Sabine Hardwood Co. v. West Lumber Co.

238 F. 611, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1158
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Texas
DecidedDecember 11, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 238 F. 611 (Sabine Hardwood Co. v. West Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sabine Hardwood Co. v. West Lumber Co., 238 F. 611, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1158 (E.D. Tex. 1916).

Opinion

RUSSELL, District Judge.

This controversy originally arose in the state court, and involved the title to the J. D. .Nash survey of land. The plaintiff in that suit was Annie T. Lomax, and one of the defendants was H. P. Weir, through whom the plaintiff in this suit, Sabine Hardwood Company, claims. One of the controversies between the parties to the suit in the state court was the length of the lines of the Nash league, one of the parties contending that the south lines should be 5,000 varas in length, and the other party contending that those lines should be only 4,480 varas in length. To state this matter differently, one of those parties contended that the southwest corner of the Nash was on the east bank of Menard creek, and the defendant H. P. Weir contended that that corner should be 520 varas west of Menard creek. -The parties to the state court suit finally agreed upon a judgment by which what was known as the Garvey survey of the Nash [612]*612was adopted, and was agreed to be made the judgment of the court. The Garvey survey fixed the southwest corner of the Nash on the east bank of Menard creek, and fixed the length of the south lines at 4,480 varas. H. P. Weir was a party to that suit, and W. D. Gordon was his attorney at the trial, and the agreement I have mentioned was executed by W. D. Gordon, as the attorney for H. P. Weir. The state district court of Polk county adopted the agreement of the parties, and thereupon, on December 4, 1911, rendered a judgment, which, among other things, fixed the southwest corner of the Nash on the east bank of Menard creek and established the length of the south lines at 4,480 varas. W. D. Gordon not only executed the agreement above referred to as the attorney for his client, H. P. Weir, but Mr. Gordon was present at the rendition of the judgment and had knowledge of its terms.

In the entry of the judgment the south lines of the Nash were, by mistake, stated fo be 5,000 varas instead of 4,480 varas, as agreed upon and as actually established by the court in the judgment of December 4, 1911. In May, 1912, the defendants affected by the judgment of December 4, 1911, discovered the mistake in the judgment entry, and at once brought a proceeding to correct it. At the time this proceeding to correct the judgment entry was brought the plaintiff here, Sabine Hardwood Company, had not acquired title to the land, and when the defendants brought that suit to correct the judgment entry, they filed a lis pendens, under the Texas statute, and the Sabine Hardwood Company acquired tire land with such notice as the lis ■ pendens statute visited upon it.

In the trial of this proceeding to correct the judgment entry the state court rendered a judgment, finding that the judgment rendered by the court, on December 4, 1911, fixed the southwest corner of the Nash on the east bank of Menard creek, and established the length of the south lines at 4,480 varas. The court further found that by a mutual mistake of the parties the length of those lines was misstated to be 5,000 varas, and the court thereupon ordered the judgment entry to be corrected SO' as to conform to the judgment actually rendered as above stated. H. P. Weir, through whom the Sabine Hardwood Company claims, was a party to that proceeding, and appealed from this last described decree of the state court, and the said decree was affirmed by the Texas court of Civil Appeals. See Weir v. W. T. Carter & Bro., 169 S. W. 1113.

[1] Now, this court is not vested with appellate jurisdiction over the state district court of Polk county. That tribunal was a court of competent jurisdiction to render the decree referred to, and that decree must be respected here. The judgment of the state court established the facts as above set out.

The day after the rendition of the judgment of December 4, 1911, in the state court, W. D. Gordon purchased the interest of his client, H. P. Weir, in the land in controversy, and received from him a conveyance in writing. That instrument, according to its terms, assigned and transferred to W. D. Gordon all the estate and interest which H. P. Weir had in the Nash survey, and then proceeded to recite that, [613]*613at some future day, Weir would make such further conveyance as might be necessary. The conveyance to Gordon from Weir makes' no attempt to describe the land. I call attention to the fact that this instrument only conveys the interest and estate which Weir had in the land, and that that interest, as fixed by the judgment rendered in the state court, was the interest which Weir had in the land with the south lines of the Nash established as being 4,480 varas long. The conveyance from Weir to Gordon was executed on December 5, 1911, more than five months before the proceeding-to correct the judgment entry was filed. *

H. P. Weir was made a party to the proceeding to correct the judgment entry, but W. D. Gordon was not made a party. However, he was present at the trial of that proceeding, and conducted the examination of the witnesses and participated in the argument of the case. There is a sharp controversy here as to whether Gordon appeared at that trial as amicus curias, or as one of the defendants, and much evidence has been submitted on this issue. I find it unnecessary to decide the question of the capacity in which he appeared, because I am of opinion that another legal principle, which is not at all in dispute, is determinative of his rights.

[2] Gordon was the attorney for Weir in the original suit in the state court, in which the judgment was rendered on December 4, 1911. Gordon, on behalf of Weir and as his attorney, executed the agreement on which that judgment was based. He, both as a matter of fact as well as by legal presumption, had full knowledge that in the judgment entry there was a mistake, in stating the south lines of the Nash at 5,000 varas, and that the judgment actually rendered fixed the length of those lines at 4,480 varas. Therefore, when he took the conveyance of the interest and estate which Weir had in the land, he took it subject to the right of the parties at interest to have that judgment entry corrected so as to conform to the judgment actually rendered. Of course, the Sabine Hardwood Company, bought with notice, because it purchased after the lis pendens notice had been properly filed.

[3] The second proceeding in the state court was not a proceeding to reform a judgment, but to correct a judgment entry. An inspection of the pleadings in that case shows this to be the fact, and the Texas court of Civil Appeals took this vie'w of the case. In the opening statement of the case by Judge Pleasants he says:

“This suit-was brought by the appellees against appellants to correct the entry of a judgment by agreement rendered by the district court of Polk county on December 4, 1911, in cause No. 4055 on the docket of shid court, styled Annie T. Lomax v. William Carlisle & Co. et al.”.

The decision which I will make in this case is based upon the distinction which must be drawn between a judgment entry and the judgment rendered. Ordinarily the judgment rendered and the judgment entry correspond, but they do not necessarily correspond, and they may widely differ. Where such differences do exist the judgment actually rendered must prevail over the judgment entry, because the former [614]*614is the judicial finding of the court, while the latter is but the ministerial act of the clerk. i

Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
238 F. 611, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sabine-hardwood-co-v-west-lumber-co-txed-1916.