DocketNumber: No. 1030. [fn*]
Citation Numbers: 259 S.W. 1004
Judges: Walker
Filed Date: 2/26/1924
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This suit was instituted by appellee against appellants G. C. Lowe and his bondsmen, to recover of them the amount of official fees and salary paid Judge Lowe during the time he was executing the duties of county judge of Tyler county, Tex., under the order of removal made by the district judge of that county, by the terms of which Judge Johnson was removed as county judge, and Judge Lowe appointed to the vacancy. Appellee pleaded that the orders of removal, both temporary and permanent, were void, that he appealed from the judgment of the court on the issues of permanent removal, and that this court reversed the judgment of the trial court and dismissed the case from the docket of the court.
Appellants answered by general demurrer, certain special exceptions, general denial, and a special plea of good faith on the part of Judge Lowe in qualifying and executing the duties of the office.
On a trial to a jury, appellee offered in evidence plaintiffs’ petition in the removal case, Judge Lowe’s official bond, and the opinion and mandate of this court reversing the judgment of removal and dismissing the case. Appellants offered no evidence. Thereupon the trial court instructed a verdict in appellee’s favor for the amount as shown by an agreement of the parties to have been paid Judge Lowe during his incumbency.
Por a full and complete statement of the facts in the case under which Judge Johnson was removed, and a discussion of the legal principals involved therein, see W. A. Johnson, Appellant, v. J. A. Mooney et al., Appellees (Tex. Civ. App.) 241 S. W. 308.
Because of appellants’ delay in filing their' briefs, we have been compelled to strike them from the record, but as they have suggested the same propositions as constituting fundamental error, with which constructions of their propositions we agree, we have deemed it our duty to review their assignments.
Opinion.
Article 6049, Revised Civil Statutes, provides:
“At any time after the issuance of the order for the citation, as herein provided, the district judge may, if he sees fit, suspend temporarily from office the officer against whom the petition is filed, and appoint for the time being some other person to discharge the duties of the office; but in no case shall such suspension take place until after the person so appointed shall-execute a bond in such sum as the judge may name, with at least two good and sufficient sureties, on such conditions as the judge may see fit to impose, to pay the person so suspended from office all damages and costs that he may sustain by reason of such suspension from office, in case it should appear that the cause or causes of removal are insufficient or untrue.”
Appellants insist that appellee could have judgment only on a showing that the causes of removal were insufficient or untrue; it being their construction of the language of the statute that “cause or causes,” as these words are used in the statute, have reference only to the grounds of misconduct charged in the petition, and as their petition did set forth statutory grounds of removal, and as no proof was offered that such statutory allegations were untrue, a verdict should have been entered in their favor. We do not concur in this construction of the statute. We believé it means that the petition must be sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of the court. If it does not invoke the jurisdiction of the court in which it is filed, then the removal becomes unlawful. In Judge Johnson’s appeal from the order removing him, we held that the jurisdiction of the district court was not invoked by relators’ petition, from which construction it follows that the order of removal as made by the district judge was absolutely void. Hollywood v. Wellhausen, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 541, 68 S. W. 329; Railway Co. v. Rayzor, 106 Tex. 544, 172 S. W. 1103.
If the removal of Judge Johnson was unlawful and made upon' a petition that did not invoke the jurisdiction of the court, our disposition of that case becomes res adju-dicata of Judge Johnson’s right to recover herein. He rested under no burden of showing that the allegations of misconduct were untrue.
But the suggestion occurs that, as the order of removal was void, it does not afford a ground of recovery in Judge Johnson’s favor against Judge Lowe and his bondsmen. A sufficient answer to this proposition is to say that appellants invoked this void judgment, entered upon the discharge of official duties thereunder and relied upon it as the source of the authority under which Judge Lowe executed the duties of county judge of Tyler county. Having invoked this judgment and enjoyed its benefits, appellants are now estopped to deny its legality. Boulder & Weld County Ditch Co. v. Lower Ditch Co., 22 Colo. 115, 43 Pac. 540; Arthur v. Israel, 15 Colo. 147, 25 Pac. 81, 10 L. R. A. 693, 22 Am. St. Rep. 381. This is the rule, even when the court is without jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the litigation. Denver v. Middaugh, 12 Colo. 434, 21 Pac. 565, 15 Am. St. Rep. 234.
But, even -if a liability exists against Judge Lowe, the bondsmen claim that the judgment against them is excessive, because
We agree with the bondsmen that their liability cannot be extended beyond the conditions of their bond; that is, beyond the time Judge Lowe was in office under the order of temporary removal. This proposition is well stated in American Surety Co. v. Gaskill’s Administrator, 85 Vt. 358, 82 Atl. 218, where it is said:
“It is clearly the doctrine of this line of cases [citing First National Bank v. Briggs, Assignee, 37 Atl. 231, 37 L. R. A. 845; Treasurer v. Mann, 80 Am. Dec. 688] that, when the appointment is to a permanent office having a definite and limited term, the obligation of the surety will not be extended beyond the term for which the appointment is made by general words contained in the condition of the bond, even though there is a corporate or statutory provision which continues the appointee in office beyond the term in default of a successor.”
But, in this case, it is our conclusion that Judge Lowe performed the duties of county judge of Tyler county during all the period of his occupancy of that office under and by force of the order of temporary removal. It was this order that took Judge Johnson out of office. It was this order that installed Judge Lowe in the office. The final judgment, on its merits, was suspended by Judge Johnson’s appeal, and was no protection or authority to Judge Lowe. Standing alone, that judgment would not have removed Judge Johnson, and, had no other order ever been made, he would have remained in the possession of his office, and in the enjoyment of its emoluments during all the period of that litigation. Therefore, as we understand the law of this case, the sureties on the bond, executed under and by virtue of the temporary order, must be held liable to Judge Johnson for the full amount of his damages, and it is accordingly so ordered.
The judgment of the trial court is in all things affirmed.