Thouvenin v. Rodrigues

24 Tex. 468
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 24 Tex. 468 (Thouvenin v. Rodrigues) 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
Thouvenin v. Rodrigues, 24 Tex. 468 (Tex. 1859).

Opinion

Hemphill, C. J.

In this case our conclusions are, 1st. That Mariano Rodrigues, the defendant, in the suit against him by John Cortes, had such notice of the suit, as in contemplation of law gave the court jurisdiction over his person; and that the [474]*474judgment in that case is not a nullity, for the supposed want of notice to the defendant.

J. A. Q-eorge W. Paschal, for the appellees, made application for a rehearing.

2d. We incline to the opinion, that the alleged donation from Jose Maria Rodrigues to his father, Mariano Rodrigues, was complete; but as the subject has not been thoroughly examined, and as the judgment will be reversed, we leave the point, as to the validity of the donation, without a positive or conclusive decision : and,

3d. We are of opinion that, under the pleadings charging that the judgment in the case of John Cortes v. Mariano Rodrigues, was null and void, on the ground of the death of the plaintiff before the institution of suit; and that the judgment, and all the proceedings under it, was but a collusion to obtain possession of the land; the testimony of the witness, offered to prove the death of the said John Cortes, before the commencement of the said suit, should have been received. An opinion will be prepared, showing more fully the reasons for our conclusions.

The judgment, so far as it shows a discontinuance as to Dangerfield, and that the demurrer was overruled, is affirmed. In all other respects it is wholly reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.

Reversed and remanded.

Wheeler, C. J.

The record presents the anomaly of a recovery by the plaintiff, upon evidence introduced by the defendant, to the admission of which the plaintiff objected at the trial, and which he now insists was incompetent to prove title in himself. Thus; the plaintiffs claimed title to the land in question, both by inheritance, and by purchase and donation from Jose Maria Rodrigues; they rested their case upon the admission of title in him by the defendants, and proof of his death, and their heirship.

[475]*475Upon this evidence alone, the plaintiff, Mariano, the father, if the only surviving parent, would have been entitled to one half, and the other plaintiffs, children of the sisters of the deceased Jose Maria, to the remaining half of his estate, by inheritance. (O. & W. Dig., Art. 345.) It does not appear whether the mother of Jose Maria survived him. But whether she died before or after the descent cast, the father would not inherit the whole estate. (Id. 347.) But by the verdict and judgment, he recovered the whole, to the exclusion of his co-plaintiffs.

This can only be accounted for, upon the ground that the court and jury considered that the donation by the son to the father, of the 15th of March, 1833, was complete; divesting the former of the property in his lifetime, and vesting it in the latter. The recovery must have been upon the title acquired by the plaintiff, Mariano, by this donation. The plaintiffs had averred title by donation, but they had not introduced the evidence of it; and when the instrument constituting the evidence was offered by the defendant, they objected to its admission, and reserved their objection by a bill of exceptions. They now insist that the donation was incomplete, and did not convey the title to the plaintiff", Mariano.

Thus it is seen, that the plaintiff, Mariano, as we have said, has recovered upon evidence introduced by the defendant, against his objections, and which, his counsel insist, conferred on him no title. If we were of the same opinion, it would require a reversal of the judgment; but we incline to a different opinion. We do not think the father and son are so far regarded as one and the same person, by the law governing this donation, that the one could not contract with, or receive a donation from, the other. We do not doubt that there must be an acceptance of the donation, to render it complete and effectual to pass the title; but we think the evidence shows such acceptance. It appears that the plaintiff, Mariano, had the writing in his possession, and that he afterwards claimed the land as his own. In his petition in this case, he asserts his title to it by donation. [476]*476It would seem, therefore, that the evidence of his acceptance of the donation, is not wanting; and that the donation was complete, unless wanting in some other essential formality or solemnity, in order to its complete execution. Without intending, at present, a final decision upon this point, (as it is unnecessary to the present disposition of the case,) we incline to the opinion, formerly expressed, that the donation was complete.

Though we might not see. cause to reverse the judgment, on account of the supposed invalidity of the donation, and consequent failure of title in the plaintiff, to support the verdict and judgment in his favor, there is another ground upon which, wrn are of opinion, the judgment must be reversed; that is, the ruling out of the record of the judgment in the case of Cortes v. Rodrigues, under which the defendant claims to have acquired the title to the land in question. This ruling is supposed to have proceeded upon the ground, that the court had not jurisdiction to render the judgment in question, for the want of service upon the defendant, and that the judgment was consequently void.

That a judgment pronounced by a court not having jurisdiction is void, and cannot be evidence of any right acquired under it, is an acknowledged doctrine, as well in respect to domestic as to foreign judgments, and as well where the judgment comes in question collaterally, as where it is sought to be enforced directly, by action.

Numerous authorities are cited, on behalf of the appellee, to show that a judgment rendered without personal service, is void for want of jurisdiction. These, for the most part, are cases where the court had not acquired jurisdiction over the person of the defendant, according to the local law, or where judgments rendered in one country, were sought to be enforced in another, and where the question was considered in an international point of view. So considered, it is held, that jurisdiction, to be rightfully obtained, must be founded either upon the person of the defendant being within the territory of the sovereign where the court sits, or his property being within the territory; for otherwise there can be no sovereignty exercised. This, unquestiona[477]*477bly, is the doctrine of international law, as applied to foreign judgments. How far it is modified by the Constitution and the act of congress, in its application to the judgments of the courts of a sister state, it is not necessary, in this case, to consider. (See on this subject, Note 59 to p. 59, 2 Cow. & H. Notes to 2 Phil. Ev.; Mills v. Duryee, 2 Am. Lead. Cases, 707, and cases cited in note; D’Arcy v. Ketchum, 11 Howard, 165.)

The present is not the case of a foreign judgment, sought to be enforced in this state, but a domestic judgment, brought collaterally in question, in the domestic forum.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Tex. 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thouvenin-v-rodrigues-tex-1859.