Lee v. Heuman, Guardian

32 S.W. 93, 32 S.W. 94, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 666, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 152
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1895
DocketNo. 863.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 32 S.W. 93 (Lee v. Heuman, Guardian) 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. Heuman, Guardian, 32 S.W. 93, 32 S.W. 94, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 666, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 152 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Appellee, as guardian of Ernst Heuman, a lunatic, instituted this suit to review and set aside a judgment by default, obtained in the County Court by appellant against Ernst Heuman, before the latter had been adjudged insane. The petition alleged, in substance, that the former suit was brought to recover the sum of $500, claimed by appellant as compensation for performing a surgical operation upon Ernst Heuman; that citation was served upon Heuman, a trial had, and judgment rendered against him, while he was insane and incapable of representing himself, and when he was unrepresented by guardian ad litem or otherwise; that the amount claimed by and awarded to appellant, as his fee, was excessive and unreasonable, and that $100 would have been adequate- compensation for the services rendered. It was also alleged that execution had issued on the judgment, and that the amount thereof had been collected by *667 the sale of property, and received by appellant. The prayer was that the judgment be set aside and canceled or that such decree be entered as “will be just and equitable” and for general relief.

It is unnecessary to state the defensive pleadings. The' case was tried by jury, the court submitting special issues, and a verdict was returned upon which judgment was rendered setting aside the former judgment, allowing appellant only $300 as compensation for his services, and adjudging that appellee recover the $200 collected in excess of that sum.

The question in regard to the disqualification of the county judge will not arise on another trial and we deem it unnecessary to discuss it at any length. We are of the opinion, however, that the evidence adduced on that point failed to show that the relation of attorney and client ever existed between the county judge and Heuman. The evidence shows only conversations between Montgomery, the agent of Heuman, and the attorney, who afterwards became county judge, in which the latter expressed some opinion as to questions which are not involved in the present litigation, but does not show that the attorney was employed or in anyway enlisted in or identified with the controversy. Montgomery was not authorized to engage counsel for Heuman, and it does not appear that he did so. Mere casual conversations and expressions of opinion by an attorney, with reference to controversies when he does not in someway become the counsel of a party to it, can not, by the most liberal construction of the language of the Constitution, be held to disqualify him when he becomes judge to try the cause. He has not “been counsel in the case.” The cases referred to do not express any different doctrine. Slaven v. Wheeler, 58 Texas, 23; Newcome v. Light, Id., 141. The question there was not whether the relation of attorney and counsel had existed, but whether or not, it having existed with reference to the controversy, that fact disqualified the attorney from sitting as judge in the case which grew out of such controversy. Here it is not shown that the relation was ever assumed with reference either to the controversy or to the case in court.

We are of the opinion that the court did not err in overruling the exceptions to the petition. It is true that suits may be brought and judgments rendered against insane persons, and such judgments are valid until set aside in some proper proceeding. They are subject, however, like other judgments, to be reviewed and set aside by a court of equity upon a proper showing. After the term at which they are rendered has closed they become final like other judgments, and are subject to be reviewed only by appellate proceedings or by the court rendering them upon the principles which govern courts of equity in proceedings in the nature of a review. Tinder such principles a party against whom a judgment has been rendered upon a claim against which he had a good defense will be allowed to reopen the judgment and set up his defense, provided he proceeds with proper diligence and can show a good reason why he did not present his defense before the judgment, *668 was rendered. In this case the reason for not presenting the defense set up is, that the defendant in the first suit was insane and incapable of understanding the purpose of the citation and of making a defense to the action. We can not see wherein his situation is worse than would be that of a defendant who has been prevented by sickness or other providential hindrance from asserting rights at the proper time; nor why his guardian, when qualified to represent him, should not be heard in order to protect his interests and free him from an unjust judgment rendered against him when he could not defend himself. Of course, if the judgment was not unjust, if there was no meritorious defense to the suit, there is no ground upon which equity will interfere. But if the judgment was unjust, and established a claim for which the lunatic was not legally liable, his insanity should be treated as a sufficient excuse for the failure to plead to the former suit. 1 Black on Judgments, sec. 205; Denni v. Elliott, 60 Texas, 337; Ewing v. Wilson, 63 Texas, 88.

The allegations of the petition stated a case in which a judgment for $500 had been taken when the claim did not exceed $100, thus showing, if true, that the judgment was unjust and that there was a just and meritorious defense against the greater part of the claim. Parts of the petition were excepted to as being too general, but they were made specific by other averments. The allegation in regard to the sale of the property under execution was proper in order to show the right to recover back from appellant any amount received by him in excess of the sum to which he should be found entitled. The characterization of the execution and sale as illegal, as well as other conclusions of the pleader, were immaterial. The merits of the cause of action depended on the facts stated. It was proper for plaintiff, as part of the history of the case and of his appointment as guardian, to allege the adjudication of the insanity of Ernst Heuman by . the County Court.

There were objections urged during the trial to many questions asked medical experts in order to elicit their opinions as to the value of the service rendered by appellant to Ernst Heuman on the ground that such questions did not properly state the facts upon which the .opinion should be based. It is not essential in conducting an examination of this character that each question should embrace every fact which it might be contended should affect the value of the service. Different hypotheses may be put so as to elicit opinions as to the different groups of facts, though there must be evidence of the existence of the facts supposed. Thus in the present instance it is contended, that the amount of the compensation for the operation of litholopaxy would depend upon all the circumstances of the particular ■case, such as symptoms presented by the patient, the emergency of the situation, the danger to life, and the skill of the particular operator. This may be true, and yet we think it would be admissible to ■prove what would be a proper charge for such operations in ordinary *669 cases, leaving the jury to determine from all the facts how far that should be varied in order to give proper remuneration for the particular service.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W. 93, 32 S.W. 94, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 666, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-heuman-guardian-texapp-1895.