DocketNumber: No. 8379.
Citation Numbers: 187 S.W. 1096, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 846
Judges: Buck
Filed Date: 5/27/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
On January 14, 1910, J. W. and J. H. Woodard, of Tarrant county, executed and delivered to Mrs. Minnie May McOamant, community administratrix of the estate of herself and her husband, W. A. McOamant, deceased, a certain note in the sum of $700, due August 1, 1910. On January 1, 1911, Mrs. McOamant for the purpose of securing her brother-in-law, R. L. McOamant in the payment of certain indebtedness due him by the community estate of which Mrs. McOa-mant was administratrix, and to secure him against loss by reason of the payment of a certain $400 noté, which W. A. McOamant had, prior to his death, executed in favor of an El Paso bank, transferred and delivered the Woodard note to said R. L. McOamant, and indorsed on the back thereof as follows: “Minnie May McOamant, Community Admin-istratrix.” On October 30, 1911, suit was filed in the county court of Tarrant county for civil cases by R. L. McOamant on his note and against J. W. and J. H. Woodard and Minnie May McOamant, as community ad-ministratrix, the petition alleging, in part, as follows:
“That on, to wit, January 14, 1910, the defendants J. W. Woodard and J. H. Woodard, made, executed and delivered, for a valuable consideration, their certain promissory note of that date in the sum of $700, payable to the order of Minnie May McOamant, community ad-ministratrix, payable on or before August 1, 1910, with interest after date at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum. Said note further stipulated that, should it not be paid at maturity and collected by an attorney or legal proceedings an additional sum of Í0 per cent, on the amount of the note should be added as attorney’s fees. And said note is long since due and wholly unpaid. That plaintiff is an innocent holder for value of said note, for that the defendant, payee in said note, indorsed the same in blank, and in due course of business plaintiff became the owner and holder of same for value, and brings this suit by his attorney to enforce collection of the same.”
J. H. Woodard and Mrs. McOamant having been served, and Mrs. McOamant having filed her formal answer, consisting of general demurrer and general denial, on March 12, 1912, judgment was entered in favor of R. B. McOamant, plaintiff, against J. H. Woodard and Mrs. Minnie May McOamant, as ad-ministratrix, in the sum of $903, principal, interest and attorney’s fees. The judgment further recited that:
“Plaintiff asked that the defendant J. W. Woodard be dismissed from said cause; sheriff’s return showing that said defendant was deceased. It is therefore ordered that said cause be, and it is hereby, dismissed as to said defendant, at the cost of the plaintiff.”
On October 8, 1914, this suit was filed by Mrs. Minnie May McOamant in the same court, in which R. L. McOamant recovered the judgment hereinabove set out. Mrs. Mc-Oamant, on behalf of herself and as community administratrix of the estate of herself and deceased husband, sought to have vacated the judgment of March 12, 1912, aforesaid, and prayed for other relief not necessary here to consider, making parties defendant R. Li. McOamant and his attorney and one W. H. James, who was alleged to reside in Hunt county, Tex., and who, it was alleged, was setting up some claim to the judgment aforementioned. As equitable grounds for the setting aside and vacating of the judgment obtained by R. L. McOamant against her, plaintiff pleaded, in part, as follows:
(1) That the note transferred by her to R. Li. McOamant was indorsed without recourse. (This allegation was not sustained by proof.)
(2) That suit thereon was not filed before the first term to which suit could be brought after the right of action had accrued, or before the second term of said court, as provided in article 579, Yernon’s Sayles’ Texas Civil Statutes, but in fact suit was not filed until more than a year after the maturity of the note, and that therefore the plaintiff in the former suit had not complied with the law necessary to fix the liability of an in-' dorser.
(3) That the trial court erred in dismissing, upon the request of plaintiff, the suit as to J. W. Woodard, alleged to be deceased, said Woodard being one of the makers of said note sued on, and plaintiff herein being only secondarily liable, if at all, as indorser on said note.
(4) In the suit whose judgment was sought to be set aside, plaintiff made no allegations or contentions, nor was any proof offered to show the insolvency of the makers of said note, or of the estate of J. W. Woodard, deceased, of which the said J. H. Woodard was administrator, and that, therefore the plaintiff herein was not bound on said note, inasmuch as R. L. McOamant made no claim against her except as an indorser.
(5) That the petition of plaintiff in the suit whose judgment was attacked contained no allegation that plaintiff herein bound herself, or intended to bind herself, thereby to pay said note, and that therefore the petition alleged nó cause of action against her.
