Daugherty v. McCalmont

41 S.W.2d 139, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1304
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 6, 1931
DocketNo. 12475.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 41 S.W.2d 139 (Daugherty v. McCalmont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daugherty v. McCalmont, 41 S.W.2d 139, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1304 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

On December 3,1929, plaintiffs, J. G. Daugherty and wife, Addie Daugherty, and O. T. Bryson, all of Wise county, filed suit in the form of a bill of review against S. M. Mc-Galmont, a resident of the state of Illinois, and George Gage, sheriff of Wise county, and for causé of action pleaded that the defendant S. M. McCalmont instituted a suit on September 24,1928, wherein he sought a judgment on a certain promissory note in the principal sum of $1,300, together with interest, executed by O. T. Bryson and his wife, payable to the Union Mortgage Company, and to foreclose a deed of trust lien executed to secure the note above mentioned, on a certain tract of land about 3½ miles southeast of the town of Sunset, containing 100 acres and located in Wise county.

It was alleged that the land described in the deed, dated January 21, 1924, from J. G. Daugherty and wife to C. T. Bryson, was duly recorded in the deed records of Wise county. It was further alleged that in the suit in which McCalmont was plaintiff it was alleged that said note was executed in lieu of one certain vendor’s lien note executed by C. T. Bryson in the sum of $1,000', dated January 1, 1924, and due January 31, 1934, pay1 able to J. G. Daugherty, or order, to secure which a vendor’s lien was retained upon said land; that said note had been likewise assigned by J. G. Daugherty to the Union Mortgage Company and to evidence which the note and deed of trust was executed by said C. T. Bryson and wife.

■ Plaintiffs in this suit alleged that they were the one and same parties mentioned in the former suit as defendants, and that they employed the firm of Donald & Donald, lawyers of Bowie, Tex., to represent them, and that pursuant to such employment they filed in said cause No. 81009 their answer on October 29, 1928, and did pursuant thereto pay into said court a jury fee of $5, a copy of defendants’ answer being attached to this petition, and marked “Exhibit B,” which in all.things sets forth a good and meritorious defense to the original suit as instituted by said defendant as plaintiff in cause No. 81009.

It was further alleged that the transaction of deeding the land by Daugherty and wife to O. T. Bryson was a simulated transaction, for the reason that at all times said land and farm was in fact the homestead of said Daugherty and wife, and, therefore, that the making of the pretended lien as mentioned and referred to contravened the rights of the said J. G. Daugherty and wife and was void. That the plaintiffs represented that after the issues had been joined in cause No. 81009 the suit was placed on the jury docket of said court and set down for trial, but on account of sickness of the defendant Mrs. Addie Daugherty, a postponement was granted; that the papers in said case showed that the defendants had duly answered and were represented by Donald & Donald, and that Donald & Donald got in touch with W. W. Alcorn, of Fort Worth, who in turn got in touch with the attorney representing plaintiff in said cause, and the case was postponed by agreement as aforesaid. That since said time no further setting for trial was had in said cause and no notice whatsoever given to the attorneys for defendants, or defendants themselves, save and except that on September 23, 1929, J. E. Whitehead, an attorney at Dallas, wrote Donald & Donald a letter wherein the following inquiry was made:

“You filed answer in the above alleged cause, and we understand that the defense is to be abandoned. This is to inquire whether or not we are correct in our understanding.’’

That immediately upon receipt of said letter and on September 24,1929, .Donald & Donald wrote to J. E. Whitehead at his known address, and told him that there was a mistake in his understanding that the defense in the case of McCalmont v. Bryson et al. was to be abandoned; and that the defendant J. G. Daugherty and wife had filed an answer in said cause and intended to prosecute the defense to a conclusion, for beyond question each and every statement as made in said answer was true, and that his agent as well as himself knew, or should know, such to be the case. That counsel for defendants were ready to try the case whenever suitable arrangements could be made to suit the convenience of all parties. That they would like to have three or four weeks’ notice in advance so that they could get all of their witnesses ready to attend court, and they desired to give Whitehead the same opportunity of ample time to arrange for his interest in the case. The letter concluded with this statement:

“Assuring you of our best wishes and kindest regards, and awaiting to hear from you in reference to matter, we are
“Yours truly, Donald & Donald.”

It was further alleged that notwithstanding the fact that they had duly and timely answered in said cause, and notwithstanding the fact that said cause was on the jury docket and one postponement had been granted, and notwithstanding the letters last mentioned between Whitehead and Donald & Donald, on September 25, 1929, a judgment was asked for plaintiff, which judgment purported to be based upon the fact that the defendants had not answered, but had made default when in fact there was then at that time an answer *141 on file and such correspondence, by letter and over the telephone between counsel for defendants, plaintiffs here, and counsel for the plaintiff in the other suit, warranted the conclusion that the case' would not be set for trial without a sufficient time being allowed for the parties to get their witnesses, and to notify the opposite party of the setting. Plaintiffs alleged that they were not advised of this judgment until after the term had expired, some time in November.

Plaintiffs further alleged that as defendants in cause No. 81009' they were ready and willing to proceed to trial at any time to adjudicate the-questions involved in said suit; that they had a meritorious defense to plaintiffs’ suit in that ease, as set forth in the answers filed thereto, beeahse the petition filed in cause No. 81009 was wholly insufficient, either in law or in equity, to show any cause of action against them, or either of them; because in said suit an attempt was made to obtain personal judgment against the defendant Mrs. Addie Daugherty, the wife of J. G. Daugherty, and therefore under coverture; because said petition in the former suit showed that said obligation upon which the suit was predicated was not for her benefit or for the benefit of her separate estate, or for necessities;. because the plaintiffs in the former suit came into possession of said note after maturity, and were not innocent purchasers for a valuable consideration without notice, as alleged in said petition. That the property upon which a foreclosure was sought was the separate property of Mrs. Addie Daugherty, and at all times said property was occupied and used by them as a homestead for herself and her husband and their six children; that said note described in said petition in the former suit was not executed for the purpose of taking care of a part of the consideration paid for said property, or for taxes, or for improvements, but merely was to evidence a plain debt owing by said J. G. Daugherty; that at the time when said property was then and there occupied by said defendants, J. G.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W.2d 139, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daugherty-v-mccalmont-texapp-1931.