McCaulley v. Western Nat. Bank

173 S.W. 1000, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 45
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1915
DocketNo. 8079.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 1000 (McCaulley v. Western Nat. Bank) 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
McCaulley v. Western Nat. Bank, 173 S.W. 1000, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 45 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

The Western National Bank of Ft. Worth, Tex., brought suit on September 29, 1913, in the Forty-Eighth district court of Tarrant county, Tex., against R. L. Mc-Caulley, W. T. Trammell, E. Q. Daniel, and J. T. Haley, on a promissory note. Citation issued to Nolan county, Tex., on September 30, 1913. This citation named the plaintiff in the suit as the “Western National Bank,” omitting “of Ft. Worth, Tex.,” and omitting the names of the defendants, and the signature of the district clerk being typewritten and the space left blank, so that the typewritten signature of the clerk was the only signature subscribed to said citation. Thereafter, on January 19, 1914, an alias citation issued again to Nolan county, Tex., addressed to R. L. MeCaulley, W. T. Trammell, and E. Q. Daniel. By its terms the parties defendant were commanded “to appear before the district court of Tarrant county, Tex., Forty-Eighth district, at the next regular term thereof to be held at the courthouse in the city of Ft. Worth on the first Monday in February, A. D. 1914, the same being the 2d day of said month.” The officer’s return on this writ indicates service had upon E. Q. Daniel January 24, 1914, upon R. U. McCaulley January 26, 1914, and upon W. T. Tram-mell January 28, 1914. The defendant J., T. Haley was served at Harris in Sullivan county, Mo., with nonresident notice on January 27, 1914; said notice being issued December 31, 1913. On February 5th, the cause was transferred by the judge of the Forty-Eighth judicial district of Tarrant county, Tex., to the Sixty-Seventh judicial district court, Tar-rant county, Tex., and on March 3, 1914, in the latter court a judgment by default was rendered in favor of the Western National Bank of Ft. Worth, Tex., against the four defendants named, jointly and severally, for $1,553.10, principal, interest, and attorney’s fees, from which judgment defendants appealed by writ of error;- the petition and bond in error being filed in said court April 8, 1914.

[1] In their first assignment of error the plaintiffs in error complain that the first citation issued September 30, 1913, was fatally defective, in that it did not state the name of the plaintiff correctly and did not state the names of the defendants at all; and in their second assignment they allege error because said citation did not state the names of the defendants; and in their third assignment they allege error because said citation did not state the correct name of the plaintiff.' We believe these assignments are well taken and should be sustained. Article 1852, Revised Statutes, 1911; Heath v. Fraley, 50 Tex. 211; Higgins v. Shepard, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 365, 107 S. W. 79; Delaware Western Construction Co. v. F. & M. Nat. Bank of Gilmer, 33 Tex. Civ. App. 658, 77 S. W. 628; So. Pac. Co. v. Block Bros., 84 Tex. 21, 19 S. W. 300; So. Pac. Co. v. Burns, 23 S. W. 288; Bickford v. Refugio Land & Irri. Co., 143 S. W. 1189.

In Delaware Co. v. F. & M. Nat. Bank, supra, the following language is used:

“The first question presented is: Will a citation which does not comply with the statute, in that it does not state the names of the parties to the suit, support a judgment by default? It has been repeatedly held that such a citation is fatally defective, and will not authorize a judgment by default” — citing a number of cases.

In the So. Pac. Company Cases, supra, it was held that, where the petition named the defendant as the “So. Pac. Railway Company,” and the citation was addressed to the company as so named, such citation did not state the name of the “So. Pac. Company”; “the So. Pacific Railway Company and the So. Pacific Company cannot be regarded as identical; the names indicate different and distinct entities.”

While in these cases the rule applied with respect to the defendant, we see no reason why the same rule is not applicable in the case of the plaintiff; the statute requiring that the names of the parties, both plaintiff and defendant, be set forth in the writ. If the corporate name of the plaintiff was the “Western National Bank of Ft. Worth, Tex.,” the phrase “of Ft. Worth, Tex.,” is a part of the corporate name and necessary to inform the defendants as to who the plaintiff is, and we do not believe that the designation of the name of the plaintiff as contained in the citation will support a judgment in favor of the “Western National Bank of Ft. Worth, Tex.”

“Citations are materially defective and wholly insufficient to authorize a judgment by default, unless they contain the names of each and every defendant in the cause.” Portwood v. Wilburn, 33 Tex. 713.
“If the citation is defective in that regard, and a judgment by default be rendered without any amendments of the writ, the defendant may avail himself of the invalidity of such service on him on error in the Supreme Court.” Norvell v. Garthwaite, 25 Tex. 584.
“And it is necessary that a summons should recite the names of all the defendants to an action, even though a copy of the petition be served, which petition named all the defendants.” Battle v. Eddy, 31 Tex. 368.

[2,3] Defendant in error urges that, although the citation of September 30, 1913, was defective, the defendants seeking to reopen the judgment based thereon must allege some defense and the nature of his defense to the cause of action, citing Kitchen v. Crawford, 13 Tex. 516; Snow v. Hawpe, 22 Tex. 168; Schleicher v. Markward, 61 Tex. 103; and other cases. In all of these cases the question of the sufficiency of the service arose under a collateral attack on the judgment, and the rule of “meritorious defense” applied; but this is a case of direct attack, and we do not believe that the cases cited are in point. The failure of the citation to give the name *1002 of the defendants in giving the style of the suit would be cured if the names of the defendants had been given correctly in the latter part of the writ. Guinan v. City of Waco, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 445, 54 S. W. 611. But in the case before us, the names of the defendants are given nowhere in the writ as defendants. After a careful examination of a largo number of authorities, we are convinced that the first citation was fatally defective and would not support the judgment rendered, and therefore we sustain the first, second, and third assignments of error.

The fourth assignment complains that the citation was not signed by the clerk of the court, or his deputy, and will not therefore support a judgment by default. This presents the question whether or not a typewritten signature of the clerk is a compliance with article 2180, Vernon’s Sayles’ Tex. Civ. Stat., which provides that all writs and process “shall be dated and attested by the clerk with the seal of the court impressed thereon.” In support of this assignment plaintiffs in error cite, in addition to the article of the statute mentioned, the cases of Wimbish v. Wolford, 33 Tex. 110; Caufield v. Jones, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 721, 45 S. W. 741. In the case of Wimbish v. Wolford, supra, the writ was signed by the deputy clerk as his own act, and not as the act of his principal, the clerk, and the court held that this was insufficient, stating:

“If the principal clerk does the act, it must he so done. A deputy only has authority to to do what the principal may do, and is not warranted in doing the act in any other way than as it might be done by the principal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 1000, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaulley-v-western-nat-bank-texapp-1915.