Freeman v. B. F. Goodrich Rubber Co.

127 S.W.2d 476, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 590
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 1939
DocketNo. 12567.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 127 S.W.2d 476 (Freeman v. B. F. Goodrich Rubber Co.) 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
Freeman v. B. F. Goodrich Rubber Co., 127 S.W.2d 476, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 590 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

LOONEY, Justice.

Earle Freeman appealed from an adverse judgment rendered in his suit filed April 1, 1936, in the nature of a bill of review, to vacate a judgment against him, rendered by the court below on June 25, 1923, in favor of B. F. Goodrich Rubber *477 Company, appellee. The ground on which appellant sought to vacate was that, the court rendering the judgment was without jurisdiction of his person, in that, he was never served with citation, did not appear in the case and had no knowledge of the pendency of the suit or of the rendition of the judgment, until in September, 1933, at which time, he was informed by a ' deputy sheriff of Dallas County that he held an alias execution issued on the judgment.

We do not deem it necessary to summarize the pleadings, as the decision will turn on the question of limitation; that is, whether appellant’s suit to vacate was brought within four years after he acquired knowledge of the existence of the judgment, or within four years after appellee attempted to enforce the same. The case was tried without a jury; the court filed lengthy findings of fact, largely evi-. dentiary, from which we will make a liberal statement, in order to show the events leading to the institution of the suit.

The court found that, about March 15, 1915, appellant and one James Fanning composing a partnership, styled “20-20 Company or Tire Company”, were engaged in buying and selling tires in the City of Dallas; that about May 1, 1915, the partnership was indebted to appellee for merchandise, in the sum of $3,641.65 and„ on that date, for a valuable consideration, appellee discharged and released appellant from liability for such indebtedness, and that from said date, the “20-20 Company” was operated by James Fanning and one R. R. Farry, as copartners, appellant having no further connection with the business; that on October 11, 1915, appellee field suit below, its docket number being 21113-B, styled B. F. Goodrich Rubber Company v. Earle Freeman, et al., against appellant and others, alleging an indebtedness against the defendants of $4,319.90, as shown by an itemized verified account, same being an indebtedness held by the Rubber Company against the “20-20 Company”, in which appellant formerly was a partner with Fanning; that citation was issued thereon October 15, 1915, and, although the sheriff’s return showed service on appellant, that, in fact, he was not served at all and, although attorneys filed a general answer therein for “defendants”, that appellant did not employ said attorneys and their act in filing the answer was without appellant’s knowledge or consent; that on June 25, 1923, the judgment sought to be vacated was rendered against appellant and others, but that “the said defendant Earle Freeman did not know of the filing or pendency of said suit and did not know that said judgment had been entered therein against him until some time after said judgment had been entered as referred to herein below”; that Charles D. Turner, of counsel for appellee in the cause that resulted in the judgment sought to be vacated, was diligent in prosecuting the suit to final judgment, but was not advised that appellant had not, been previously served with citation or that the attorneys who filed an answer in said cause for “defendants” were not authorized to represent appellant; that prior to his partnership with Fanning in the “20-20 Tire Company”, appellant had been engaged in the tire busines.s with one W. A. Gibson, and that judgments had been rendered against appellant and others on account of the failure of said business; that appellant knew of the existence of the judgments growing out of the latter partnership, and that shortly prior to November 26, 1926, Geo. K. Holland, a practicing attorney of Dallas, was employed by one Earl C. Freeman to cure certain objections made to the title to certain real estate in the City of Dallas, owned by him; said objections arose by reason of the judgments against appellant above mentioned, the same having been abstracted in the judgment abstract records of Dallas County; so, Mr. Holland communicated by telephone with appellant to ascertain if he were the Earle Freeman named in the said abstracts of judgment, and, in that connection, inquired if he were “the Earle Freeman who was formerly in partnership with W. A. Gibson in the tire business,” and that, after the telephone conversation, appellant went to the ofiice of the attorney on November 26, 1926, and made an affidavit (evidently prepared beforehand) substantially as follows: stating therein that his name was Earle Freeman, that he had resided in the City of Dallas twenty years; that he used the name Earl Freeman in his business transactions, stating, “I am the Earl Freeman who was defendant in the following styled and numbered cases”, naming four cases by number and style, and the courts in which they pended, including “B. F. Goodrich Rubber Company v. Earl Freeman, et al., No. 21113-B in the 44th Judicial District Court of Dallas County, Texas”, stating further that “in *478 each above styled and numbered case judgment was rendered against me as well as the other persons named therein and said judgments are of record in the abstract judgment records of Dallas County, Texas, as follows (naming volumes and pages)”; stating further that he had never gone under the name of Earl C. Freeman, had never done business or owned property under that name; that he was not and never had been the owner in whole or in part of any interest in the real estate owned by Earl C. Freeman; that he knew Earl C. Freeman, but was not related to him. The court further found that appellant read the affidavit, but “that his reading thereof was hurried and superficial and that he did not actually realize and understand that the affidavit contained any reference to any suit against him by the B. F. Goodrich Rubber Company, growing out of said Earle Freeman’s partnership with James Fanning and that he did not actually realize and understand that such judgment had been entered against him until September, 1933, when a deputy sheriff of Dallas County, by telephone, advised him that an alias execution had been issued on said judgment”. The court also found that neither misrepresentation, concealment nor fraud of any nature was practiced upon appellant and that he “had full opportunity to read and understand said entire affidavit before he signed, subscribed and swore to same”.

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.W.2d 476, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-b-f-goodrich-rubber-co-texapp-1939.