Johnson v. Barker

215 S.W. 348, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 8, 1919
DocketNo. 482.
StatusPublished

This text of 215 S.W. 348 (Johnson v. Barker) 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
Johnson v. Barker, 215 S.W. 348, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This suit was filed in the district court of Harris county by appellant, Mary Johnson, acting by her next friend, Moses Westbrook, against D. Barker and M. F. Hammond; the latter being sued in his capacity as sheriff of Harris county, and the nature of the suit being a direct attack by appellant on a judgment that was obtained by the appellee D. Barker against appellant and others in the district court of Harris county, on May 14, 1917. The purpose of the former suit, judgment in which was sought to be set aside and canceled by this suit, was to have foreclosed an express contract lien and deed of trust against a small tract of land, which it is claimed by the appellant in this suit constituted the homestead of herself and husband at the time the contract lien and deed of trust were executed.

The record in this cause shows without reasonable dispute, we think, the following facts:

*349 Oñ tlie 17tli day of October, 1912, one A. J. Johnson and appellant, Mary Johnson, who were at that time husband and wife, entered into a written contract with another A. J. Johnson, who it seems was a building contractor, by which it was stipulated and agreed that the said contractor, A. J. Johnson, in consideration of $1,055, would erect and construct for the said Mary Johnson and her husband a dwelling house on a small tract of land in Harris county, being of. the dimensions of 71x250 feet, which property constituted the homestead of said Mary Johnson and her then husband, A. J. Johnson. The dwelling was to be erected in accordance with certain specifications and in a workmanlike manner, and at the time of the execution of the written contract between the parties it was agreed that the consideration to be paid by Mary Johnson and her husband should be evidenced by 20 promissory notes, the first 19 being for the sum of $42 each, and the'twentieth being for the sum of $257. The notes were executed by Mary- Johnson and her husband, A. J. Johnson, and one of these notes became due every three months, and each provided for interest at the rate of 8 per eent. per annum from maturity, and also for the usual attorneys’ fees, etc. The written contract between the parties expressly provided that A. J. Johnson, the contractor, should have a lien on the premises above described to secure the payment of said notes, and this written contract and lien was duly acknowledged by both Mary Johnson and her husband, A. J. Johnson, (as required by the statute in order to fix a lien upon a homestead. At the same time this express contract lien was executed by the parties, Mary Johnson and her husband also executed in favor of the contractor, A. J. Johnson, a deed of trust as additional security for the erection and construction of said dwelling.

Some time after the execution of the contract lien, notes, and deed of trust above mentioned, A. J. Johnson, the contractor, by written assignment, transferred and assigned the same to Texas & Louisiana Lumber Company, which concern also in writing transferred and assigned the same to the appellee D. Barker. »

It appears from the record that only the first six notes executed by Mary Johnson and. her husband, A. J. Johnson, were ever paid, and D. Barker, being the owner and holder of the remaining unpaid notes and contract lien and deed of trust given to secure the payment of same, filed suit in the district court of Harris county against Blary Johnson and her husband, A. J. Johnson, and also the heirs of A. J. Johnson; it being alleged by the plaintiff Barker in that suit that the residence of A. J. Johnson was unknown, and also the residence of his heirs, if any, was unknown, and they were duly cited in that suit by publication, and Mary Johnson, who the plaintiff alleged was non compos mentis at that time, was cited by personal service, and the court appointed an attorney for said defendants cited by publication and also a guardian ad litem for said Mary Johnson in said cause.

The attorney appointed for. the defendants cited by publication appeared and filed an answer for them, consisting of a general demurrer and general denial, and also, as it seems from the record, appeared in his capacity as guardian ad litem for Mary Johnson ; but the record does not disclose the nature of the answer, if any, filed by him for her.

Upon the trial of the former cause, at the conclusion of the evidence the court peremptorily instructed a verdict (a jury having been demanded) in favor of the plaintiff, D. Barker, and upon the verdict so instructed entered judgment foreclosing the contract lien on the premises in question, but did not render a personal judgment against any of the defendants- for the unpaid balance due upon said notes; this for the reason that, 'at the time of their execution Mary Johnson being a married woman, no personal judgment could be rendered against her on .the notes, and at the time of the trial it being shown that her husband, A. J, Johnson, was dead, no personal judgment was rendered against him on the notes. This judgment was not appealed from and was .not in any manner altered or modified or questioned until this suit was filed by appellant attacking same.

The grounds of attack made upon the former judgment by the appellant in this case, according to her petition, are substantially as follows:

She alleged that at the time of the execution of the contract, lien, and notes sued on in the former suit, she (appellant, Mary Johnson) was .of unsound mind and incapable of making any contract, and especially incapable of executing said notes and contract lien; that said contractor, A. J. Johnson, and D. Barker, the plaintiff in the former cause,.and said Texas & Louisiana Lumber Company, each knew or ought to have known that she was of unsound mind at the time she executed said notes and contract lien; that service of citation in the former suit was made upon A. J. Johnson, her former husband, and his heirs by publication, and that, in fact, said A. J. Johnson was dead at the time the former suit was commenced; that she (appellant) was sued in the former action as a non compos mentis, and no answer was ever filed in said cause by her or by any one for her; that the land upon which the foreclosure was sought to be made in the former suit was, at the time of the execution of said notes and contract lien, the homestead of *350 herself and husband, and neither she nor her husband ever appeared in said former suit; that a judgment was obtained in said causé and the property levied upon and sold, and it was bought in by said Barker ; and that Sheriff Hammond was attempting to dispossess appellant, Mary Johnson, claiming authority to do so under said judgment and writ of possession thereon.

Appellant further attacks the former judgment on the ground that same did not pronounce a personal judgment on any of the notes sued on; further, that the petition upon which the judgment in the former suit was based did not allege that the contractor, A. J..

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 348, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-barker-texapp-1919.