Case Name: SLAUGHTER v. HARPER, Chief Justice, et al. SAME v. KEITH, District Judge, et al. SLAUGHTER et al. v. SLAUGHTER et al.
Court: Texas Commission of Appeals
Jurisdiction: Texas
Decision Date: 1929-06-12
Citations: 17 S.W.2d 763
Docket Number: Motion No. 8498; Nos. 1233-5261, 1234-5262
Parties: SLAUGHTER v. HARPER, Chief Justice, et al. SAME v. KEITH, District Judge, et al. SLAUGHTER et al. v. SLAUGHTER et al.
Judges: CURETON, C. J. The opinion of the Commission of Appeals in the above two causes is adopted, and said causes are dismissed, and motion for writ of prohibition denied.
Reporter: South Western Reporter Second Series
Volume: 17
Pages: 763–764

Head Matter:
SLAUGHTER v. HARPER, Chief Justice, et al. SAME v. KEITH, District Judge, et al. SLAUGHTER et al. v. SLAUGHTER et al.
(Motion No. 8498; Nos. 1233—5261, 1234—5262.)
Commission of Appeals of Texas, Section A.
June 12, 1929.
See, also, 276 S. W. 724; 284 S. W. 350; 288 S. W. 1107.
D. B. Chapin, of Barstow, for relator W. B. Slaughter.
J. Hart Willis, Beall, Worsham, Rollins, Burford & Ryburn, and John W. Pope, all of Dallas, for respondents.

Opinion:
ORITZ, J.
The above two applications for mandamus are filed in this court as two separate causes and under two separate numbers, but they involve, in the main, the same original transactions. Both cases were submitted and argued together, and we therefore dispose of both in the same opinion. In fact, this is the only way they can be intelligently considered. The above motion for writ of prohibition is filed by interveners, C. C. Slaughter Company et al., and will also be discussed with the two main cases.
It appears from the various records before us that W. B. Slaughter filed suit in the district court of Palo Pinto county, Tex., against C. C. Slaughter Co. et al., for the recovery of certain lands described in the petition, and also .for a money judgment. The case was finally tried in the district court and a judgment recovered by W. B. Slaughter against said defendants in that case for a part of the lands sued for, together with a money judgment for some thirty' odd thousand dollars. The defendants appealed from said judgment to the Court of Civil Appeals at Eastland. While the case was pending in the court of Civil Appeals at Eastland, certain proceedings were had involving a motion filed by W. B. Slaughter, appellee in that court, and relator here, for certiorari; the object of said motion being to bring up to said Eastland court a certain purported judgment of the district court of Palo Pinto county. The matters involved in said motion are fully .discussed, passed on, adjudicated, and overruled in the opinion of the Eastland court, which is reported in 276 S. W. 724. We refer to the opinion of that court for the issues there involved. We will say that the matters set up in the two cases at bar are in part the same matters that were before the Eastland court and decided by the opinion above referred to. It seems while said original appeal was pending in the Eastland court, and after it had rendered its opinion on the above motion for certiorari, and before it had finally passed on the appeal on its merits, the case was transferred, on equalization of the dockets of the several Courts of Civil Appeals, to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Eighth District at El Paso. The latter court, on October 26, 1926, rendered a judgment reversing the judgment of the district court of Palo Pinto county, Tex., and remanded the case to the district court for a new trial. 288 S- W. 1107. Thereafter motion for rehearing was overruled and application for writ of error was duly filed and prosecuted to the Supreme Court. This, application for writ of error presented in substance the material issues that are involved in the two petitions for mandamus in the two mandamus cases at bar. The Supreme Court duly considered said application for writ of error, and on February 2, 1927, entered its judgment and decree refusing said writ, and said judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and the Supreme Court had become final long before the two petitions in the two mandamus cases at bar were filed.
