Scruggs v. McCart

16 S.W.2d 973, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 546
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 10, 1929
DocketNo. 3182.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 973 (Scruggs v. McCart) 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
Scruggs v. McCart, 16 S.W.2d 973, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 546 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

HALL, C. J.

The city of Dallas instituted this suit for the benefit of the Tesas Bithu-lithic Company, to recover an amount alleged to be due upon a paving assessment and to foreclose the paving lien upo'n certain lots in the city of Dallas. The petition names as defendants Southern School Book Depository, a corporation, Smith-I-Iughs Investment Company, a corporation, Victor R. Smith, J. W. Em-bree, and Mrs. Lizzie McCart, a feme sole. The plaintiff prays that it have judgment against the defendants Victor R. Smith, Smith-Hughs Investment Company, and Southern School Book Depository, for the amount due, as evidenced by the assessment, together with interest thereon and attorney’s fees, and that it further have judgment foreclosing its lien upon the premises as against all defendants.

Embree and the Southern School Book Depository answered, disclaiming, and denied that they had ever owned the lots in controversy, and they were dismissed with their costs.

Mrs. McCart answered, denying the existence of plaintiff’s lien, and alleged that she had purchased the property in question from Gross R. Scruggs on May 17, 1923, without notice of the plaintiff’s alleged lien; that Scruggs and wife had conveyed the property to her by general warranty deed, warranting the title free of all liens and incumbrances. She prayed that Scruggs be made a party defendant, “and that if plaintiff have judgment against this defendant, that this defendant have judgment over against the said Gross R. Scruggs on the aforesaid warranty in such an amount as the law will award.” She also prayed for general relief.

Scruggs answered by plea in abatement, and in reply to the cross-action of Mrs. Mc-Cart set up a plea in abatement and answered by general demurrer, insisting that Mrs. Mc-Cart had filed her cross-action against him prematurely, in that she had sustained no loss, no judgment had been rendered against her, and neither had she been dispossessed.

Alex Meletio and wife filed their petition on April 17, 1928, asking leave to intervene in' the action, alleging that they had purchased the lots in question from Mrs. Lizzie McCart by general warranty deed, granting’and conveying them the property, and prayed that they have judgment against Mrs. McCart and Gross R. Scruggs on their respective warranties in the amount of the plaintiff’s debt. The court overruled the motion, and they were denied the right to intervene. They have not appealed from the court’s order, and no error is assigned by any one to the court’s action.

The case was tried to the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered on May 2, 1928, in favor of plaintiff against Victor R. Smith in rem for the sum of $1,109.71 and interest from the date of the judgment at 6 per cent, and for foreclosure of the lien as against all the defendants, except Scruggs. There was no prayer for a foreclosure as to him, and he is not mentioned in plaintiff’s pleadings. The property was ordered sold for the payment of the judgment. The judgment recites that it appearing to the court that Mrs. McCart acquired the property in controversy subsequent to the accrual of the paving lien from the defendant Gross R. Scruggs and wife, under a deed containing a covenant of general warranty against incumbrances, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed that she recover from Gross R. Scruggs the sums herein adjudged in favor of the city of Dallas, trustee for the Texas Bithulithic Company, being $1,109.71, with interest, and decrees that if the property shall not sell for a sum sufficient to satisfy the amount of the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, the city of Dallas, then that no further process shall issue on said judgment in favor of plaintiff.

Scruggs alone has appealed. He complains only of that part of the judgment decreeing a recovery against him in favor of Mrs. Mc-Cart. The proceedings in the. case, stated in their sequence, are as follows: The city of Dallas filed its original petition and lis pen-dens notice December 1, 1924. Its amended petition was filed September 1, 1925. Mrs. McCart filed her amended answer and cross-action May 14, 1925. Scruggs filed his answer to the cross-action on May 21, 1925. On the 21st day of May, 1926, Mrs. McCart conveyed the property in question, by general warranty deed, to Alex Meletio and wife, and judgment was rendered May 2, 1928. No amended pleadings were filed after Mrs. Mc-Cart conveyed the lots to Meletio.

The following documentary evidence pertinent to the issues between thp appellant and appellee was introduced:

(1) The lis pendens record of Dallas county showing the filing of a lis pendens notice and the due registration thereof in the records of Dallas county on December 1, 1924.

(2) A general warranty deed, executed by Gross R. Scruggs and wife to Mrs. Lizzie' Mc-Cart, a feme sole, dated May 17, 1923, reciting a consideration of $70,000, and in the *975 form prescribed by R. S. art. 1292, conveying the property in question.

•(3) Scruggs introduced, without objection, a certified copy of a general warranty deed, dated May 21, 1926, from Mrs. Lizzie McCart, a feme sole, to Alex Meletio and wife, conveying the property in question for a recited consideration of $70,000. This deed is also in statutory form.

The first proposition urged by appellant is: “Appellee, in her cross-action against appellant, having prayed that in the event plaintiff recover judgment against her, that she have judgment over against appellant for such amount as the law will allow, and plaintiff having neither sought nor recovered a money judgment against appellee, the judgment in favor of appellee against appellant is not supported by her pleadings and is erroneous.”

Appellant’s second proposition is: “The defendant, Gross R. Scruggs, having conveyed the real property in question, by general warranty deed, to the defendant, Lizzie McCart, after the fixing of the paving lien against the property, and Lizzie McCart, thereafter, having conveyed the property, by general warranty deed, to Alex Meletio and wife, Wilhelmina Meletio, Lizzie McCart was not the owner of the property when the case was tried, and no money judgment having been sought or recovered against her, the rights of Alex Meletio and Wilhelmina Meletio against Lizzie McCart, under her warranty to them, and their rights against Gross R. Scruggs, under his warranty to Lizzie McCart, are outstanding, undetermined, and unsatisfied; therefore, the judgment of the court against Gross R. Scruggs in favor of Lizzie McCart, on her cross-action against him, was erroneous.”

We think the first proposition should be sustained.

In Jordan et al. v. Massey (Tex. Civ. App.) 134 S. W. 804, it is stated that, because the statute (article 2003) provides that the petition shall state the nature of the relief sought, “a prayer for relief is therefore an essential part of the plaintiff’s petition, and will determine the character of the order or decree which the court is called upon to render. Hogan v. Kellum, 13 Tex. 399; City of Houston v. Emery, 76 Tex. 282, 13 S. W. 264. It not only serves the purpose of indicating the desire of the petitioner as to some particular adjudication which he wishes the Court to make, but of fixing a limit beyond which the Court is not authorized to go in making its judicial award.”

The special prayer in Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 973, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scruggs-v-mccart-texapp-1929.