Hubbart v. Willis State Bank

119 S.W. 711, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 504, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 383
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 119 S.W. 711 (Hubbart v. Willis State Bank) 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
Hubbart v. Willis State Bank, 119 S.W. 711, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 504, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 383 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from an inter *505 locutory order made in vacation by the district judge, dissolving a temporary injunction previously granted by him on motion of appellee.

The material facts set up in the petition for injunction are, in substance, that appellee, the Willis State Bank, on December 39, 1908, instituted suit in the District Court against appellants for debt .and foreclosure of a chattel mortgage on certain horses, mules and wagons; that on February 34, 1909, the clerk of said court issued an order of sale, purporting to be issued upon a judgment in said cause, which had been levied by the sheriff upon the property described therein, and that the same had been advertised for sale by the sheriff. The petition further states that the purported judgment upon which the order of sale issued was entered in the minutes of said court by the district clerk after the minutes had been signed by the district judge and after the court had adjourned for the term, and that the issuance of the execution upon such judgment was without authority and the execution void. As a further ground for the interposition of the court by writ of injunction, it is stated that appellants are engaged in farming, having under cultivation 300 acres of land of their own and 100 acres rented, that they have hired hands to assist in the cultivation of said land, in which cultivation they expected to use the teams and wagons seized by the sheriff, without which they would be unable to carry on said farming operations, which would result in the entire loss of any crop on said lands, for which they had no adequate remedy at law. The petition was duly verified by affidavit of appellants.

The temporary writ was granted by the district judge in chambers March 7, 1909, returnable' to the next regular term of said District Court in July, appellants executing satisfactory bond in the sum of $1,363.80. On March 13th defendants filed their answer to said petition, in which it alleges the filing of the suit by them for debt and foreclosure, that citation regularly issued and was served, that defendants Joseph Hubbart and Kate Hubbart made default and on January 13, 1909, while said, court was in session a judgment was rendered by said court in favor of plaintiff, the Willis State Bank, and against Joseph and Kate Hubbart for their said debt with foreclosure of their chattel mortgage; that thereupon on January 30, 1909, counsel for plaintiffs prepared a draft of a judgment in conformity with the judgment rendered, and the judge of the court having signified to counsel that he did not care to inspect the same, it was handed to district clerk with instructions immediately to enter same upon the minutes of the court. It is further alleged that thereafter, the exact date whereof can not be stated by defendant, the judgment was entered in the minutes of the court.

It appeared from both petition and answer that the District Court convened in the 11th day of January, 1909, and adjourned for the term on February 3, 1909. The answer of defendant was not sworn to. Defendant also, as a part of its answer, presented a general demurrer and several special exceptions to plaintiffs’ petition, and upon this answer also presented its motion to dissolve the temporary injunction. Hpon the hearing of the motion the general demurrer and special exceptions of defendant were all overruled by the judge. In addition to the sworn petition plaintiffs presented the affidavits of the *506 district clerk and also of A. W. Morris, counsel for plaintiffs, showing conclusively that in fact the judgment upon which the execution was issued was entered upon the minutes of the court 'by the district clerk after the minutes had been signed by the judge and after the court had adjourned for the term. The district clerk so positively states, and Morris states in his affidavit that about February 15, 1909, the court having adjourned on February 2d, he examined the minutes of the court with a view of ascertaining the kind of a judgment that had been rendered in said cause, and that at that time there was no entry upon the minutes of the court of such judgment. It was shown for- defendant that there was a regular judgment upon the minutes in favor of the Willis State Bank and against Joseph and Kate Hubbart for debt and foreclosure as set out in the execution or order of sale sought to be enjoined. Ro attempt was made to show when such entry was made or to contradict the allegations of the petition and supporting affidavits as to the facts of the entry of the judgment alter adjournment .of court. The district judge upon the hearing, after overruling the demurrer and exceptions ef defendant, dissolved the injunction and refused to allow an entry of the judgment nunc pro tunc upon defendant’s application for such order.

There is but one question presented by the appeal, which is: .Was the clerk authorized to enter the judgment in vacation, after the minutes had been signed by the judge and the court adjourned for the term, and to issue an execution upon such judgment?

The district judge overruled the general demurrer and special exceptions to the petition, thus in effect holding that the facts stated were sufficient to authorize the granting of the temporary injunction. The one essential fact, that the judgment was entered after adjournment, was not even denied by the unsworn answer, and was established beyond controversy by the sworn petition and supporting affidavits. In such case it is difficult to understand upon what ground the injunction was dissolved. (Article 3006, Rev. Stats.)

The contention of appellee is expressed in the following proposition: “Execution or order of sale may issue on a judgment duly rendered, although it has not been entered,” and the further proposition that the entry of the judgment on the minutes, being a ministerial act, could be done in vacation.

If the first proposition be sound, then it would not affect the execution if the judgment had not been entered upon the minutes at all. Appellants speak in their pleadings and briefs, of the judgment as being void because not entered' on the minutes in term time, and appellee devotes a good portion of its brief in combating this proposition. It is not correct -to say that the judgment is void for the reason assigned, and it is in no sense necessary to appellants’ right to the injunction that it should be held that the judgment is void, nor that they should have denied in their petition that the judgment had been rendered. Full- force and effect may be given to the authorities cited by appellee, that the failure of the clerk to enter judgment at all does not affect its validity as between the parties. In a proper proceeding to have -the judgment entered in the minutes nunc pro tunc, it would only be necessary to establish by proper evi *507 dence that it had, in fact, been rendered, but this proceeding, as seems to have been held by the district judge, can only be had at a regular term of the court. This, however, is an entirely different proposition from that upon which appellants’ right to the injunction rests, which is that the entry of the judgment by the clerk after the adjournment of the court was unauthorized and forms no part of the minutes of the court, and that the issuance of the execution was unauthorized and the execution (not the judgment rendered) was on this account void.

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Bluebook (online)
119 S.W. 711, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 504, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubbart-v-willis-state-bank-texapp-1909.