Texas Land & Loan Co. v. Winter

57 S.W. 39, 93 Tex. 560, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 183
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1900
DocketNo. 908.
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 57 S.W. 39 (Texas Land & Loan Co. v. Winter) 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
Texas Land & Loan Co. v. Winter, 57 S.W. 39, 93 Tex. 560, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 183 (Tex. 1900).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

On the 27th of October, 1893, the plaintiff in error instituted suit against John G. Winter and his wife, Ellen J. Winter, who is the defendant in error, to recover judgment against the husband for a debt and against both parties for the foreclosure of a lien upon the property described in the petition, arising upon a contract between Winter and wife and Wm. Cameron & Co. for material furnished by the latter for the improvement of such property, *562 and assigned by them to plaintiff. Winter and wife, by attorneys employed by Winter, filed an answer, containing exceptions to the plaintiff’s petition, some of which were fundamental, and, if good, went to the foundation of the action. On.the 17th of January, 1895, the exceptions were presented and were sustained by the following entry upon the judge’s docket: “Exceptions of defendants to plaintiff’s petition sustained. Plaintiff excepts.” This order was not carried into the minutes of the court and no further action was taken in “the cause until the October term, 1895, when John G. Winter, by agreement between him and the plaintiff, and without the knowledge of his wife or the attorneys representing them, withdrew the answer previously filed and presented another answer in lieu thereof, in the names of himself and wife, in which they admitted the allegations of plaintiff’s original petition and virtually consented to the judgment prayed for. The court, upon this answer and agreement and proof heard, entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff against John G. Winter for the debt sued for and against both parties for the foreclosure as sought. This judgment makes no reference to the previous ruling on exceptions. An order of sale having been taken out on this judgment prior to the 18th of .August, 1897, John G. Winter at that time instituted the proceeding now before us to enjoin the execution of the writ upon the ground that the judgment was dormant. The Texas Land and Loan Company filed a cross-petition for a revival of the judgment, making Ellen J. Winter a party. She answered the petition for the revival of the judgment, claiming that the judgment wa,s void because of the fact that the court, prior to its rendition, had entered a final judgment sustaining exceptions to the petition and disposing of the cause, and that she was no longer before the court when the last judgment was entered. She also asked that the judgment previously pronounced upon demurrer be entered nunc pro tunc so as to show that the cause was thereby finally disposed of as to her. The District Court, passing upon these several issues, granted the motion to enter nunc pro tunc the order of January term, 1895, so far aszto show simply that the exceptions to the petition were sustained and that plaintiff excepted, but refused to add to such entry a further adjudication finally disposing of the case. The court also entered judgment reviving the judgment of October term, 1895, as prayed for by the plaintiff. Mrs. Winter carried the case to the Court of Civil Appeals by writ of error, in which the judgment below was affirmed in favor of plaintiff as against John G. Winter and was reversed in favor of Mrs. Winter, and the cause ■was remanded with instructions to the trial court to enter nunc pro tunc a final judgment in her favor, based upon the order of the court made at the January term, 1895, disposing of the demurrers, discharging her from that cause without foreclosure of the lien prayed for, and that the court enter judgment in her favor in the present proceeding that plaintiff take nothing, etc. The Court of Civil Appeals held that the action upon the. demurrers at the January term, 1895, amounted to a final judgment disposing of the case as to Mrs. Winter, and that in conso *563 quence thereof, she ivas no longer before the court when the judgment of October, 1895, was rendered, and that the court, therefore, had no power over her or to render any judgment against her. This court, believing this view of the case to be erroneous, granted the present writ of error, and the question thus raised is the one upon which the determination of the controversy depends. If the proposition that the judgment upon demurrer was a final adjudication of the cause were true, it would undoubtedly follow that, after the adjournment of the term at which it was rendered, the court would have had no such jurisdiction over the parties or the subject matter of that suit as to empower it to render, upon the issues of that cause, any further judgment affecting them. It is equally true that a failure to enter the order or judgment of the court upon the minutes does not change the attitude of the case, for, when the controversy arose, it was unquestionably competent for the court to supply the omission and to make such entry nunc pro tunc as would properly represent the action previously taken. We shall therefore treat the case as if the proper entry upon the minutes had been made in January, 1895. We can not agree, however, to the proposition that the action then taken by the court ivas a final disposition of the case or of any issue in it as to any party to it. The entry made was nothing more than the recorded expression of the ruling of the court sustaining the exceptions. If the dismissal of the case should have logically followed from the ruling made, it was nevertheless essential to the finality of the action of the court that it should have declared such consequence b)r the judgment pronounced. It is not' sufficient to constitute a final judgment that the court make a ruling which should logically lead to a final disposition of the cause, but the consequence of the ruling to the parties must be also declared. One of the accepted definitions of a final judgment is that it is “the awarding of the judicial consequences which the law attaches to facts.” Hanks v. Thompson, 5 Texas, 6; Bradshaw v. Davis, 8 Texas, 344; Warren v. Shuman, 5 Texas, 449. Should it be conceded, therefore, as contended by defendant in error, that a dismissal of the cause or a final judgment in favor of Mrs. Winter, at least, properly followed from the ruling on exceptions, it can not be admitted that the court, by its judgment, so declared and adjudicated. It is not enough to make a final judgment that we can see-that the court ought to have rendered one. What the court did must have amounted to a final determination of the rights of the parties resulting from the ruling made. In the case of Andrews v. Richardson, 21 Texas, 295, an order was entered that if the plaintiff should not amend his petition by the first day of the term next succeeding1'the order, the case should be dismissed. The plaintiff did not amend his petition by the given time, but did amend later, and, after such amendment and the taking of various other steps in the cause, the defendant moved to dismiss because of noncompliance with the order, and the motion was sustained. The Supreme Court, in passing upon this action, said: “The motion assumed that the failure to comply with the order operated a dismission of the cause, but this was *564 manifestly a mistake. It required a final judgment, from which an appeal would lie, to effect such dismission. Ho such judgment was rendered; the cause was not dismissed.” This authority recognizes the proposition, which, in fact, runs through all our decisions on the subject, that in order to constitute a final judgment dismissing a cause, there must be an express adjudication in substance to that effect.

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Bluebook (online)
57 S.W. 39, 93 Tex. 560, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-land-loan-co-v-winter-tex-1900.