She further alleged that:
“She had no actual knowledge that this judgment had been entered, or even that the case had been set down for 'trial; that while it is true a formal answer of general demurrer and general denial had been filed by her attorneys, neither she nor her said attorneys took any further note of the case, nor was it necessary, under the state of the pleading, without same had been amended, that she should do so.”
Q. (1) Were J. W. and J. H. Woodard insolvent from the 1st day of January, 1911, until the 30th day of October, 1911. A. Yes.
“Q. (2) If you answer ‘yes’ to the first question, then did such insolvency continue during the whole period between the 1st day of January, 1911, and the 30th day of October, 1911? A. Yes. ' .
“Q. (3) Were J. W. and J. H. Woodard insolvent on the first Monday in January, 1911? A. Yes.”
Upon the motion of defendants R. U. Mc-Camant, W. H. James, and J. H. Woodward, the latter individually and as the administrator of the estate of J. W. Woodard, deceased, judgment was rendered against plaintiff, both personally and as community adminis-tratrix, for all costs of suit, and denying the relief sought, tfrom which judgment the plaintiff appeals.
“If the plaintiff’s petition had not contained the allegation that J. C. Tyree was notoriously insolvent at the time the suit should have boon brought to fix the liability of the indorser, no cause of action would have been shown against W. B. B. Smith, because it appeared from the allegations in the petition that suit was not brought either to the first or the second term of the court after the debt matured. It devolved upon the plaintiff to allege and prove in this ease one of the exceptions expressed in article 1204 (now article 1843), in order to maintain this action against the indorser, who was discharged by the failure to sue at the first or second term of the court unless one of the exceptions which relieved the holder of the note from bringing such suit existed. Fisher v. Phelps. 21 Tex. 555; Elliott v. Wiggins, 16 Tex. 596.”
“A judgment will not be set aside on account of defects or insufficiency on the pleadings, especially where the alleged fault was amendable, or has been waived by joining issue and going to trial; although -it seems a judgment may be vacated if the declaration or complaint states no cause of action, or contains no averments showing liability on the part of the defendant.”
“A judgment must accord with and be warranted by the pleadings of the party in whose favor it is rendered. * * * So where the declaration is defective in substance to the extent of failing to show a cause of action, no judgment can be entered upon it.”
While it is asserted that a judgment cannot be regarded as entirely void when jurisdiction over both the parties and the subject-matter is once obtained, and that no error committed in the exercise of that jurisdiction can make the proceedings or judgment of the court void (Freeman on Judgments, § 135a), yet, as said by Black in his work aforementioned (section 184):
“In no proper sense can a court of law be said to have jurisdiction if there is no specific question or controversy submitted for its determination. It is not enough that the parties are properly in court. That does, not give the tribunal power to adjudicate any and all matters of difference between them. When we speak of ‘jurisdiction of the subject-matter,’ we do not mean merely cognizance of the general class of actions to which the action in question belongs, but we also mean legal power to pass upon and decide the particular contention which the judgment assumes to settle. And how can a court acquire jurisdiction of the particular contention, except it be clearly marked out and precisely defined by the pleadings of the parties? And how can that bo done, in any mode known to the law, save by the formation of a regular issue?”
For illustration, the district court has jurisdiction over and power to grant divorces, and also to determine questions involving the title to land. Suppose a son should sue his father and mother for an interest in land, and upon a hearing, with all parties before the court, the court should proceed to grant a divorce to one of the parents, could it be reasonably contended that such a judgment was not absolutely void, a mere nullity? We feel sure no one would so contend.
“If the want of jurisdiction over either the subject or the person appears by the record, there is no doubt the judgment is void.” “The general rule, as stated, is that every presumption will be indulged in favor of the records of superior courts. An important corollary to this rule is that there can be no presumption against the record. For if the record imports absolute verity, its recitals must be equally conclusive when they make against the jurisdiction as when for it. If the record is silent as to jurisdictional facts, it will be aided by presumptions. But if it recites such facts, and the facts recited are not sufficient to confer jurisdiction, there can bo no presumption that the recital is incorrect or incomplete.” 2 Black on Judgments, §§ 276-278.
Nor will lapse of time nor laches affect the right to vacate a judgment void on its face. Black on Judgments, § 313; Cunningham v. Taylor, 20 Tex. 126-130.
For the reasons indicated, we are of the opinion that the court below erred in holding that the petition of R. L. McCamant was a sufficient basis for the judgment of March 12, 1912, and in not holding said judgment void, and therefore it is our conclusion that the judgment herein should be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accord with this opinion; and it is so ordered.
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