City of El Paso v. West, 8859.

Decision Date23 May 1939
Docket NumberNo. 8859.,8859.
Citation104 F.2d 96
PartiesCITY OF EL PASO v. WEST et al.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit

Frank B. Clayton, City Atty., and Ernest Guinn, Joseph G. Bennis, and Coyne Milstead, all of El Paso, Tex., for appellant.

Eugene R. Smith and Maury Kemp, both of El Paso, Tex., and Robert G. Bosworth, of Denver, Colo., for appellees.

Before SIBLEY, HOLMES, and McCORD, Circuit Judges.

PER CURIAM.

On the argument of this case the appellees treated their petitions as suits at law in tort for negligence in performing a duty arising out of a contractual relation. The motion for rehearing seeks to avoid the application of the bar of two year limitation by contending that four years is the limitation because the suit is an "action for debt where the indebtedness is evidenced by or founded upon any contract in writing." Revised Civil Stats. Texas, Art. 5527. Appeal is also made to the new Rules of Civil Procedure which abolish the old forms of action and provide that there shall be but one.

This case was filed and tried in the District Court before the Rules of Civil Procedure existed. The pleadings must be interpreted according to the law then obtaining. Even under the new rules, when limitation depends on the State law and that law refers to a form of action as determinative, it will be necessary to ascertain what sort of case the pleader is presenting. While the allegations in this case are somewhat jumbled, it can hardly be thought that it is an "action for debt where the indebtedness is evidenced by or founded upon a contract in writing." The certificates if sued upon as evidencing a fixed obligation would have been attackable as lacking constitutional validity to impose a debt on the City. So if the recital in them "For the payment of this certificate the City of El Paso has created the City of El Paso Special Paving Fund and has obligated itself to collect and enforce all special assessments" had been sued on as an absolute promise so that a mere failure to collect the assessments, irrespective of negligence, would make the City liable to pay the certificates, the same trouble would be met that was held fatal in City of Fort Worth v. Bobbitt, Atty. Gen., 118 Tex. 14, 41 S.W.2d 228. Moreover in an action for debt on a writing negligence would not have been appropriately alleged at all. The pleader we think advisedly treated the recited promise as not absolute, or as fixing a debt by a mere failure to keep it, but rather as an...

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  • Wolf Sales Co. v. Rudolph Wurlitzer Co.
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — District of Colorado
    • June 25, 1952
    ...the period of limitation that is accorded an action of a same or similar nature which arises under the law of the forum. City of El Paso v. West, 5 Cir., 104 F.2d 96. The statutory remedy awarded to private litigants who have been injured by a violation of the antitrust laws, the treble dam......

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