Simms Oil Co. v. Butcher

55 S.W.2d 192
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1932
DocketNo. 11078.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 192 (Simms Oil Co. v. Butcher) 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
Simms Oil Co. v. Butcher, 55 S.W.2d 192 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

In a district court of Dallas county, appel-lee, W. T. Butcher, obtained a judgment of foreclosure and order of sale on a business lot in the city of Dallas, against appellants Simms Oil Company and Hopkins-Crandall, Inc., to satisfy a judgment indebtedness of §2,256.73, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from September 25, 1926, and for the additional sum of $166.40 as court costs, against R. Carnahan, as surety on a supersedeas bond. Judgment for a like amount was obtained by Simms Oil Company against M. L. Jones and the National Bank of Arkansas, as executors of the estate of R. Carnahan, deceased, as warrantor of the title to the land. The Simms Oil Company and the executors have duly perfected an appeal to this court. For convenience, Simms Oil Company will be styled appellant, and M. L. Jones and the National Bank of Arkansas, as executors. The facts are as follows:

On or about September 25, 1926, appellee recovered judgment against one George E. Shuttles, in the district court of Dallas county, for the Ninety-Fifth judicial district, in the sum of $2,256.73. Shuttles perfected an appeal from this judgment to this court, executed a supersedeas bond with J. D. Crandall and R. Carnahan as apparent sureties, in the amount required by law. The cause was duly transferred from this court to the El Paso Court of Civil Appeals, and on December 8, 1927, the latter court affirmed the judgment of the district court, and entered the usual judgment against the sureties, whose names appeared on the supersedeas bond. This judgment was properly abstracted in Dallas county on July 5, 1928, and it was the statutory lien, created by the abstract of this judgment, appellee sought by this suit to foreclose. At the time the judgment was abstracted, R. Carnahan was the owner of the lot or parcel of land in question. During the same year and after the abstract of judgment was filed, Carnahan duly conveyed the land by warranty deed to Hopkins-Crandall, Inc., which latter company conveyed the land by warranty deed to appellant. After the judgment of aflirm-anee was rendered, Carnahan died, and M. L. Jones and the National Bank of Arkansas duly qualified as executors of his estate.

As an equitable defense to appellee’s suit, appellant alleged in its verified answer: “That the supersedeas bond described in plaintiff’s petition and alleged to have been executed by George E. Shuttles as principal, and J. D. Crandall and R. Carnahan as sureties, was not signed or executed by R. Carna-han, nor by any person authorized by him to sign or execute it for him; that said instrument in writing was made without R. Carna-han’s knowledge or consent, and that he has never at any time since ratified or confirmed the same.”

In their verified answer, the executors alleged : “ * * * That if the name of R. Car-nahan appears to have been signed to any such supersedeas bond as that described in plaintiff’s petition, the said R. Carnahan’s name to such bond was forged without his knowledge, that he never was a party to the appeal in which such purported supersedeas bond appears to have been filed, and that the purported judgment upon such forged signature to said alleged supersedeas bond is void and of no effect and force whatever; that no rights ever accrued against the said R. Carna-han, or against his estate or the representatives of such estate, by reason of said judgment which was void, and that the said W.T. Butcher’s assertion of a claim against any property owned at the time such purported judgment was rendered is of no force and effect and cannot constitute the basis of any claim either against the estate of the said R. Carnahan or against any property, the title to which has heretofore been warranted by the said R. Carnahan, for which reason the plaintiff is not entitled to recover either against Simms Oil Company or against the estate of R. Carnahan, or any other -persons perforce of the attempt to assert a lien by abstracting said void judgment.”

To each of the allegations above set forth, the court sustained a general demurrer and a special exception which had the force of a general demurrer. The special exception sustained is that the allegations constitute a collateral attack upon the judgment of the El Paso Court of Civil Appeals. This special exception contained matters that are in the nature of a plea in bar, and we conclude that such part of the exception was not sustained by the trial court. As the result of the ruling of the court on the general demurrer and special exception, appellants were not permitted to offer evidence on the issue of the forgery of the name of R. Carnahan to the supersede-as bond. Appellants duly excepted to the ruling of the court in this respect, and have assigned error only on this ruling. The ease was tried on the issues made by appellee’s pleading and the cross-action of appellants, *194 and the judgment above described duly entered.

The allegations stricken from the pleadings of appellant and the executors sought to obtain relief from a judgment entered against R. Carnahan on an instrument alleged to have been forged as to him, and hence not binding on them. This pleading constitutes a collateral attack upon the judgment of the El Paso Court of Civil Appeals. Hence the question for decision is, Can an apparent surety on a supersedeas bond, whose name was forged thereto, establish the fact of such forgery, in a proceeding to enforce the judgment against him, in a collateral attack on the judgment entered against him by an appellate court as such surety?

For the purpose of this appeal, we must assume the truth of the allegations by the executors and appellant that Carnahan neither signed nor authorized the signing of his name to the supersedeas bond, and that his signature thereto was forged. The appellate court could obtain jurisdiction of the person of Carnahan as a surety on the supersede-as bond alone by his voluntary act of signing it. ' As such bond was not signed by him, he never became a party to the proceedings in which the judgment was entered, and no power to render judgment against him was ever vested in the appellate court. Such court having no power to render a judgment against Carnahan, the rendition thereof is void. The general rule of law is well established in this state that a judgment rendered by a court, even of general jurisdiction, is void, if such court had, at the time of the rendition of the judgment, no jurisdiction over the person against whom the judgment is rendered. Crawford v. McDonald, 88 Tex. 626, 33 S. W. 325.

However, not every judgment that is in fact void can be impeached by means of a collateral attack. The general rule is that, the infirmity of the judgment, in the respect that renders it void, must appear on the face of the record, and cannot be shown by evidence aliunde, except in a proceeding that constitutes a direct attack on the validity of the judgment. It is the settled rule of law in this state that, on any matter upon which the court must have passed in the rendition of the judgment against a party to the proceedings, such judgment, on a collateral attack, is immune from evidence aliunde the record. Crawford v. McDonald, supra, and cases therein cited. The jurisdiction over the person of a defendant litigant in a court of general jurisdiction rests either upon the due service of process on such litigant, or some act of his which amounts to voluntary submission to the jurisdiction of the court.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

in the Estate of Henry H. Blankenship
392 S.W.3d 249 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2012)
in the Interest of D.C., A.C. and H.M.
128 S.W.3d 707 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2004)
In Re DC
128 S.W.3d 707 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2004)
in the Interest Of: V.M.I.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2003
Texas Machinery & Equipment Co. v. Gordon Knox Oil & Exploration Co.
434 S.W.2d 182 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1968)
Westerly Supply Corp. v. State
89 S.W.2d 244 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1935)
Griggs v. Jefferson Bank & Trust Co.
57 S.W.2d 390 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simms-oil-co-v-butcher-texapp-1932.