Court Opinion

ID: 4891785
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:51:12.304541+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:09:41.377533
License: Public Domain

Ogden, J.
This is a motion to set' aside a judgment and decree of this court rendered in March, 1855, for the want of jurisdiction in this court of the parties in interest in the subject matter in litigation in said suit.
The judgment sought to be vacated by this motion originated in an action of trespass to try title to certain lands, brought by James Power against the defendants to this motion in Refugio county in 1849, which, by change of venue, was removed to Jackson county, where the plaintiff, Power, obtained a judgment in 1851, and the defendants below appealed to this court. Pending the appeal James Power died, and his widow and executrix was made a party appellee as his representative, and the cause was decided by this court in 1855, reversing the judgment of the District Court, and remanding the cause for further proceedings. It appears that no further action has been had in the matter by the District Court, and the heirs of James Power now present this motion to set aside that judgment on account of its nullity, for the reason that on the death of James Power they, and not the executrix, were not made parties to the suit. They claim that they, on the death of James Power, were the only *379legal parties to represent the appellee, and that, as they were minors, and were not made parties, the cause was decided without parties, and therefore without jurisdiction in the court, and that the judgment in consequence is null and void.
It may be stated as a well settled principle of law, that where a judgment is clearly void for the want of jurisdiction, time, however long protracted, can in nowise affect or change its nullity; but it is also well settled, that after a long lapse of time every reasonable and fair presumption will be indulged in to sustain the regularity, legality and jurisdiction of the courts; and at least no judgment will be declared void until it be made clearly to appear from the law, or the facts of a case, that it is a nullity.
It is also a well recognized principle of law and equity, that where a particular construction has for a long time been placed upon a statute by the courts of the country, and has been recognized by the whole community as a true and correct interpretation, where questions of the rights and interests of parties have long since arisen and been settled, it is not the true policy of wisdom or justice to change that construction, and thereby unsettle the affairs of society, and disturb adjudicated rights, unless demanded by very solemn and weighty considerations.
Where the courts have, upon mature adjudication, taken cognizance of a matter, and assumed jurisdiction of a person, or cause, that adjudication should not be set aside, except upon the most urgent demand of law and justice.
Let us, then, look to the law and decisions touching the question raised by the motion in this case, and see if this court was clearly without jurisdiction of the subject matter, or the parties at interest, when the decision complained of was made. The cause was regularly appealed from the District Court during the lifetime of Power, and *380it is not questioned that up to the time of his death this court had complete jurisdiction of the whole case; but at his death the widow and executrix, and not the minor heirs, was made a party. Article 1447, Paschal’s Digest, provides, that “Suits for title, or for the possession of lands, or for any right attached to, or growing out of the same, or for any injury or damage done thereto, may be instituted by executors, administrators, or guardians, in like manner as they could have been by their testator or intestate, and judgment in such cases shall be as conclusive as if rendered in favor of their testator or intestate.” This statute is without ambiguity, and we are_not aware that but one construction has ever been contended for it. It is very clear that if Power had died before the institution of this suit, the executrix would, under this statute, have had full authority to institute this suit, and to prosecute the same to final judgment, whether an appeal had been taken to this court or not. (Lacy v. Williams, 8 Texas, 182; Givens v. Davenport, 8 Texas, 451; Thomas et al. v. Jones, 10 Texas, 52; Patton v. Jones, 21 Texas, 513; J. R. Bartlett v. R. T. Bartlett, 31 Texas, 344.)
But it is contended that there is no law authorizing suits to be brought against executors of administrators, where the title to land is brought in question; and that this suit was decided in favor of Power in the lower court, and appealed by the opposite party; and that, therefore, while-in the appellate court, the suit was against Power, and the appeal could not be prosecuted against his executrix. We do not so understand the law in relation to the relative position of the parties litigant. The plaintiff below may assume the relative position of defendant in this, court, but he is defendant only in relation to alleged errors of the lower court, while he is as much the plaintiff in regard to the original subject matter of the suit in this as in the lower court; and it cannot properly be said that *381because a party appeals a cause in which a judgment has been rendered in favor of an administrator or executor, that he thereby brings suit against the administrator or •executor.
But it would seem that the latter clause of Article 1373, Paschal’s Digest, was intended to settle that question, for it provides that the executor or administrator shall have a right to the possession of the estate he represents, and that it shall be his duty to recover and hold possession of the same in trust.
This court has frequently had the question raised by this motion under consideration, and it is believed it has uniformly recognized the right of the executor or administrator to be made party in a suit, when the testator or intestate had died pendente lite, whether in the District or Supreme Court. (Givens v. Davenport, 8 Texas, 465; Thomas v. Jones, 10 Texas, 52; and in the case át bar, Egery et al. v. Power.) The opinion of the court in this cause was delivered by Hemphill, C. J., and has, ever since, been regarded as one of the leading authorities in regard to colonial grants made by the government of Coahuila and Texas, and the right to appropriate, under those grants, land within the littoral leagues. It appears that the court, then, had no doubt of its jurisdiction over the case, and that the right parties were before the court.
That an executor or administrator may prosecute a suit for title or possession of land belonging to the estate he represents, has been too often decided by this court to require at this time reference to cases. The cases referred to by the plaintiff to this* motion (found in 10 Texas, 52, and 31 Texas, 344) fully recognize the law as here enunciated. We are clearly of the opinion that when this case was decided the court had complete jurisdiction, not only ■of the subject matter, but also of the parties interested.
There is another question raised by the defendant *382in this motion, which might have great weight in the proper disposition of this case, if other considerations had not already disposed of the motion. Parties representing themselves to be the heirs of James Power, deceased, have filed this motion; but it may be questioned whether this court, having only appellate jurisdiction, has any power or authority to inquire into or determine the question of heirship as an original matter.
For the reasons here given the motion is overruled.
Motion overruled.