage an additional defendant, and granted appellee judgment without additional service of citation or notice, without permitting appellant time to prepare to meet the allegations contained in appellee’s amended petition, which error on the part of the court is fundamental.
“(2) The court erred in failing and refusing to prepare and file with the clerk of said court his finding of facts and conclusions of law within the statutory time after the adjournment of said term of court, after having been requested in open court and by a written request duly filed and recorded in the minutes of said term of court to do so, which error on the part of the court is fundamental.”
All assignments are overruled, and judgment is affirmed.