McGowan v. Lowry

230 S.W. 465, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 200
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 1921
DocketNo. 9418.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 465 (McGowan v. Lowry) 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
McGowan v. Lowry, 230 S.W. 465, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 200 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

BUCE, J.

Suit was filed by plaintiff, appellant here, on May 14, 1919, in form tff trespass to try title to 83 acres of land situated in Comanche county, against defendants, J. H. Lowry and Chalmers F. Greenwood. The defendant Lowry answered by general demurrer and general denial and the plea of not guilty, and specially pleaded that he held title by reason of a deed executed to him on November 16, 1902, by W. A. Warren and wife, which deed was duly recorded in the deed records of Comanche county. He specially pleaded the three, five, and ten year statutes of limitation. From a judgment in favor of defendant Lowry that plaintiff recover nothing as against-Lowry or Greenwood, and that Lowry have judgment against plaintiff for the title and possession of the land described in plaintiff’s petition, and for costs, plaintiff has appealed.

Plaintiff alleged in his motion . for new trial, duly verified, that his father and mother formerly owned the land in controversy, and that the same was occupied as a homestead by them,; that his mother died in August, 1893, at which time plaintiff was about four weeks old; that in purchasing *466 the land his father gave to his grantor, H. R. Mkrtin, vendor’s Hen notes, aggregating $284.50, but that these notes were paid pri- or to the death of plaintiff’s mother; that the community estate owed no debts, but that his father, on December 29, 1894; executed a warranty deed to his grantee, H. R. Martin, the recited consideration in said deed being the cancellation of three certain promissory notes aggregating $284.50; that thereafter H. R. Martin, on January 2, 1895, executed a warranty deed to R. G. Hendrix, and that paper title was subsequently passed until it became vested in Lowry. Plaintiff alleged that in truth and in fact no consideration passed from Martin to J. H. McGowan, his father, and that the conveyance to Martin was a fraudulent transaction made for the purpose of defrauding plaintiff of his interest in the land, and that all the parties engaged in this transaction Knew that said land was community property, and that plaintiff held an interest therein; that said deed was given to Martin for the purpose of making the title appear regular, and making the deed as if executed by the elder McGowan in payment of community debts.

Plaintiff further alleged in his motion for new trial that he had talked with witnesses residing outside of Comanche county who would testify to the truth of the allegations made in his petition. He further alleged that he had employed B. Y. Cummings as an attorney to represent him, and that said attorney filed his petition, and that prior to the trial, at which plaintiff was not present, said Cummings wrote him that he desired to withdraw from the case; that plaintiff thereupon wrote Cummings requesting him to see that no action was taken or that the case was not dismissed until he could come to Texas and look after his interests, he at that time living at Mangum, Okl.; in reply to said letter written by plaintiff, Cummings answered assuring him that no action would be taken until he could secure other counsel; that he wrote to the district clerk of Comanche county and received a reply that service was not complete, and plaintiff had asked leave of the court to file amended pleadings; that court was, 'in session and would be until January 1, 1921; that plaintiff thereupon secured another attorney, E. M. Stewart, of Mangum, who was busily engaged in the trial of cases in the state of Oklahoma and at Wichita Ealls, and could not immediately leave for Comanche, Tex., where this cause was pending; that on the 27th day of November, 1919, the .earliest time possible, plaintiff reached Comanche and discovered that a judgment had been rendered in his suit on November 14th. Attached to said motion is an affidavit from E. M. Stewart substantiating the allegations made in said motion, and that he knew of his own knowledge that plaintiff had used every diligence at his command to get ready for trial, and had reached Comanche at his earliest opportunity. Also there was a verified statement from B. Y. Cummings to the effect that he had been the attorney of plaintiff and had reached the conclusion that plaintiff would' not be able to prove that defendant Lowry was not an innocent purchaser ; that on or about October 7, 1919, he received a letter from P. A. Gates inclosing a letter written to the latter by plaintiff, which affiant construed as a withdrawal of the case from his hands; that thereupon he wrote to Gates that he had been unable to get any witnesses to establish plaintiff’s case, and did not feel like going to Oklahoma and incurring a useless expenditure of money in an effort to hunt up such witnesses. He further stated, that if plaintiff could compromise the case to go ahead and do so, and that he would charge nothing for his services theretofore rendered ; that at the fall term of the district court in 1919 he had a conversation with the attorney representing defendant Lowry and told him that he did not intend to continue in the ease and had so advised the plaintiff, ■ and requested that the case be allowed to remain on the docket until plaintiff could procure another attorney, if he so desired.

Defendant’s first amended answer was filed the day the judgment was entered, and for the first time he asked for affirmative relief against plaintiff. Moreover, it appears from the clerk’s certificate in the record that neither defendant was served with citation, and that no return was ever made of the two citations issued on or about May 14, 1919. In the decree the defendant Greenwood was ordered and adjudged “to go hence without day and recover his costs,” although he does not appear to have been served.

'[1] Error is assigned to the action of the court in granting affirmative relief on defendant’s answer and cross-action, filed on the day of the trial, without notice to plaintiff, where the defendant by cross-hill sets up title in himself. In Harris v. Schlinke, 95 Tex. 88, 65 S. W. 172, our Supreme Court says:

“Where the defendant by cross-bill sets up title in himself, the court cannot enter judgment on the cross-bill without service of it upon plaintiff.”

In Kruegel v. Bolanz, 100 Tex. 572, 102 S. W. 110, our Supreme Court says:

“The cross-bill, as an independent action, was as fully under the control of the defendant as was the original suit subject to the will of the plaintiffs, and it follows logically that the same means should have been used to call upon the defendants to the cross-bill to answer its charges as were required by law to compel *467 the defendant in the original suit to appear and plead to that complaint.”

See, also, Field v. O’Conner, 80 S. W. 872; Bryson v. Boyce, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 415, 92 S. W. 820. In the last case, writ of error denied, the Court of Civil Appeals, quoting from the syllabus, said:

“Where the record of a judgment upon a cross-bill showed that it was rendered On the same day that the ei’QSs-bill was filed, so that service could not have been had, and that the persons against whom the judgment was rendered did not appear, it was subject to collateral attack.”

[2] Appellee urges in answer to this assignment that the recitations in the judgment sustain the contention that plaintiff’s attorney, B. T.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 465, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgowan-v-lowry-texapp-1921.