Evans v. Young County Lumber Company

368 S.W.2d 783
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 1963
Docket16427
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 368 S.W.2d 783 (Evans v. Young County Lumber Company) 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
Evans v. Young County Lumber Company, 368 S.W.2d 783 (Tex. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Our opinion in this case, filed under date of May 3, 1963, is withdrawn and the following substituted therefor.

This case is companion to Wall et al. v. Young County Lumber Company, Tex.Civ.App., 368 S.W.2d 789 our opinion in which was handed down May 3, 1963. Defendants having the material interest in the instant case are Bill Jack Evans and The First National Bank of Bowie, Texas.

In the oral presentation of argument in the two cases, attorneys in both represented and agreed that the cases could and should be considered at the same time. The judgment under examination grew out of the litigation in said companion case and is supported, if at all, by the judgment or judgments therein entered. We deem it particularly important so to mention for much omitted from the transcript in the instant case may be found in the transcript of that to which it is companion. In view of the representations and agreement of the attorneys, we have, in our work upon the instant opinion, referred to and considered as part of the record before us instruments in the other transcript. We have not directed the clerk of the trial court to bring up said instruments in a supplemental transcript, believing that such a requirement would occasion needless expense under the circumstances, and furthermore aware that the parties would be entitled to file such a supplemental transcript at a later time if subsequent developments indicate any necessity.

Judgment in the instant case (given the number 14,654 in the trial court) was one by which the trial court declared that when title to three certain lots and parcels of land was apparently conveyed from one *785 Oswalt to Lakeland Lumber and Construction Company, by deed dated July 29, 1960, the actual grantee under legal and equitable principles was M. D. Wall, the alter ego of Lakeland. Further, that since Young County Lumber Company, plaintiff, had on October 27, 1960, obtained a personal judgment against M. D. Wall in the principal sum of $28,812.54 (in the same district court) in Cause No. 14,406, styled Young County Lumber Company v. M. D. Wall,— abstract of which judgment having been recorded on October 27, 1960, in Vol. 11, p. 281, Abstract of Judgment Records of Young County, — a valid judgment lien then and there became fixed upon said real property aforedescribed and as to which plaintiff’s lis pendens notice had been placed of record when its suit was filed; and that the lien of said plaintiff having become then and thereby fixed, and encumbering said real property, was prior and superior to the liens against the same property claimed by defendants Bill Jack Evans and The First National Bank of Bowie, Texas. The judgment also declared that plaintiff Young County Lumber Company was entitled to issuance and levy of execution upon the three lots pursuant to the judgment it had obtained and recorded on October 27, 1960. In part, the judgment was declarcb-tory, and in part was quasi m rein as fixing the status inter se"of the priority of the parties’ liens on realty.

From said judgment the defendants appealed.

Judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

We have become convinced that the “judgment” which was entered under date of October 27, 1960, in Cause No. 14,406 could not under any theory have become a “final judgment” prior to date of May 21, 1962, when another “judgment” was entered under the same cause so docketed, numbered and styled upon completion of the trial of issues on the Trespass to Try Title phase of plaintiff’s suit. Furthermore, an appeal was perfected from the “judgment” in Cause No. 14,406, entered May 21, 1962, with a supersedeas bond as well as a cost bond filed. Our opinion in said case is the one companion hereto, being this day published and styled as Wall et al. v. Young County Lumber Company. We need not dwell upon the question of whether the trial court judgment in Cause No. 14,406 had ever become final and ap-pealable, for in so far as requisite for the purposes of our disposition of the instant appeal a treatment of it as having become final as of the date of its entry on May 21, 1962 would nevertheless be subsequent to the time of the conduct of the trial considered on the instant appeal. For convenience it will generally be so treated. Judgment therein was entered several weeks after the time of this trial, but we believe this to be of no consequence, the time of the trial being of paramount importance.

Judgment on the instant appeal (in Cause No. 14,654) was entered June 15, 1962. It followed and was pursuant to trial begun on April 23, 1962, with the jury’s verdict therein returned on May 11, 1962. Propriety of conduct of the trial and of any judgment rendered on the verdict returned therein was necessarily predicated upon the “finality” of that judgment in Cause No. 14,406 which was entered on October 27, 1960. This is so because the trial of the case before us on this appeal was held upon the theory that a judgment lien had attached upon the three lots perforce the judgment on October 27, 1960. No lien could have attached if said judgment was “interlocutory”. The first “judgment” was placed of record in the Abstract of Judgment Records of Young County on October 27, 1960. We do not know that the later judgment in Cause No. 14,406 was ever recorded.

Subject matter, or an integral part thereof, of plaintiff’s cause of action tried in Cause No. 14,654 was the “finality” of the judgment entered on October 27, 1960, for the subsequent trial was of a suit *786 based on that judgment. If that judgment was interlocutory rather than final, and the fact was so shown on its face, it would in Texas be treated as a judgment which was void on its face, or as no judgment at all. No court has jurisdiction to enter a valid decree based upon such a void judgment for it constitutes subject matter of which no court has jurisdiction so long as its void character persists, and having no authority to base orders or judgments thereon under any circumstances, any such that a court does purport to make or render are null and void. They may be collaterally attacked in any court and at any time, including a time after appeal is perfected. Black on Judgments, p. 347, “Collateral Impeachment of Judgments”, § 278, “Judgment Void on its Face may be Attacked collaterally”; Withers v. Patterson, 1864, 27 Tex. 491, 498; Frankel v. Satterfield, 1890 (Del.), 19 A. 898. See also Restatement of the Law, Judgments, p. 65, “Validity of Judgments”, § 11, “Collateral Attack”; 49 C.J.S. Judgments § 20, Matured Cause of Action p. 51; Morrow v. Corbin, 1933, 122 Tex. 553, 62 S.W.2d 641. See also 30A Am.Jur., “Judgments”, § 863, “(Grounds for Collateral Attack) — Generally”, § 912, “Necessity of Valid Judgment”, § 939, “Finality of Judgment”, § 944, “(Validity of Judgment) — Generally”, and § 945, “Jurisdiction”.

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Wall v. Young County Lumber Company
368 S.W.2d 789 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1963)

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