Lee v. British-American Mortgage Co.

115 S.W. 320, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 272, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 208
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 115 S.W. 320 (Lee v. British-American Mortgage Co.) 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
Lee v. British-American Mortgage Co., 115 S.W. 320, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 272, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 208 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This is a suit by W. J. Lee, Clara Pearl Cary and her husband, O. C. Cary, and Cumi Lee, against the defendants in error, the British-American Mortgage Company, Limited, and S. L. McCracken and T. MT. Simmons, in the nature of a bill of review to set aside a judgment of the District Court of Brown County, purporting to have been rendered on May 22, 1901, and a judgment bv the same court rendered January 11, 1902, correcting a mistake in the date of the entry of the first judgment named from May 22 to June 22, 1901.

The substantial grounds alleged, if true, are that the plaintiffs in error had no notice of the rendition of these judgments, and did not authorize the same, and that the trial judge who rendered the same was disqualified by reason of owning an interest in the property involved, and that he had acted as counsel in the case upon which these judgments were formerly based.

The trial court sustained demurrers to plaintiff’s bill, and they declining to amend, the case was dismissed at their cost, from which judgment they have prosecuted this writ of error.

The judgments here attacked were merely formal, carrying into effect a consent decree by the Court of Civil Appeals, in cause No. 905, British-American Mortgage Company v. W. J. Lee, in March, 1901, which was by agreement of parties in this court subsequently corrected and amended. This judgment, in part, was'an affirmance of the judgment of the trial court, and was in part reversed and rendered with instructions to the trial court. The parties to this judgment were defendant in error in this case, British-American Mortgage Co., and the plaintiff in error Lee herein, and the other plaintiffs in error Clara Pearl Lee and Emma Cumi Lee, who were named as interveners in that case. That judgment disposed of and settled the title and interest of each party to the land in controversy, and directed the trial court to partition same among the parties entitled thereto by virtue of the decree rendered by this court. From this judgment so rendered it is not made *275 to appear that a writ of error was prosecuted to the Supreme Court, nor was any complaint of that judgment made in this court by the interveners that they were not parties thereto or bound by the same, on the ground that they had no notice of the original suit and were not interveners therein. As to the plaintiff in error Lee being a party to that suit and the judgment therein rendered there can be no question. We do not understand that the plaintiff’s bill of review seriously undertakes to attack this judgment; but, however, if such purpose is claimed, it consists merely in inferential averments, which are too meager and obscure to be considered in a case of this nature. It merely says that, as to the original case in the District Court, neither plaintiffs in error Cumi Lee or Clara Pearl Lee were served with citation of the third amended original petition filed in that case, and had no notice of the same, and they did not authorize any person to appear in said case after said petition was filed, and that O. C. Cary was never made a party to that suit. Mo facts are shown which demonstrate that the third amended petition, if one was so filed in the original case, was substantially different from the petitions that preceded it, and that they did not appear in the case as interveners prior to the time of filing this amendment, so as to subject themselves to the jurisdiction of the court, nor is it made to appear that they did not agree or consent, as interveners, to the judgment agreed upon by the parties and rendered by this court. Mor is it made to appear that facts did not exist that would dispense with the necessity of joining the husband, 0. C. Cary, or that he did not consent to the agreed judgment rendered by the court in the original case.

As to the attack upon the judgments rendered by the District Court, carrying into effect the decree rendered by this court, it appears that, by virtue of the mandate issued by this court the trial court, on the 22d day of June, 1901, entered the judgment directed to be rendered, and appointed commissioners of partition, but by a mistake the judgment was entered as rendered on May 22, 1901. Thereafter, in July, 1901, the plaintiffs in error in this case filed a motion in the trial court to set aside the judgment rendered in that court upon the mandate from this court, on the ground that when rendered, in May, the Court of Civil Appeals still retained jurisdiction, and that the mandate had been prematurely issued. In reply to this motion the British-American Mortgage Company, among other things, stated in its answer that the entry of judgment as given, of May 22d, was a mistake, and that the actual date of entry and rendition was June 22, 1901, and prayed that such mistake be corrected by a judgment of the District Court to that effect. On January 11, 1902, the plaintiff’s motion, with the answer of the British-American Mortgage Company, was heard in the District Court, and judgment was there rendered declaring the mistake, and correcting the same in the date of the entry of the judgment, and it was determined that the date of rendition in that court was June 22d, instead- of May 22d, and proceeded to formally enter a decree, as instructed by this court, and appointed commissioners of partition. From this judgment the plaintiff W. J. Lee appealed, but there was no appeal by the other plaintiffs in error.

In determining that appeal this court held that the mandate was not prematurely issued, and that the trial court rendered the proper judg *276 ment. 70 S. W., 775. The attack made hy the plaintiffs in error in their bill upon this judgment is contained in the following averments: “That, after filing of their said motion, the said Clara Pearl Lee and Cumi Lee did not afterwards appear in this court to prosecute or try same; that they were never notified of the motion of the BritishAmeriean Mortgage Company, or its answer in said cause, seeking to reform the minutes and orders and judgment of this court referred to in said last above described judgment. And they never in any way waived notice or service thereof; that at the time each and all of the aforesaid orders, decrees and judgments were rendered, the said Clara Pearl Lee was married to said O. C. Cary, and that he was not a party to said suit or motion in any way, and did not waive or have any legal notice thereof, and did not consent or agree to any of said decrees, orders or judgments aforesaid, and that said judgment was rendered and entered without their consent or knowledge, or the consent of W. J. Lee, and it was long after the adjournment of the term of the court in which said last mentioned judgment was rendered before Clara Pearl Cary and O. C. Cary and Cumi Lee learned of said judgment; that at the time said judgment was rendered, on June 22, 1901, and said last above described judgment was rendered, the judge who tried said case and rendered said judgment was, at the time of said trial and rendition of said judgment, interested, together with his father, in said case, and that they and each of them were claiming the 320-acre tract and the 160-acre tract of land ' involved in this suit, as will more fully show from the deed dated November 3, 1901, executed by John Murphy, Constable of Precinct No. 1, Brown County, Texas, to G. I. Goodwin and John W. Goodwin, recorded in Book 30, pp. 437, 438 and 439, deed records of Brown County, Texas, and that said judge had, prior to the rendition of said judgment, acted as counsel in this suit.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 S.W. 320, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 272, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-british-american-mortgage-co-texapp-1908.