Miller v. Texas Life Ins. Co.

123 S.W.2d 756
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1938
DocketNo. 12766.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 756 (Miller v. Texas Life Ins. 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
Miller v. Texas Life Ins. Co., 123 S.W.2d 756 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

This appeal is from an order of the 68th'District Court of Dallas County, made July 22, 1938, for the purpose of correcting a judgment theretofore rendered, on January 3, 1936, in cause No. 12109 F/C, wherein C. E. Logan, D. D. Logan and Mrs. Virginia Logan were plaintiffs; the Texas Life Insurance Company, among others, was defendant, and Charles L. Miller, a further party to the cross-action of the Insurance Company. The amended motion to correct was filed in the original styled and numbered cause, praying that upon notice to all parties, the court vacate, set aside, amend, change, correct and modify the prior judgment of January 3, 1936. Briefly, appellee company and petitioner in said motion (a corporation with principal office in McLennan County, Texas) was party defendant to the particular suit when first filed by the Logans, who owned real property on which the Insurance Company was threatening to foreclose under deed of trust. The initial suit was to enjoin a sale that was posted for December 4, 1934, a temporary restraining order being first granted; however-, before date of trustee’s sale (December 4, 1934) the aforesaid restraint was dissolved, the property sold at the posted -time, and purchased by the Insurance .Company, herein referred to as appellee. During the proceedings just mentioned, appellant Miller was lessee of the property with rent paid in advance to July 10, 1935. In January 1935, said Miller was made a party to the suit under amended pleadings filed by the Insurance Company, seeking title and possession. Later, a writ of sequestration was caused to issue against Miller, who thereafter vacated the property, appellee thereby obtaining possession. By third amended answer of December 9, 1935, appellee repleaded a cross-action against the Logans and Charles L. Miller, for title and possession, or in the alternative for foreclosure of its alleged lien upon the described property; and upon the hearing judgment was rendered declaring appellees’ prior trustee’s sale invalid and void. Said judgment further allowed the Logans (plaintiffs in said suit) damages of $540, as for wrongful sequestration; said decree, however, allowing ap-pellee Insurance Company a recovery against plaintiffs on notes and foreclosure of lien, under the Company’s affirmative pleading therefor; but as to its cross-action for title and possession, above mentioned, the following recitals appear:

“And the Court, having considered the cross-action of the defendant, Texas Life Insurance Company, for title and possession to the premises above described, is of the opinion that said defendant is not entitled to recover title and possession to the above described premises as prayed, to which action of the Court the defendant, Texas Life Insurance Company, in open court excepted.”

Following the above judgment of January 3, 1936, appellant Miller brought suit against the Texas Life Insurance Company and another, also the sureties on the aforesaid sequestration bond, in damages for alleged wrongful dispossession; and in said later suit, a plea of privilege was urged by the Insurance Company, on the ground that the judgment already described and entered in cause No. 12109, in the Dallas County district court, was not final ■ — in that, it did not dispose of the Insurance Company’s aforesaid cross-action against said Miller as to the premises. This venue plea was overruled and on appeal the Waco Court of Civil Appeals held this judgment was final, and though Miller was not mentioned therein by name, *758 —yet it was “broad enough in its terms to dispose of Miller and the cause of action asserted against him by the insurance company by implication”. See Texas Life Ins. Co. v. Miller, Tex.Civ.App., 114 S.W.2d 600, 601, where further pertinent matters and facts are shown.

On April 16, 1938, the above mentioned amended motion to vacate, set aside, change, correct and modify the original judgment of January 1936, was filed by appellee, its allegations, in the main (omitting alternative pleadings), being that: “Your petitioner, Texas Life Insurance Company, further alleges that plaintiffs, C. E. Logan, D. D. Logan and wife, Virginia Logan, originally filed this suit against the defendants above named; that thereafter Texas Life Insurance Company filed an answer to plaintiffs’ said petition and also filed a cross-action against said plaintiffs and made Charles L. Miller, a party defendant to said cross-action; that the said cross-action of the Texas Life Insurance Company, as will more fully appear from the original of said pleading on file in this cause, was a statutory action of trespass to try title, with a plea in the alternative for foreclosure of its lien upon the-premises involved in this controversy; that service of citation was duly had upon the said Charles L. Miller in the manner and -for the length of time required by law; that the said Charles L. Miller, defendant to said cross-action, wholly failed to answer the same or file any pleading of any kind or character in answer thereto; that this cause came on to be heard on or about the 3rd day of January 1936, at which time the court announced its decision; that the court did not, in the pronouncement of its decision from the Bench, make any decision as to the cross-action of Texas Life Insurance Company against Charles L. Miller, and the Court did not in fact render any judgment, either for or against Charles L. Miller, on said cross-action; that the only judgment which the court could have rendered, in view of the fact that Charles L. Miller failed to answer said cross-action for title and possession, was a judgment that Texas Life Insurance Company have and recover of and from Charles L. Miller title and possession to the premises dsecribed in said cross-action under Article 7383 of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas; that it was fundamental error for the court not to render such judgment in favor of Texas Life Insurance Company; that the written' order signed by the Court and entered in the minutes of said court, as evidence of the judgment pronounced by the court, was erroneously drafted so as to dispose of said, cross-action' as to the defendant Charles L. Miller; that the Court of Civil Appeals for the Tenth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, at Waco, in the case of Texas Life-Insurance Company et al. v. Charles L. Miller et ux, in an opinion dated February 17, 1938, and recorded in Volume 114 of' Southwestern Reporter, second series, at page 600, held that the judgment as entered disposed, by implication, of the above-mentioned cross-action as to Charles L. Miller, whereas, in truth and in fact, the court in announcing its decision from the Bench, neither expressly nor impliedly made any adjudication or pronounced any judgment or rendered a decision as to said, cross-action against Charles L. Miller; that the written entry ot said judgment ought,, therefore, to be vacated, set aside, amended, changed, modified and corrected so as to make it conform to the decision actually rendered by the Court, by making Paragraph VII thereof read as follows. * * * if

Appellee does not contend that the allegations of its amended motion constitute a bill of review, nor do we consider same as containing the elements necessary-to such a proceeding.

Upon hearing of said motion, there was.

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123 S.W.2d 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-texas-life-ins-co-texapp-1938.