The respondents in both mandamus cases have answered herein, and the defendants in the original cause have intervened. In cause No. 5261, being the petition for mandamus against the honorable justices oí the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso, the relator seeks a judgment of the Supreme Court compelling' and requiring said respondents to recall its mandate in said original cause sent to the district court of Palo Pinto county, vacate its judgment of reversal in said cause, grant the writs of certiorari prayed for by relator in that court, and-dismiss the appeal in cause 1866 on the docket of that court, being the original appeal. It will here be noted that all the relief here sought by mandamus in the two cases at bar has been presented to the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso, and by that court duly acted on and refused. Further, said court has never failed or refused to act upon and render a judgment and decree in any matter presented to it involved in the two applications for mandamus at bar.
The application for mandamus against the district judge seeks to compel the judge of the district court of Palo Pinto county to enforce the original judgment of W. R. Slaughter against C. C. Slaughter Company et al., which judgment was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso. 288 S. W. 1107. Another branch of the original case is reported in 284 S. W. 350. This latter application is now pending in the district court.
It is shown by the answer of the respondents that Hon. James R. Harper, mentioned in relator's petition as Chief Justice of the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso, is not now a member of said court, he having retired from said official position on January 1, 1925, and was succeeded on said date by Hon. W. I-I. Pelphrejq who has since said date been' Chief Justice of said court. It is also shown that Hon. J. B. Keith, formerly judge of the district court of Palo Pinto county, has retired and been succeeded by Hon. Sam M. Russell. However, all present justices of the Court of Civil Appeals and the present judge of the district court have waived service and made their appearances herein.
The two petitions for mandamus filed herein are very voluminous and complicated, but we have, with great labor and care, gone into and examined the transcript and record in the original appeal in the Court of Civil Appeals, and the papers and documents filed herein, and we find that every question here presented has been presented to the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso and at Eastland, and said questions have been duly passed on and considered by said courts, and, further, each and every question germane to a decision of the two mandamus cases at bar has been presented to and passed on and adjudicated by the El Paso court adversely to relator. We further find that the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso has entered its judgment and decree reversing the judgment of the district court of Palo Pinto county, Tex., in the original suit, and said Court of Civil Appeals had jurisdiction of said cause and of said appeal. The Supreme Court has refused writ of error in said cause, and we think properly so, and the judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and of the Supreme Court are now final. The effect of the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is to reverse the original judgment of the district court of Palo Pinto county, and remand the cause to that court for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion of said Court of Civil Appeals, and therefore there is now no judgment in said court in favor of plaintiff and against the C. C. Slaughter Company et al. to be enforced.
There is also on file in motion No. 8498, supra, a petition by C. O. Slaughter Company et al., interveners, in the above two causes, for writs of prohibition against W. B. Slaughter, and his attorney, and Hon. Sam M. Russell, district judge as aforesaid, and against Ed Dalton, clerk pro tern, praying that they be restrained from doing certain things in regard to a suit filed on January 14, 1929, by W. B. Slaughter, in which suit it is alleged that W. B. Slaughter is asking the judge of said district court for a writ of mandamus against the district clerk forcing said district clerk to issue an execution on said above-discussed reversed judgment. On filing of this application the Supreme Court, on recommendation of the Commission, issued a writ of prohibition commanding and restraining the said W. B. Slaughter et al. from doing any act or thing in regard to said last-named suit in the district court pending the action of the Supreme Court in the above mandamus causes Nos. 5261 and 5262.
It follows from what we have said that we find no merit in the two applications for mandamus filed herein by W. B. Slaughter. We do not wish to be understood as holding that this court has jurisdiction over the matters as presented in the manner presented. We do not pass on that matter at all. We hold that, even if jurisdiction be conceded, we find the facts do not justify the Supreme Court in exercising same; therefore it is not necessary to pass on the question of jurisdiction.
We • are further of the opinion that there is no necessity shown for further relief in said latter motion No. 8498, being the petition of C. C. Slaughter et al. v. W. B. Slaughter et al., as it will not be presumed that the district court, or its officers, will violate the solemn judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and of the Supreme Court.
We therefore recommend that said causes Nos. 5261 and 5262 be dismissed, and that further relief be refused in motion No. 8498, and that W. B. Slaughter be taxed with all costs in this court in said three proceedings.
CURETON, C. J. The opinion of the Commission of Appeals in the above two causes is adopted, and said causes are dismissed, and motion for writ of prohibition denied.