Lemaster v. Dalhart Real Estate Agency

121 S.W. 185, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 302, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 493
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 5, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 185 (Lemaster v. Dalhart Real Estate Agency) 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
Lemaster v. Dalhart Real Estate Agency, 121 S.W. 185, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 302, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 493 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

COKNER, Chief Justice.

Appellant instituted this suit in the District Court of Dallam County on ¡November 5, 1908, to enjoin and to vacate a judgment by default rendered in the same court on April 13, 1906, in favor of appellee, the Dalhart Real Estate Agency, and against appellant Mike C. LeMaster for the sum of seventeen hundred and eighty-six dollars. From this judgment no appeal or writ of *304 error was ever prosecuted. At the inception of the present suit a temporary injunction was granted as prayed for, but' at a term of the court thereafter, viz., on April 16, 1909, the court sustained appellee’s general demurrer to appellant’s petition and ordered the dissolution of the injunction. Appellant obtained leave to amend his petition and the cause on the merits was continued for the term. To the order dissolving the injunction, however, appellant excepted and duly prosecutes an appeal therefrom to this court.

The grounds upon which appellant in the petition excepted to bases his right to an injunction are: First, that the pleadings in the original suit affirmatively show that appellee had no right of recovery as adjudged on April 13, 1906; second, that said judgment of April 13, 1906, was predicated upon an amended petition which set up a new cause of action and to which appellant had-not been cited to answer; and third, that the citation in the original suit served upon appellant wras insufficient to confer jurisdiction of the court over his person. In verification, of these averments the citation, the original and the amended original petition in the original suit were attached as exhibits to the petition for injunction, which also further set forth that no indebtedness as adjudged in fact ever existed, and gave appellant’s excuse, to be hereinafter more particularly noticed, for not having earlier sought to set aside the judgment of which complaint is made.

The original petition in the suit culminating in the judgment of 1906 averred as a basis for the action that the plaintiff (appellee herein) was engaged in the real estate business, and on January 3, 1906, “had for sale the 7,489 acres in Dallam County, Texas, of and belonging to one-W. M. Pardue, and that thereafter plaintiff offered said land to defendant at the sum of $5.50 per acre, wherein plaintiffs were to receive the sum of five percent commission for selling same to any one on the following terms, $2,500 cash, balance in the following payments: one-third, less $2,000, in sixiy days, with remainder in one, two and three years at interest at the rate of eight percent per annum from date thereof.” The petition further alleged that the defendant therein by telegram accepted said offer but later breached the contract of purchase, which at all times they were able and willing to complete, to plaintiff’s damage ten hundred and twenty-four dollars, for which there was a prayer for recovery. The amended petition, filed after appellant had been personally served with the citation herein assailed, was substantially the same as the original petition, save that it set forth the correspondence ending in -appellee’s acceptance of terms and agreement to buy, and concluded with a prayer for damages in the sum of seventeen hundred and eighty-six dollars instead of ten hundred and twenty-four, as originally sought. The defects in the citation served upon appellant which it is insisted invalidates the judgment of April 13, 1906, are that, the citation did not give the date of the filing of the original petition and failed to command the defendant to appear and answer the petition.

The case has been presented to tís on the theory that the defects pointed out render the judgment of April 13, 1906, absolutely void and subject to collateral attack, the argument being that it is necessary to so conclude in order to authorize the injunction, It is t'o be ab- *305 served, however, that this is not a ease where the judgment is collaterally brought in question, as where the judgment is offered as a muniment of title in a suit of trespass to try title, or the sale of a given piece of property is sought to be enjoined, but one where the judgment itself is the direct object of the attack. It is in the nature of a bill of review for a new trial after the term and after the time allowed for an appeal or writ of error, the petition setting up the defects in the proceedings, alleging a meritorious defense, and giving an excuse for the delay. Hence this suit constitutes a direct and not a collateral attack upon the judgment of April 13, 1906. (Crawford v. McDonald, 88 Texas, 626; Foust v. Warren, 72 S. W., 404.) This being true, we need not discuss the question whether the judgment of 1906 is void in an absolute sense, although inclined to agree with appellee that it is not) but need only determine whether the defects complained of are available in a direct proceeding as an appeal, writ of error, or for injunction, as here. Of this we entertain no doubt.

It was clearly decided by our Supreme Court on writ of error in Tinsley v. Dowell, 87 Texas, 23, that a mere selling agent or broker has no such interest in a contract for the purchase of land secured by him as authorizes a recovery of damages in the way of lost commissions from the proposed purchaser who has refused to comply with the contract. To the same effect is the decision in the case of Tinsley v. Anderson, 33 S. W., 266, by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth Judicial District. On the authority of these decisions, which we approve, we are of opinion that in neither the original nor amended original petition upon which the judgment of April 13, 1906, is predicated, did appellee show a cause of action entitling him to recover any sum of money from appellant, and the judgment -therefore was clearly erroneous. We are not' inclined to attach any weight to the fact that the amended petition prayed for the recovery of a larger amount than was sought in the original, it appearing that it was a mere enlargement explainable by mathematical calculation from the number of acres, the price per acre, and the rate of commission stated alike in both petitions, but the omission of the citation to give the date of the filing of appellee’s petition also renders the default' judgment of April 13, 1906, erroneous. See Durham v. Betterton, 79 Texas, 223; Dunn v. Hughes, 36 S. W., 1084.

Appellant’s petition distinctly alleging -that appellant in fact was not indebted to appellee as adjudged in 1906, or in 'any other way, we have but to determine whether the facts averred sufficiently excuse appellant’s failure to prosecute the usual legal remedy by appeal or writ of error for the correction of the errors in the judgment. On this subject the petition alleges in substance that at the time of the suit in 1906 appellant was residing in Altus in the State of Oklahoma; that soon after the service of citation upon him and before the meeting of the court at Dalhart, Texas, he employed W. T. McConnell, an attorney-at-law residing at Altus, “to look into the matter for this plaintiff and ascertain whether or not there was any cause of action against this plaintiff, and whether or not there was any sufficient service to confer jurisdiction upon this plaintiff, and that in case there was such *306 cause of action, and in ease the court at Dalhart had acquired jurisdiction over this plaintiff, then the said W. T.

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 185, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 302, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemaster-v-dalhart-real-estate-agency-texapp-1909.