Wilson v. Ware
Wilson v. Ware
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit for the balance due on a promissory note, with interest and attorney’s' fees, instituted by appellant against O. L. Ware and J. W. Ware, appellees, in the justice’s court of precinct No. 2, Uvalde county. Appellant sued for $196, including attorney’s fees, and the cause was dismissed on the ground that the attorney’s fees and the balance of the principal of the note amounted to more than $200. The cause was appealed to the county court, where the appeal was dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
*706
In the case of Burke v. Adoue, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 494, 22 S. W. 824, 23 S. W. 91, it was held: “It may be true that the claim for the attorney fee was so distinct from the debt that the plaintiffs might have wholly abandoned it, and have thus obtained a standing in court upon a cause of action which the court had power to adjudicate. But this was not done. The effort was made to abandon a part of that demand and recover the remainder. Upon principle, it would seem that this was not permissible. The cause of action upon the note was entire, and was a liquidated demand, as was the stipulated fee. What court had the power to hear and adjudicate it was determined by law. The right to have the cause passed upon in that forum belonged to defendants, as well as to the plaintiffs, and the arbitrary action of neither could deprive the other of its enjoyment.” That decision was approved by the Supreme Court in Railway v. Canyon Coal Company, 102 Tex. 478, 119 S. W. 294.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
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