Gooch v. Sparkman

285 S.W. 897, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 974
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1926
DocketNo. 7598. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 897 (Gooch v. Sparkman) 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
Gooch v. Sparkman, 285 S.W. 897, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 974 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

Appellant appeals from a judgment for $632.70, and an additional amount of $63.27, on two notes executed by A. D. Evans and W. H. Daimwood to Albert Higby, dated November. 13, 1913, one for the principal sum of $150, and one for $125, with 8 per cent, interest per anum and attorney’s fees, and to foreclose the vendor’s lien securing the same upon certain lots of land.

The case was tried on September 3, 1919, and a personal judgment was instructed for appellee against A. D. Evans and W. H. Daimwood, the makers of the note to Higby, who assigned the notes to appellee. Subsequently Daimwood and Evans filed a motion for a new trial and to set aside the judgment against them, and on October 2, 1919, the motion was granted, and the entire judgment was set aside, and the cause thus reinstated stood for trial as though there had been no previous trial or judgment. On January 21, 1920, appellee amended his pleading and filed his second amended original petition, suing on the same notes, and sought to foreclose the lien previously asserted and sought to reform the description of the note as written in the notes and service thereof upon appellants.

Appellants’ answer, among other things, consisted of a plea of former judgment as a bar, general denial, the statutes of limitation of 2 and 4 years, as to a foreclosure of the lien, and against the reformation of the description.

The case was tried without a jury, and the court rendered a judgment in favor of appel-lee.

Appellants filed a motion containing 27 grounds upon which the court was requested to file findings of fact, and 16 ground’s requesting the court to file conclusions of law thereupon.

The findings of fact reflect all the issues involved in this case, and we find that they -are supported by the evidence. There was no bill of exceptions taken and presented to the court, and there was no complaint made and duly presented to the court, with request' for further or additional findings. If challenged at all, it was by assignments of error, for there is no bill of exceptions in the transcript whatever, preserving any ruling of the' court on any question involving the ruling of the court in regard to admitting or rejecting testimony; hence we must treat that matter as waived.

There is no proper predicate laid for any challenge to any finding or omission made in respect to the court’s deduction and finding of any fact necessary to support its judgment.

The first complaint presented by appellants to the judgment is' that, because on the former trial appellee sought and obtained a personal judgment only, against Daimwood and Evans, without a foreclosure of the lien, such judgment, though the same was set aside upon an application for a new trial, estopped appellee

The following colloquy occurred on the former trial upon entering the judgment:

“The Court: Do you mean to dismiss as to Gooch?
“Mr. Coleman:. No; we don’t dismiss as to them, but don’t ask any judgment against them, nor against the land.
. * * * * * * *
“Mr. Coleman: Now, your honor, this doesn’t have anything to do with the land, and therefore I am not caring anything about the de *898 scription of the property; these notes are executed by Evans and Daimwood, and therefore all I am going to ask is a judgment against the makers.”

The eighth paragraph of the court’s finding of fact is:

“I further find that in the original trial of this cause that the plaintiff stated in open court before the conclusion of said trial that, while he did not dismiss as to the defendants Gooch, still he did not ask any judgment against them nor against the land in controversy, and that all he was going to ask for was a judgment against the makers of the notes, Evans and Daimwood.”

. The court, in granting the order setting aside its former judgment, made the order that it set aside “whatever order of dismissal- has been made in such case.” The court having power and control of its judgments until after an adjournment, the effect of this action was as though no former judgment had been entered., if in fact it was entered, and the case stood for trial and adjudication as of the date of the entry. This ruling also applies to all correlative propositions raising the same, question in other forms.

Appellants cite to support their contention the cases of Boone v. Hulsey, 71 Tex. 176, 9 S. W. 531, and Railway v. Moore, 103 Tex. 349, 127 S. W. 797. Neither of those cases support the claim; but, if anything, perhaps they are authority in support of the ruling of the trial court. The distinguishing feature is that here the entire judgment was set aside upon a motion for a new trial, during the term of the court that made the previous orde'r, and the cause reinstated the same as though no previous action was had, and the cause proceeded to trial with amended pleadings. The assignment and all propositions flowing therefrom are overruled.

There is nothing in the contention that the alleged assumption of the notes and the foreclosure of the lien is barred -by the statute of limitations and the claim that the lien was barred by the statute of limitations. On this issue the court very properly found against appellants. There was no abandonment of the debt or lien, and, the lien being an incident to or security for the debt, it would continue as such as long as .the debt was vital and not itself barred; the lien would follow it as an incident and available for foreclosure.

There is nothing in the case, cited by appellants, of Mitchell v. Thomas (Tex. Civ. App.) 172 S. W. 719, as in support of their contention; to the contrary, it supports the ruling of the ‘trial judge, and the assignment is overruled.

We overrule the contention of appellants that there was no evidence that appellants assumed the notes except that it was recited in the record of the deed executed by Daim-wood and Evans that the consideration was the assumption of the notes.

There is no bill of exceptions tajren to the admission of the deed. The delivery of the deed to the purchaser and his acceptance thereof with the assumption clause is as binding on him as any other recital, whether the recited consideration be of money, notes, or the assumption of notes, and, in the al> senee of evidence to the contrary, is effective and binding upon the purchaser and those holding under him. This makes a prima facie case, and the burden rested upon the appellants to show the contrary.

Appellants’ eighth proposition is:

“That is the court erred in rendering any judgment to reform the description of the land as written, because the pleadings did not allege any fact nor was there any testimony as to any facts that there was a mutual mistake between the parties in executing the deed. It was agreed that an ex parte statement of W. O. Stewart might be admitted, subject to such legal objections as could be urged to it, if the witness was on the stand and testifying as therein stated. It is stated in the document, ‘it was intended in both the deed from Albert Higby to A. D. EVans and W. H. Daimwood.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 897, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gooch-v-sparkman-texapp-1926.