Alston v. Emmerson

18 S.W. 566, 83 Tex. 231, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 723
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1892
DocketNo. 3421.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 18 S.W. 566 (Alston v. Emmerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alston v. Emmerson, 18 S.W. 566, 83 Tex. 231, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 723 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

STAYTOR, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by appellee to recover lands which once belonged to John D. Alston, and the rights of the parties depend on the validity of a judgment through which the lands were partitioned among his heirs. The original decree directing partition was entered on April 29, 1878, by the District Court for Dallas County, and the report of commissioners was approved and final partition made on May 7, 1879.

Appellants took a part of the land in controversy, as heirs, in that partition, and the residue of that in controversy was set apart to another heir of John D. Alston, and the interests of these persons was acquired by appellee under sales made under executions against these distributees for costs of partition adjudged against them. These sales are admitted to have been regularly made, and it is further conceded, *235 that appellee paid valuable consideration without knowledge of any vice in the judgment under which the executions issued; but it is claimed that the judgment was void because appellants, who were minors when the judgment was rendered, were not cited, although they were represented by a guardian ad litem appointed by the court.

The suit in which the judgment in question was entered was brought by the other heirs of John D. Alston, against appellants, on September 20, 1875, and citations to the defendants were issued on the day the suit was brought, commanding them to appear at the next October term of the court, but the returns made on these citations, on the 27th and 29th of the same month, showed that they were not served, because defendants were not to be found in Dallas County, and no other citations were found among the papers of the case, and the record does not affirmatively show that any others were issued.

This is an agreed case, and the other facts affecting the question of jurisdiction are thus given:

“6. The following entry is made on the judge’s docket, viz.: ‘October term, 1875, Philip Lindsley appointed guardian ad litem for the defendants, Thomas and Eichard Alston.’ There is nothing else to indicate when the guardian ad litem was appointed. June 15, 1876, the guardian ad litem filed for the said Thomas and Eichard Alston an answer containing a general and special demurrer and a general denial. Said guardian represented said minors throughout said proceedings, and in the judgment affirming the report of the commissioners appointed, as hereinafter shown, to divide the land, a fee of $25 was allowed said guardian ad litem for his services as such.

“7. April 29, 1878, John M. Stemmons was permitted to intervene in said cause. In his plea of intervention filed on said date he alleged, that on April 9,1858, Eichard Alston, Sr., father of defendants Thomas and Eichard Alston, sold by metes and bounds 50 acres of said 426 acres survey to Jesse Atterburry, and that Atterburry afterward sold the same to Estes, and Estes afterward sold the same to intervenor; intervenor asked that 50 acres of the land to which Eichard and Thomas Alston were entitled by reason of their heirship from their father, Eichard Alston, Sr., be set aside to him.

“8. April 29, 1878, judgment was rendered in said cause. There were no recitals in said judgment that defendant had been served with citation, or that the court had jurisdiction over their persons, other than the following recital in the judgment, viz.: ‘This day came the parties by their attorneys, and waive a jury, and submit the matters in controversy, as well of fact as of law, to the court; and the evidence and argument of counsel being heard,’ etc. This judgment determined the interest of each of the parties in said tract of land. The interest of Eichard and Thomas Alston together was adjudged to be one-sixth, out of which it was decreed that the intervenor John M. Stemmons was *236 entitled to 50 acres. Commissioners were appointed to partition said survey in accordance with said judgment, and were directed to set aside to intervenor 50 acres out of the one-sixth adjudged to the said Richard and Thomas Alston.

“9. The original petition filed in said partition proceedings represented that there were four of the Angelí heirs, entitled together to one-twelfth of said survey; the four heirs were named. The decree made no mention of Thomas Angelí, one of the Angelí heirs, but it ascertained and named the parties to whom the land in controversy jointly belonged, and assigned to each one his interest, naming the three Angelí heirs entitled to one-twelfth, and upon this basis partition was made. After the original petition was filed it appears of record that leave was given plaintiffs to file an amended petition; but no amended petition was found among the papers of the cause.”

Appellants, over objection of appellee, testified, that they were never served with citation in this partition suit, but that they knew of the proceedings and partition under them a few days after the commissioners partitioned the land; and one of them at time of trial was 27 years old and the other 29.

“It is admitted by the parties, that unless it affirmatively appears from the record as above set out in said partition proceedings that the court did not have jurisdiction over the persons of defendants, or unless they could show a want of jurisdiction over their persons by oral evidence, that then said judgment is valid and binding on defendants. The parties therefore submit for the decision of the Supreme Court the following issues:

“1. Does the record in said partition proceedings as above set out show affirmatively the want of jurisdiction over the persons of defendants?

“2. If the record does not show the want of jurisdiction over the persons of defendants, can it be shown by the oral evidence of the defendants themselves in this proceeding?

“3. If, however, the court did hot have jurisdiction over the persons of the defendants, but nevertheless appointed a guardian ad litem for them, who represented them throughout the proceedings, what would be the effect of the judgment rendered under such circumstances against the minor defendants?

“4. If the judgment rendered in said partition proceedings is valid and binding on these defendants, would it be res adjudicata as to any other title except that which the record above set out shows to have been involved in that proceeding; and if it was not, does the evidence show that John D. Alston gave the survey to the father of these defendants, or does the evidence show a title by limitation in them under the ten years statute of limitation?

*237 “5. It is agreed that the court may render such judgment as the law and facts may warrant.”

In the view taken of one question involved in this case it is not necessary to consider the first and second issues submitted; for if it be conceded that it was shown in any lawful manner that appellants were never served with process in the partition suit, still all the members of this court concur in holding, under the former decisions of this court, that the judgment through which appellee acquired right was at most only voidable.

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Bluebook (online)
18 S.W. 566, 83 Tex. 231, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alston-v-emmerson-tex-1892.