Dunn v. Taylor

94 S.W. 347, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 241, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 236
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 347 (Dunn v. Taylor) 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
Dunn v. Taylor, 94 S.W. 347, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 241, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 236 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

Ella G. Taylor, joined by her husband, J. S. Taylor, instituted this suit to recover from Frank Dunn the John Cummings survey of 640 acres of land. In addition to the ordinary averments in actions of trespass to try title, title to the land by three, five and ten years limitation was pleaded by the plaintiffs. Dunn answered by general denial and plea of not guilty, and also through a cross-action sued for the land and attacked the judgment in cause number 191, styled The State of Texas v. The San Antonio National Bank et al., which was a suit for delinquent taxes against the bank and an unknown owner. Afterwards J. Y. Tackaberry intervened in the suit alleging that he had purchased the land from Dunn, since the suit was instituted, and filed pleadings similar to those of Dunn. Dunn and' Tackaberry then amended their pleadings and made a number of purchasers from Taylor and wife parties, defendant, to their cross action for the land. Those defendants pleaded three, five and ten years limitation. The court peremptorily instructed a verdict for the Taylors and the parties brought into the suit by appellants.

Appellees claimed title through a deed from the San Antonio National Bank, which bought the land at a sale by the sheriff of Dimmit County, made by virtue of an order of sale issued under a judgment in favor of the State of Texas and against an unknown owner, of date May 25, 1897. The suit in which the judgment was rendered was styled “The State of Texas v. The San Antonio National Bank et al.,” and the judgment made no disposition of the bank. One of the deeds admitted in evidence was from Mrs. M. T. Taylor to Mrs. Ella G. Taylor. The latter was at that time the lawful wife of J. S. Taylor.

The first assignment of error brings in review the action of the court in sustaining exceptions to the cross action of appellants attacking the judgment, which exceptions were based on the suit being barred by limitation of four years. The judgment was rendered on May 25, 1897, and the land was sold thereunder to the San Antonio National Bank on September 7, 1897, and the sheriff’s deed was filed for record in Dimmit County on September 16, 1897. Appellants filed their cross action on May 20, 1905, about eight years after the judgment was rendered and considerably more than seven years after the sheriff’s deed was filed for record. The foregoing facts were fully set out in the cross action and it was apparent on the face of the pleadings that appellants *245 had exercised no diligence whatever in attempting to, discover the fraud alleged in the procurement of the judgment and the sale of the land by virtue'thereof. It was not alleged that the parties to the judgment had used any means to conceal the fact that the judgment for taxes had been rendered in favor of the State of Texas, nor that the sale under execution was fraudulently concealed. On the other hand the judgment was duly recorded in the minutes of the court and the sheriff’s deed recorded a few days after the sale of the land.

As was said by this court in the case of Vodrie v. Tynan, 57 S. W. Rep., 680: “It is the settled rule in Texas that fraud will only prevent the running of the statute of limitations until the fraud is discovered, or by the use of , reasonable diligence might have been discovered. Munson v. Hallowell, 26 Texas, 475; Anding v. Perkins, 29 Texas, 348; Bremond v. McLean, 45 Texas, 10; Kuhlman v. Baker, 50 Texas, 630; Ransome v. Bearden, Id., 119; Alston v. Richardson, 51 Texas 1; Kennedy v. Baker, 59 Texas, 150; Brown’s Heirs v. Brown, 61 Texas, 45; Calhoun v. Burton, 64 Texas 510; Bass v. James, 83 Texas, 110.” It is also well settled that if a judgment is procured by fraud it is subject to attack, through a direct proceeding, at any time within four years from the date of its rendition, but in order to suspend the running of the statute of limitation, so as to permit such attack on a judgment after the expiration of four years, there must not only have been fraud in obtaining the judgment but it must have been coupled with such concealment of the fraud as to prevent the attacking party from ascertaining the fraud by the use of reasonable diligence. This proposition necessarily follows from the principle that in order for fraud to suspend the statute there must be no lack of diligence on the part of the person attacking the transaction, for if the fraud is not concealed but perpetrated in such a way as to charge him with knowledge he is in no position to enter a court of equity for redress. (Munson v. Hallowell, 26 Texas, 475; Texas & Pac. Ry. v. Gay, 86 Texas, 571.)

In this case the sheriff’s deed was a matter of public record, and in that deed it was recited that it was made by virtue of an execution issued under a certain judgment. That deed was placed on record and the exercise of the least diligence upon the part of appellants would have led to a discovery of the alleged fraud.

We have considered this matter as though the cross action constituted a direct attack on the judgment, which is by no means true. It is requisite in an attack upon a judgment rendered voidable by fraud in its procurement, that the suit should be brought in the court in which the judgment was rendered, and all of the parties to the fraud must be made parties. In the cross action of appellants neither the State of Texas nor the San Antonio Wational Bank were made parties. It might be that it being impossible to make the State a party appellants would be relieved from that, but that would offer no excuse for a failure to make the bank a party. (Smith v. Perkins, 81 Texas, 152.) In that case it was held that a cross action was a collateral attack, for the reasons that the judgment sought to be attacked had been rendered in a different court and all the original parties were not parties to the cross action. It is not held in that case that an attack on a judgment through a cross bill is a collateral attack merely because so made, and, while not abso *246 lutely necessary to the proper disposition of this case, in view of attacks made on the opinion of this court in the case of Scanlan v. Campbell, 55 S. W. Rep., 502, by appellees, we deem it not improper to say that no valid reason can be advanced why an attack, made through a cross bill on a judgment rendered in the same court, the same parties to the judgment being parties to the cause in which the cross bill is filed, would not be a direct one. The cross bill so attacking a judgment, would, to all intents and purposes, be an independent suit to set aside the judgment. We have seen no authority to the contrary. This does not aid the cause of appellants, however, because their cross bill was defective.

The second and third assignments are that the court erred in admitting the judgment in evidence entitled the State of Texas v. San Antonio National Bank et al., because the same showed on its face that it was a suit for taxes against an unknown owner, and the law made no provision at that time for a tax suit against an unknown owner; and because the judgment showed that the San Antonio National Bank was one of the defendants and no disposition was made of said defendant in the judgment.

In regard to the last objection it may be said that in a collateral attack it will be presumed in aid of the judgment that some disposition was made of the party not mentioned in the judgment prior to its rendition. (Crawford v. McDonald, 88 Texas, 626; Templeton v. Ferguson, 89 Texas, 47; Gullett v. O’Connor, 54 Texas, 415.)

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 347, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 241, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-taylor-texapp-1906.