Boone v. Hulsey

9 S.W. 531, 71 Tex. 176, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1121
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1888
DocketNo. 5724
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 9 S.W. 531 (Boone v. Hulsey) 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
Boone v. Hulsey, 9 S.W. 531, 71 Tex. 176, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1121 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

Gaines, Associate Justice.

This case was reported for reversal by the Commission of Appeals at the last Galveston term and the opinion was adopted by this court, but a rehearing was granted. After a more thorough review of the record and the authorities bearing upon the questions presented we have concluded to affirm the judgment as to two of appellees and to reverse it as to the others. This renders it necessary to state the grounds upon which our conclusion is based.

The suit was brought by appellants against more than forty defendants to recover undivided interests in the Daniel Davis league of land in Fannin county. Prior to the August term, 1880, of the district court of that county, judgments by default were rendered against some of the defendants. Other defendants compromised and obtained a judgment by agreement for the lands respectively claimed by them. At the August term a trial was had between the plaintiffs and the defendants who had answered and had not compromised, and resulted in a judgment in favor of the latter. A motion for a new trial was filed and was overruled. Subsequent to the overruling of the motion for a new trial, and during the term, the defendants against whom judgments by default had been entered moved the court to set aside the judgment as to them, upon the ground that the citations were defective and would not support a judgment. This motion was granted. At a subsequent term the plaintiffs moved the court to hold for naught the judgment in favor of the other defendants, on the ground that the setting aside the judgment against some of the parties vacated it as to all, and at the same time moved the court to allow them to proceed to trial against all the defendants who had not compromised. This motion was refused and plaintiffs excepted. At the August term, 1885, a trial was had between the plaintiffs and the defendants against whom judgments by default had been formerly rendered and set aside, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the latter. A motion for a new trial was again overruled and plaintiffs gave notice of appeal. Two bonds were given, one to appeal from the first judgment and the other to appeal from the latter. Upon mo[184]*184tion to dismiss, the former bond was held of no effect, so that the case stands upon the appeal from the last judgment.

In their answer to the motion for a rehearing, appellants call attention to the fact that the point raised by their assignment, that the court erred in not setting aside the first judgment altogether and in not allowing them to proceed against all the defendants in the last trial, was not passed upon in the former opinion, and ask that the question should be determined. We think the question of the vacation of the former judgment as an entirety by the setting aside of the judgments by default against some of the defendants, properly before us for consideration, and we will dispose of it here. It is to be noted that each of the defendants claims a separate parcel of the land as against the plaintiffs. Therefore the plaintiffs might have brought a separate suit against each, or at least for the recovery of each tract; and after the suit was brought against all, each defendant or set of defendants claiming each separate parcel might have claimed a severance and had a separate trial and judgment. (Ballard v. Perry, 28 Texas, 347.) Chambers v. Fisk, 9 Texas, 261, was such a case. There a severance was had, and after a verdict in favor of each defendant, the judgments were recorded in one entry and as but one judgment. The plaintiff appealed, giving one bond payable to all the defendants. The appeal was dismissed, the court holding that the judgments were several and that a separate bond should have been given payable to each defendant. This clearly recognizes the doctrine that if, in a case in which the defendants are entitled to sever, a severance be allowed upon the trial, there may be more than one final judgment, and it .follows as a consequence that the fate of the judgment in favor of one or more defendants is not dependent upon the result of a motion for a new trial made by the other defendants, or to vacate the judgment against them. In this case the defendants who had answered, and who obtained a verdict and judgment upon the first trial, were not responsible for the error which led to the setting aside of the judgment by default against the other defendants. It was not their fault that their co-defendants were not duly cited and that judgments by default were erroneously granted. It was incumbent upon plaintiffs to see that the service was perfected upon all the defendants before proceeding to trial; and if, having tried the case as to some (the others not being properly cited), they fail to get a verdict, they [185]*185should not be heard to complain that the judgment is not final as to all parties. In all suits for the recovery of lands, where the defendants claim separate parcels and where they are entitled to demand a separate trial, if the plaintiff proceed to trial against one or more, the others not having been properly served and not having appeared, this should at least be deemed a voluntary severance on his part, and the judgment as to the parties who have been served should be deemed a finality. And so if .he has taken a judgment by default as to defendants not duly cited, and proceed to try as to those who have answered, and those who have answered get a judgment, this should also be treated as a severance, and the judgment, properly rendered, should not be affected by the vacation of that which was erroneous. The case should be treated as severed and as admitting of more than one final judgment.

It is not an unusual practice in this court in an appeal by a plaintiff from a judgment in favor of several defendants, each for a separate parcel of land, in which the defenses are in no way connected, to recover as to one or more defendants, and to affirm as to the others. (Wiley v. Posey et al., decided at the present term; Bayless v. Daniels, 8 Texas, 140; Houston v. Ward, Id., 124; Burke v. Cruger, Id., 66; Hopson v. Murphy, 4 Texas, 248.) For a discussion of the principles applicable to this matter, see especially Burleson v. Henderson, 4 Texas, 48.) This court can only render such judgment as it would have been proper for the court below to have rendered; and hence it follows that in our opinion in this class of cases, it is not improper mutually to sever the defenses after judgment, and when justice demands it, to grant a new trial as to some of the defendants, and to let the judgment stand as to others. We conclude that the court properly treated the judgment rendered in 1880, as final as to the defendants who then obtained a verdict, and did not err in refusing to allow plaintiffs to proceed to trial against them a second time.

The land in controversy was patented to “Daniel Davis, his heir or assigns,” by virtue of a headright certificate issued to him as the head of a family, by the board of land commissioners of Fannin county, on the second day of March, 1838. Appellant Margaret Boone claimed to have been the wife of Davis at the time the right to the certificate was acquired, and at the time of its issue and location upon the land, and sought a recovery of one-half of the league, based upon this claim. [186]*186The other appellants claim as heirs of Mary Ann Davis, deceased, who was alleged to be a child of Daniel Davis and Margaret Davis, now Margaret Boone. Margaret Boone testified, that she was married to Davis by alcalde Emory Bains, in 1833 or 1834.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.W. 531, 71 Tex. 176, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boone-v-hulsey-tex-1888.