Janes v. Adm'rs of Reynolds

2 Tex. 250
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 2 Tex. 250 (Janes v. Adm'rs of Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janes v. Adm'rs of Reynolds, 2 Tex. 250 (Tex. 1847).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Hemphill

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question presented by the record is, whether on the dissolution of the injunction the court had lawful authority to render summary judgment against the sureties in the bond on which the writ of injunction was issued, and this involves two considerations:

1st. Whether the court has authority in any Case to render judgment without nótiee to the parties on trial by jury, ón [252]*252bonds declared by statute to have on tbeir forfeiture the force and effect of judgment; and

2d. Whether such judgment should have been rendered on the bond given by the plaintiffs in error, for the purpose of obtaining the injunction.

This judgment was rendered before the organization of the ■state government, and it is contended that the statutory provision of 1841, authorizing summary judgments on injunction bonds, is void, as being in derogation of the rights secured by the seventh, ninth and eleventh sections of the declaration of rights in the constitution of the republic.

It will not be necessary for the determination of this question to enter into any critical examination of these provisions, or to ascertain with precision the exact scope and meaning, or the extent of the rights thereby secured. Eor the purposes of this investigation we might admit that the common law of England, instead of the laws of Spain, was the basis of our jurisprudence, and give to the terms the signification in which they are generally understood in the constitutions, charters and statutes of countries or states governed by the common law.

Does the due course of the law of the land ” render unconstitutional all statutes authorizing summary judgments without notice and the intervention of the trial by jury?

The terms “ laws of the land ” have been often construed, and somewhat variously defined.

When first used in the magna charta of the kings of England, they probably meant the established law of the kingdom, in opposition to the civil or Roman law, which was about being introduced into the land to the exclusion of the former laws of the country.

They are now, in their most usual acceptation, regarded as general public laws, binding all the members of the community under similar circumstances, and not partial or private laws, affecting the rights of private individuals, or classes of individuals. 2 Yerg. 602, 270.

Whatever may be the meaning of the terms laws of the land,” or “ due course of the law of the land,” they have never been held to enjoin in all cases a trial by jury as a requisite [253]*253indispensable to the validity of a judgment. That a party should have notice and an opportunity of being heard in his defense, and the right of trying disputed facts by a jury, are cardinal principles of the common law; but there are many exceptions in which one or two of these privileges were never enjoined, or may be regarded as renounced by the defendant.

A court does not intervene in the rendition of judgment by default, or on confession of the party, or on demurrer, nor in cases of contempt. Persons accused of high crimes and misdemeanors are, without a jury, imprisoned for safe custody; and under the common law of England, all causes in the courts of equity and admiralty, in courts military and ecclesiastical, are determined without the intervention of a jury.

Tinder the class of exceptions to the rule in relation to notice, may be ranked cases under the attachment laws and other laws notifying parties by publication, which by legal fiction operates as an actual notice; also summary proceedings against delinquent taxpayers and in confiscations of the property of absentee alien enemies, and in other cases of the like description. 2 McCord, 55; Peck (Tenn.), 448; 1 Haywood, 49.

In many of the states summary judgments are authorized by statutes on bonds given in judicial proceedings; and such laws have not been held to contravene the guarantees of their constitutions. 3 Stewart, 227; Minor (Ala.), 27.

The parties to this bond were cognizant of the statutory provision declaring such bonds on forfeiture to have the force and effect of a judgment, and having virtually renounced their right to notice and trial by jury, and no law or principle prohibiting such renunciation, the summary judgment rendered in the case cannot be impeached for the want of either. The law regards them in effect as having become parties to the record, and that in legal contemplation they are notified of all proceedings subsequent to their execution of the bond. But the obligors in statutory bonds declared by statute to have the force and effect of a judgment are not in point of fact precluded from redress or the benefit of trial by jury.

The 18th section of the statute of limitation, Laws of 1841,-p. 168, provides that the obligors in all such bonds shall have [254]*254one year next after the forfeiture of the same to move to quash the bond, and to have any issues tried by a jury which in a regular action on such bond might properly defeat or modify a recovery thereon against such obligo]* or obligors.

It is very questionable whether this provision will not be productive of all those vexations and delays which the summary proceedings are designed to avoid. It removes, however, the objection of a want of a jury trial, or other defense, as these are accorded to the defendant.

Having shown that summary judgments in bonds declared by law to have, on forfeiture, the force and effect of judgments, are not in derogation of rights secured by the constitution, we will proceed to inquire whether there was error in the judgment of the court below on the bonds presented in this record. The provision of law under which this bond was given is found in the fifth section of an act to regulate the granting and trial of injunctions, etc., Laws of 1841, p. 82, and requires the complainant to enter into bonds with sufficient security before the clerk of the court whence the injunction issues for the payment into court of the sum complained of, and all costs upon the dissolution of the injunction.

The condition of the bond is not very precisely defined, but sufficiently so to instruct the officer taking the bond in the discharge of his duty.

The bond in this record, after reciting that a writ of injunction has been issued (and which recital, if construed literally, would show that the injunction had been granted in Harris and not in Houston county, whence it really did emanate), proceeds to express the conditions, as follows: “Should the said circuit court set aside the above named judgment, then this obligation to be void in law; but should the court award the judgment for the whole amount or more, or confirm the former judgment, then this obligation to be and remain in full force and effect in law.”

On comparing these stipulations with the conditions imposed by the statute, there will be found a great dissimilarity in their features.

By the statute the obligors should covenant that on the dis[255]*255solution of the injunction they will pay the sum complained of and all costs; and on the performance of such condition the bond becomes void of course.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tex. 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janes-v-admrs-of-reynolds-tex-1847.