Uvalde Construction Co. v. Joiner

126 S.W.2d 22, 132 Tex. 593, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 258
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1939
DocketNo. 7264.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 126 S.W.2d 22 (Uvalde Construction Co. v. Joiner) 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
Uvalde Construction Co. v. Joiner, 126 S.W.2d 22, 132 Tex. 593, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 258 (Tex. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Hickman

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This litigation began as a suit by the City of Terrell against W. 0. Boyd et ah, and ended as a suit by Uvalde Construction Company against R. F. Joiner. No statement of facts accompanies the record and no findings of fact and conclusions of law were filed. Our statement of the case must therefore be taken from the transcript.

The City of Terrell, according to the pleadings, adopted the provisions of Chapter 106, First Called Session of the 40th Legislature, being known as the Paving Act of 1927, and being Article 1105b of Vernon’s Texas Statutes. Proceeding under that statute it levied a special assessment against a lot in the City of Terrell to pay a portion of the cost of paving a street upon which the lot abutted. The certificate of special assessment was issued by the City to Uvalde Construction Company and its assigns and evidenced an assessment levied against the lot and against W. O. Boyd as owner. R. F. Joiner and I. D. Hunnicutt were made defendants in the suit, it being alleged that they were claiming to have some interest or title in the lot subordinate to the lien and claim of plaintiff. The relief sought was a personal judgment against Boyd on the certificate and a foreclosure of the assessment lien as against all of the defendants. Uvalde Construction Company intervened, alleging that it was the legal owner and holder of the certificate and indebtedness and entitled to enforce and collect the same in its own name. It adopted the allegations of the city’s petition and also declared upon a mechanic’s lien contract entered into between it and defendant Joiner. Judgment was sought both upon the certificate and upon the contract. Joiner answered this plea of intervention and by way .of cross action sought damages for the alleged breach by the Construction Company of the terms of an oral contract made contemperan *596 eously with the written mechanic’s lien contract. The trial court sustained certain special exceptions, hereinafter to be more fully stated, interposed by the Construction Company to Joiner’s answer and the case proceeded to trial on the pleadings as they existed after these exceptions were sustained. A jury was waived, and after hearing the evidence the trial court rendered judgment as follows:

It was recited in the judgment that plaintiff and intervenor had dismissed Boyd and Hunnicutt from the suit and it was decreed that they go hence without day. It was then recited that the city instituted the suit for the use and benefit of the Construction Company, which was the owner and holder of the certificate of special assessment, and was decreed that the plaintiff, City of Terrell, take nothing. As between the Construction Company and Joiner the judgment recited that it appeared to the Court that there was then due and owing to the Construction Company on the certificate of special assessment and the mechanic’s lien contract $410.31, including principal, interest and attorney’s fees, and it was decreed that the Construction Company do have and recover of Joiner the sum of $410.31. The judgment further recited that that amount was secured by a valid and subsisting “special assessment and mechanic’s lien” upon the property described in plaintiff’s petition and it was ordered, adjudged and decreed that “said assessment lien as it existed on the 26th day of February, 1929, and said mechanic’s lien as it existed on the 24th day of April, 1929, or at any time thereafter, be and the same are hereby foreclosed. * *

Joiner prosecuted a writ of error to the Court of Civil Appeals at Dallas, which court reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the cause thereto. 103 S. W. (2d) 1055.

The special exceptions of the Construction Company to the answer of Joiner, all of which were sustained by the trial court, were, in substance, as follows: First, that the allegations with reference to fraud were too general and were insufficient; second, that the alleged oral agreement was pleaded as a cross action for unliquidated damages, which could not be set up in a suit founded upon a liquidated demand; third, that the answer did not state the name of the agent of the Construction Company alleged to have made the oral contract with Joiner; and fourth, that the cause of action pleaded by Joiner was barred by the two years statute of limitation.

The Court of Civil Appeals held that the trial court erred in sustaining intervenor’s special exception to that portion of *597 the answer alleging fraud practiced by intervener’s agent in procuring the execution of the lien contract, and also the exception directed at the failure of the answer to give the name of the agent alleged to have made the oral representations. It overruled the assignment complaining of the action of the trial court in sustaining the exception presenting the plea of two years limitation.

We approve this latter holding by the Court of Civil Appeals, because the action was clearly one for damages, which could have been maintained as an independent action, and the petition disclosing that more than two years had elapsed after the accrual of that alleged cause of action, it was barred by limitation. The cross action upon which the case went to trial was defendant’s third amended answer. It clearly disclosed that more than two years had elapsed at the time it was filed since the accrual of his alleged cause of action for damages. We are not advised by the record when the original answer was filed. Ordinarily abandoned and superseded pleadings have no place in the transcript, but if it be necessary to look to such pleadings on a question of limitation they properly belong there. District and County Court Rule No. 14. The trial court had that information before it when the exception was sustained. Presumably that court entered the correct judgment and the burden was upon Joiner, if he would have that judgment overturned, to bring to the Court' of Civil Appeals a record which disclosed error. Not having done so, that court correctly upheld the trial court’s order sustaining the exception.

We do not agree with the holding of the Court of Civil Appeals that the judgment of the trial court should be reversed on account of the sustaining of the other special exceptions. As pointed out above, the judgment established Joiner’s liability upon both the certificate and the contract and foreclosed the lien fixed by each. No assignment in the Court of Civil Appeals complained of the judgment in so far as it was based upon the certificate of special assessment, but complained only of the rulings of the trial court on the special exceptions, all of which were leveled at allegations with reference to the mechanic’s lien contract. As we understand the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, it holds that fundamental error was committed by the trial court in rendering judgment upon the certificate, because in the proceedings fixing the assessment lien and in the certificate Boyd was named as the owner and Joiner’s name was not mentioned. We do not agree with the holding that the proceedings and the certificate were void because of this error *598 in naming the true owner of the property. We must presume in support of the trial court’s judgment that it was established upon the trial that Joiner was the true owner of the lot.

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W.2d 22, 132 Tex. 593, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uvalde-construction-co-v-joiner-tex-1939.