Simmons v. Arnim

220 S.W. 66, 110 Tex. 309, 1920 Tex. LEXIS 92
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1920
DocketNo. 2788.
StatusPublished
Cited by275 cases

This text of 220 S.W. 66 (Simmons v. Arnim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Arnim, 220 S.W. 66, 110 Tex. 309, 1920 Tex. LEXIS 92 (Tex. 1920).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question presented by the ease is whether as against a collateral attack there should be held as invalid an execution sale of the property of minors under a judgment for the fee allowed their guardian ad litem in a case where they were the successful parties, and a further judgment, rendered at a subsequent term of the court, allowing the guardian ad litem an additional fee; the minors *318 having no permanent guardian, and there being no attempt to execute the judgments through the Probate Court.

The present suit is an action of trespass to try title brought by the minors after attaining their majority, to recover the property so sold—about one-half of a block of real estate in the city of Houston.

The material facts, briefly stated, are these:

In August of 1893 one Jacob Chase instituted a suit in the District Court of Harris County against the minor grandchildren of Darius Gregg, the plaintiffs in the present action, their mother and their step-father, and against the step-father as the executor of the estate of their deceased father, to remove cloud from title to the property here involved and other property. It was recited in Chase’s petition that there was a mutual agreement between himself and the defendants to have the difficulty, as pleaded by him, in their titles removed, but owing to the minority of some of the defendants it was necessary to invoke the judgment of the court. The prayer of the petition was that the rights between the defendants and himself be adjusted in accordance with the petition, “and for this,” it concluded, “plaintiff has agreed that costs be adjudged against him. ’ ’

It is evident from the recitals and prayer of the petition that Chase expected only a friendly suit and a judgment entirely favorable to himself; and that such anticipation was his reason for in effect asking that the costs be adjudged against him.

The minors were duly served with a copy of Chase’s petition.

Their mother and step-father, and the latter as executor of their father’s estate, filed an answer admitting the justice of Chase’s claim and asking that judgment be given as asked by him.

S. Taliaferro, Esq., an attorney of Houston, was appointed by the court to act as guardian ad litem for the minors. He successfully resisted Chase’s suit, and by cross-action against Chase obtained for the minors removal of cloud from the title to other lands claimed by Chase; a judgment in all things favorable to them being rendered, April 14, 1894.

At one place in the judgment it was provided that the defendants should recover their “costs of court” against Chase. At its conclusion, it recited that $1200 was allowed the guardian ad litem as a fee, for his services, ‘‘rendered and to be rendered,” in the recovery of the lands, to be paid out of the estate of the minors “recovered herein,” but not out of any of their other property.

Chase appealed, and the judgment against him was affirmed—in this court on October 28, 1895. 88 Texas, 552, 32 S. W., 520.

After the decision in the Supreme Court, the guardian ad litem, in December, 1895, filed in the District Court of Harris County a motion reciting that the services performed by him since the allow *319 anee of his original fee had not been foreseen or taken into consideration in that allowance, and praying for an additional allowance.

On June 1, 1896, this motion was granted by the court, and by order of that date an additional allowance of $500 was made the guardian ad litem, the order reciting that the total allowance of $1700 should be paid out of the estate of the minors recovered in the cause.

On these two judgments execution was issued, in September, 1896, in favor of the guardian ad Utem against the minors, commanding that $1700, with 6% interest from April 14, 1894 on $1200 anct 6% interest from June 1, 1896 on $500, be made out of their goods, etc., and lands recovered in the suit.

The execution was levied upon the real estate in controversy, a part of that involved in Chase’s action but not of that included m the minor’s cross-action. It was bought for $1700 at the sheriff’s sale in November, 1896, by T. W. House, a banker, who took the title for the guardian ad Utem as a means of securing .indebtedness of the latter to him; the consideration for the sale being a credit upon the judgments.

The defendants in the present suit, filed in March, 1911, claim under the sheriff’s deed to House.

A verdict for the defendants was directed in the trial court, the judgment being affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.

In our view of the case the execution sale should be held valid against collateral attack, the character of attack here made, unless

1. The original judgment taxing the fee for the guardian ad Utem against the minors, was void; or

2. That judgment could be lawfully executed only through the Probate Court; or

3. The execution itself was rendered void because of failure to sufficiently identify, according to the statutory requirements, a valid judgment- authorizing its issuance.

In determining the effect of the original judgment in its taxing of the guardian ad litem’s fees against the minors, it is immaterial here whether it was an erroneous judgment—that is, a voidable judg-' ment. The judgment was before the court in the present ease only collaterally; necessary, it is true, to support the execution and sale under it, but only as constituting a link in the defendant’s chain of title. It is therefore • of no consequence in this inquiry that for sufficient reasons it would have been reversible on appeal, or subject to annulment on direct attack. The question here concerns only the court’s power. It has nothing to do with the exercise of the power. Only an entire want of power to render the judgment could make it void. The question is, therefore, simply whether the court had the power to render such a judgment; not whether, having the power, it rendered an erroneous judgment.

*320 The fee of the guardian ad litem was taxable as part of the costs in Chase’s suit. Article 1942. But the court was not bound, under declares that “for good cause, to be stated on the record,” the court may adjudge .the costs otherwise than as provided in the preceding the law, to tax it against Chase. The minors were the successful parties in the suit, and Article 2035 declares that such parties shall recover of their adversary in the suit all costs incurred in it, “except where it is or may be otherwise provided by law.” In Article 2048 of the same chapter it is so “ otherwise provided. ’ ’ That article articles of the chapter.

It is therefore plain that the law did not absolutely require the court to tax the fee of the guardian ad litem against Chase.

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Bluebook (online)
220 S.W. 66, 110 Tex. 309, 1920 Tex. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-arnim-tex-1920.