Schneider v. Sellers

61 S.W. 541, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 226, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 427
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 8, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 61 S.W. 541 (Schneider v. Sellers) 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
Schneider v. Sellers, 61 S.W. 541, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 226, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 427 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

RAINEY, Chief Justice.

This suit was instituted by plaintiffs against W. C. Walker and wife, Sarah E. Walker, Jules Schneider, Alfred Davis, and the Schneider-Davis Company, a private corporation. The object of the suit is to recover a certain tract of land situated in Ellis County, which it is claimed plaintiffs inherited from their father, Teole Sellers; and a direct attack is made upon two judgments of the District Court of Ellis County partitioning the estate of Teole Sellers between plaintiffs and Sarah E. Walker, the surviving widow of said Teole Sellers, who, after the death of said Sellers, intermarried with said W. C. Walker. Various grounds are urged why said judgments should be held void.

It was alleged that' Schneider & Davis had bought the land set apart to Mrs. Walker under a sale by virtue of a deed of trust executed to them by Walker and wife, and that same had been deeded by Schneider & Davis to said Schneider-Davis Company, in fraud of plaintiffs’ rights, and plaintiffs pray for damages, etc.

Defendants, Schneider and Davis and the Schneider-Davis Company, plead a general demurrer, a number of special exceptions, general denial, *228 the five years statute of limitation, and that they were innocent purchasers, etc., and also the payment by them of a certain incumbrance on the land given by Walker and wife to the guardians of plaintiffs.

In reply to said answer plaintiffs plead their minority and the cover- ' ture of Mrs. Walker, denying that Schneider & Davis and said company were innocent purchasers. That the deed of trust given by W. C. Walker and Sarah E. Walker to Schneider and Davis included certain personal property which was of value more than sufficient to pay off and discharge the debt secured, and that by their gross negligence they permitted said personal property to be squandered and lost, by which the lien upon the land was released, it being the separate property of Mrs. Walker, and stood only as surety, and that the sale of the land under the trust deed was, as to Mrs. Walker, void and of no force, the same having been bid in by said Schneider & Davis. That the sale to Sehneider-Davis Company was fictitious and fraudulent. It was further alleged that W. C. and S. E. Walker had conveyed said land to plaintiffs, and assigned to them all claims for damages against said Schneider'& Davis growing out of said transaction.

In reply to this last supplemental petition of plaintiffs, defendants plead a general exception, several special exceptions, the statute of two years limitation to the claim for damages, general denial and various special answers. Special issues were submitted to the jury, and upon the findings a judgment for the land was entered for plaintiffs.

Appellants, by exceptions to plaintiffs’ petition, which the court overruled, and which action of the court is here complained of, questioned the right of plaintiffs to prosecute in this suit an action for the recovery of the land and. to set aside, for fraud, certain judgments affecting the title to said land; the contention being that as third parties have become possessed of said land, such an attack upon the judgments is collateral, although made in the court rendering same, and further, that a suit attacking a judgment for fraud can only be maintained against the parties to the judgment, or at least to the fraud.

We are of the opinion that the court properly overruled defendants’ exceptions in this particular. It is true that the main object of the suit is a recovery of the land in controversy, but before a recovery could be had, it was essential that the judgments should be set aside, for if they stand plaintiffs can not recover as heirs of their father. A direct attack is made upon the judgments in this suit. All the parties to said judgments are made parties to this proceeding, and as Schneider & Davis and the Sehneider-Davis Company claim through said judgments, it was proper to litigate their validity in this proceeding, and such an attack can not be held to be collateral. Heidenheimer v. Loring, 6 Texas Civ. App., 560.

In the case of Crawford v. McDonald, 88 Texas, 626, Justice Denman clearly makes the distinction between a direct and collateral attack upon a judgment. He says a direct attack “is an attempt to amend, correct, reform, vacate, or enjoin the execution of same, in a proceeding *229 instituted for that purpose, such as a motion for a rehearing, an appeal, some form of writ of error, a bill of review, injunction to restrain its execution, etc.” A collateral attack “is an attempt to avoid its binding force in a proceeding not instituted for one of the purposes aforesaid, as where, in an action of debt on a judgment, defendant attempts to deny the fact of indebtedness; or where, in a suit to try title to property, a judgment is offered as a link in the chain of title, and the adverse party attempts to avoid its effects, etc.”

This action partakes of a dual character. While the main object is to recover the land, it at the same times makes a direct attack to vacate the judgment through which Schneider & Davis and the Schneider-Davis Company claim the land as innocent purchasers. In order to .affect defendants’ claim to the land, it was necessary to make them parties to the action to vacate said judgments. This being so, we see no good reason under our system of practice why in the same action the title to the land and the validity of the judgments should not be adjudicated, all those interested being parties to the suit, and the judgments having been rendered by the tribunal in which the suit is instituted and having full and complete jurisdiction of all the matters sought to be adjudicated. Had plaintiffs brought an action of trespass to try title and not made an attack upon the judgments, then they could not show the invalidity of the judgments, unless they appeared to be void on their face.

The court overruled defendants’ exception to plaintiffs’ petition which assailed the'petition on the ground that it did not show sufficient facts to avoid said judgments. It alleges, in substance, that plaintiffs were the children of Teole Sellers and S. E. Sellers; that after the death of Teole Sellers, S. E. Sellers married W. C. Walker; that plaintiffs were minors, and in the care, custody, and control of said S. E. Walker and husband, W. C. Walker, at the time of the rendition of said judgments; that said Walkers knew that said land was the separate property of said Teole Sellers, and was not the community property of said Sellers and the said S. E. Walker, and that they, the said Walkers, fraudulently withheld the facts from the court, etc.

Notice of the fraud on the part of Schneider & Davis is also alleged. We are of opinion that, owing to the relation existing between the plaintiffs and the Walkers, it was incumbent on them to at least not take advantage of the plaintiffs’ condition, and the allegations stated sufficient grounds for vacating the judgments as to the Walkers, and also as to Schneider & Davis, it being alleged that they had notice of the fraud.

The plaintiffs by amended petition set up in addition to their claim to the land as heirs of Teole Sellers a claim to the land by conveyance to them from S. E. Walker, and also charged that Schneider & Davis had fraudulently converted the land by selling same, and prayed in the alternative for the value of the land, if the land itself could not be recovered.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W. 541, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 226, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-v-sellers-texapp-1900.