Gutierrez v. Cuellar

236 S.W. 497, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 354
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 1922
DocketNo. 6656.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 497 (Gutierrez v. Cuellar) 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
Gutierrez v. Cuellar, 236 S.W. 497, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 354 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This case involves title and possession of 2% acres of land in Zapata county, together with some rock buildings, located thereon, of the value of $500. It appears from the pleadings that title to the land embracing this tract was obtained by-appellees’ ancestors through a grant ffom the King of Spain more than a century ago, and that at the time of the grant the family constructed the buildings and have continuously made their home therein from generation to generation up to this time. The primary purpose of this suit was to restrain the execution of a writ of .possession ousting appellees from the premises.

In December, 1918, Nestor Gutierrez brought an action in the district court of Zapata county, in trespass to try title, against Lucio Cuellar and Juan Cuellar Ochoa, two of the appellees here, to recover the title to the land involved. Juana Garcia de Cuellar, the remaining appellee, although the wife of Lucio, was not impleaded in that suit.-

In March, 1920, Antonia Vda. de Gutierrez, wife of Nestor Gutierrez, the original plaintiff, who had died since the filing of the suit, was substituted as plaintiff, and on the same day judgment by default was rendered in her favor against Cuellar and Ochoa for title and possession of the land. In this judgment it was recited that proper service had been had Upon the defendants.

On July 20, 1920, the defendants in said cause No. 118 brought this action against Mrs. Gutierrez and the sheriff of Zapata county to enjoin the threatened execution of a writ of possession issued out of that cause, and to set aside the judgment therein rendered. Juan Garcia de Cuellar, wife of Lucio Cuellar, intervened, adopting as her own the allegations in the plaintiffs’ petition, and claiming the premises involved as the homestead of her husband and herself. In ■answer to these pleadings the defendant below was content to rest her ease on general and special demurrers, and without general or other denial of the facts alleged in the pleadings of plaintiffs and interveners. The trial court overruled all these demurrers, and rendered judgment for the plaintiffs, setting aside the judgment rendered in cause No. 118, and perpetuating the injunction. So, if their pleadings stated any cause of action, the plaintiffs and interveners were entitled to recover, as they did. These pleadings, with the exhibits attached to them, cover aoout 40 pages in the transcript, rendering it impossible, of course, to here set out in detail the facts pleaded. The appeal presents two main questions: First, whether or net the judgment in cause No. 118 was void or voidable; and, second, whether or not a meritorious defense to the original suit was shown. These questions will be discussed in the order mentioned.

Appellees, as plaintiffs below, sought to set aside the judgment rendered against them in cause No. 118 on the grounds: (a) That service of citation upon them as defendants in that cause was void; (b) that the citation purported to have been served upon said defendants was fatally defective, in that it did not state in the body thereof the num-Der of the cause or the date of the filing of plaintiff’s petition in that cause, or the date upon which the defendants w'ere required to appear and answer thereto, or the date on which the citation was issued; (c) that defendants were illiterate and unlearned men, ignorant of the laws, and inexperienced in court procedure, and therefore did not know they were required by law to file any answers in the cause in order to present their *499 defenses, but nevertheless, as a matter fact, they attended in person the term of court to which the cause was returnable and remained present in said court throughout that and the two succeeding terms, in “readiness to present their defenses” in event the case was called; that neither the original or substituted plaintiff, in person, nor their attorney or any one representing them, attended either of said terms, nor did they visit the courthouse, or even the county seat at any time during either of said terms of court; that at the third term of court following the filing of the suit, in the presence, but without the knowledge, of defendants, and in the absence of the plaintiff or any of her representatives, the trial court of his own motion substituted the name of the original plaintiff, then deceased, with the name, or the latter’s widow, and, without hearing any evidence, rendered judgment for the substituted plaintiff against the defendants; that defendants did not learn of the renuition of this judgment until some four months later, and Jong after the court had adjourned for the term, and could not then with due diligence prepare to take the case up on writ of error within the time allowed by law for that purpose. Of

[1,2] It is well settled that the provisions of article 1852, R. S., prescribing the essentials of a citation, are mandatory and must be strictly construed, and that, unless the citation be in substantial compliance with these statutory requirements, it will not support a judgment by default. Pruitt v. State, 92 Tex. 434, 49 S. W. 366. Articles 1852 and 2180, which must be construed together, provide (article 1852) that the citation shall state the time of holding the term of court to which it is returnable, the date of the filing of plaintiff’s petition, and the file number- of the suit, and (article 2180) that the date of issuance of the citation “shall be noted on the same.”

• The citations purported to have been served upon the defendants in cause No. 118 directed the sheriff to command defendants to appear at the next regular term of the district court of Zapata county “on the fourth Monday after the first Monday in February, 1919, the same being the -■— day of- 19—.” This was a sufficient compliance with the requirement that the citation shall state the time of holding court. Ry. Co. v. Wheat, 68 Tex. 133, 3 S. W. 455; Cave v. Houston, 65 Tex. 619.

[3] The file number of the suit was omitted from the body of the citation, but was correctly shown in an indorsement over the clerk’s signature on the back thereof.' This was not a compliance with the statutory requirement that, the citation “shall state * * * the file number of the suit.” In order to meet that requirement the file number of the suit must appear in the body of the citation, and its indorsement on the back thereof will not suffice. Duke v. Spiller, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 237, 111 S. W. 787; Crenshaw v. Hempel, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 385, 130 S. W. 731.

[4] The same strict construction of the statute requires a holding that the omission from the citation of the date of filing of plaintiff’s petition renders the citation insufficient to support a judgment by default. Leavitt v. Brazelton, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 3, 66 S. W. 465; Dunn v. Hughes, 36 S. W. 1084.

[5] The date of the issuance of the citation was indorsed on the back of that instrument, over the signature of the clerk, as well as in the body thereof, and was in compliance with the statute, and is not subject to the objections appellant has raised here.

[6,7] A much more difficult question is presented, however, with reference to the failure of service of citation upon the defendants in cause No. 118.

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 497, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gutierrez-v-cuellar-texapp-1922.