Court Opinion

ID: 9827627
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 17:43:03.29371+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:42:33.942698
License: Public Domain

WILLSON, C. J.
The suit was by appel-lee against appellants, Mrs. Withers and one Cantrell, a constable, to enjoin the sale under an execution of certain land belonging to appellee, and the collection of the judgment on which the execution was issued. A copy of the judgment was made an exhibit to the petition, and from the copy it appears that the judgment was rendered January 25, 1910, in favor of one Craig against appellee and appellant Mrs. Withers, and in her favor over against appellee, for the sum of $85,-70, interest and costs. The judgment recited that “the plaintiff appeared by attorney and announced ready for trial, and the defendants duly cited. The defendant Mrs. V. F. Withers appeared in person and the defendant William Linden came not, but wholly made default,” etc. In his petition for the injunction appellee alleged that Craig’s suit resulting in the judgment was against him as an indorser and appellant Mrs. Withers as the maker of a promissory note for the sum of $75, interest and attorney’s fees; that the citation issued in said suit and served on him so recited, and did not show Mrs. Withers, his codefendant therein, to be asserting any claim against him; that he did not appear by answer or otherwise, nor authorize any one to appear for him in said suit, and had no notice of any kind that Mrs. Withers was making or would make any claim against him in said suit; that he did not know that the judgment against him in favor of Mrs. Withers had been rendered until after the expiration of more than 90 days from its date, when it was too late to remove the cause to the county court; that he had learned that the judgment against him in favor of Mrs. Withers was rendered on a claim made by her that she had been induced by fraud on his part to execute and deliver to him the note sued on; that he was not guilty of fraud in the particular she claimed; and that the testimony on which the judgment in her favor was rendered therefore must have been false, etc. The petition was sworn to. A temporary injunction was granted as prayed for by appellee. From a recital in the judgment appealed from, rendered July 30, 1910, it appears that the cause was before the court June 18, 1910, only on a motion made by appellants to dissolve the injunction and a motion by appellee to “strike out respondents’ pleadings and make the injunction perpetual,” and not for a trial on its merits. The judgment further recites that at that time the “respondents announced if their pleadings were held defective they would ask leave to amend,” and that “the evidence was heard and taken under advisement.” On leave granted by the court, by an order duly made, appellants on July 29, 1910, filed an amended answer, and an amended motion to dissolve the injunction. The answer was verified as to portions thereof denying specific allegations in appellee’s petition. In the answer Mrs. Withers averred that she hád been induced by fraudulent representations made by ap-pellee to execute the note which furnished the basis for the judgment against her in favor of Craig, and prayed if the judgment over in her favor against appellee rendered by the justice court should be declared to be void, that she have judgment against appel-lee in the pending suit for the amount of said note, interest, and attorney’s fees, as her damages for the fraud perpetrated by appellee upon her. The judgment appealed from further recited; “Respondents announced they had further evidence to introduce and gave in evidence the original citation and the officer’s return thereon in cause No. 14,408, justice court. Because it is the opinion of the court that no service was had upon William Linden in said justice court to warrant the judgment in favor of Mrs. V. F. Withers over against William Linden, the said judgment is void. Therefore it is considered and adjudged that the injunction be and is hereby perpetuated. The cross-bill of Mrs. Y. F. Withers v. William Linden is hereby dismissed without prejudice to respondent V. F. Withers in any action she may desire. Relator shall recover all costs of respondents, for which he may have his execution.”
Appellants insist that the trial court should have sustained their motion to dissolve the temporary injunction (1) because they had in their answer denied every material allegation made by appellee in his petition; (2) because it appeared from allegations in the petition and in the answer that appellee had neglected to resort to either an appeal or certiorari for relief against the *1119judgment; and (3) because it did not appear from allegations in bis petition that appel-lee bad a meritorious defense to the claim asserted against him by Mrs. Withers in the suit in the justice court.
[1] The two contentions first mentioned are not supported by the record. Appellants in their answer did not deny the allegation made by appellee in his petition that the judgment against him in favor of Mrs. Withers was by default and rendered by the justice court without service first had on him of a citation notifying him that she was asserting a right to a judgment against him. This allegation not only was a material one, but it was the basis for the relief appellee sought. Unless that judgment was void, because rendered at a time when .the court had not acquired, jurisdiction over his person, appellee was not entitled to the injunctioii he prayed for. If it was void, and he had not been guilty of such laches as deprived him of the right to complain of it, he was entitled to relief by injunction. In his petition appellee specifically alleged that he did not know that the judgment against him in favor of Mrs. Withers had been rendered “until 90 days had expired from the date of said, judgment and until it was too late to remove the same to the county court.” This allegation is not specifically, but only argumentatively, denied in the answer. To entitle a respondent to the dissolution of an injunction on the ground that he has by a sworn answer denied the equities set out in the petition, the rule is that the denial must be as clear and certain as are the allegations asserting such equities. 2 High on Inj. § 1472.
[2] If the conclusion reached, that it appeared from the petition and answer that the judgment was void and that appellee had not been guilty of laches depriving him of tne right to complain of it, is a correct one, then the fact that it may not, have appeared from the allegations in the petition that appellee had a meritorious defense to Mrs. Withers’ suit was not a reason for dissolving the injunction. While the rule is otherwise in courts of record, it is held with reference to judgments of a justice court that where the record is silent (as seems to have been the case here) as to the existence or not of facts necessary to confer on such a court jurisdiction it has assumed to exercise, evidence aliunde is permissible, notwithstanding the attack on the judgment is a collateral one, to show the nonexistence of such facts. Wilkerson v. Schoonmaker, 77 Tex. 615, 14 S. W. 223, 19 Am. St. Rep. 803; Kern Barber Supply Co. v. Freeze, 96 Tex. 513, 74 S. W. 303; Tucker v. Pennington, 45 S. W. 314; Montgomery v. Gunther, 81 Tex. 320, 16 S. W. 1073; Hambel v. Davis, 33 S. W. 251; Machine Co. v. Wesson, 41 S. W. 726; Martin v. Anderson, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 111, 23 S. W. 292. [3] Tested by this rule, the judgment against appellee in favor of Mrs. Withers appeared to be a void one, because it was shown by facts specifically alleged in the petition, and not denied in the answer, that the court rendering it had not acquired jurisdiction over appellee’s person. As it appeared that the judgment was a void one, to entitle himself to relief against it by injunction, it was not necessary that appellee should show that he had a meritorious defense against the claim it represented. Kern Barber Supply Co. v. Freeze, 96 Tex. 513, 74 S. W. 303.
We conclude, therefore, that the trial court did not err in overruling appellants’ motion to dissolve the temporary injunction.
[4] But the judgment must be reversed for an error not assigned, but which appears on the. face of the record, and which we think should be treated as fundamental. Loan Ass’n v. Newman, 25 S. W. 463; Ditch Co. v. Hudson, 85 Tex. 590, 22 S. W. 398. In their answer, besides denying specifically certain allegations in the petition, appellants denied generally the truth of any of them. Appellee did not offer evidence to prove the truth of his allegations. The judgment perpetuating the injunction was rendered without other evidence of the truth of those allegations than that furnished by the affidavit to the petition. That this was not sufficient has been directly decided. Scales v. Ry. Co., 35 S. W. 205.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.