Bagley v. Spruill
Bagley v. Spruill
Opinion of the Court
Suit by defendant in error against plaints iff in error on promissory notes; petition filed June 19,1876, in the district court of San Saba county, in the seventeenth judicial district. Citation issued same day, and executed by service thereof on defendant on the 24th day of same month, 1876. ■ ‘
Judgment final, by default, was rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant, on the notes sued on, for the sum of $4,518.64, with ten-per cent, interest, and costs of
L That the court had no jurisdiction over his person in said case.
■2. That the judgment is void, and is a nullity upon its face, for the reason that he was cited to appear at the term of the district court to be held on the fourth Monday after the first Monday in September, 1876, and the judgment was rendered at a term of ttie court which was begun and was holden on the first Monday after the first Monday in September, 1876.
The record shows that the citation served on the defendant notified him to appear on the fourth Monday after the first Monday in September, 1876, and that the term of the district court for said county, at which this judgment was rendered, was begun and held on the 11th day of September, A. D. 1876.
The citation was issued and executed at a time when, according to law, the terms of the district court in the county of San Saba were required to be holden on the fourth Mondays after the first Mondays in March and September. Sec. 17 of ordinance fixing the terms of the district courts of the state of Texas, constitution of 1876.
The time for holding the terms of said court in the county of San Saba was altered by an act of the legislature, which passed and took effect from its enactment on the 29th day of July, 1876, which required said terms to be held on the second Monday in March and September, and might continue in session two weeks. General Laws "of the 16th Leg., civ 67, p. 73.
.The statute which authorizes the rendition of judgments by default (art. 1513, Pascb. Dig.) provides that, . “if the defendant has. been personalty served according to law, ., . and shall fail to answer before the fourth day of the ierra of the court to which he has been cited, the plaintiff . . may have judgment by default.” The authority to render the judgment, therefore, requires that the service of process shall be made according to law, and the failure to answer
The defendant had not been cited to appear and answer at the term which was thus holden.
If the change which was made as to the time of beginning the term had been such as to have included also in the sessions of the court the day specified in the citation for the appearance of the defendant, and to have embraced also the four days succeeding thereto, allowed defendants for filing their pleadings, it might be that judgment by default could properly be rendered on such fourth day for want of an answer, notwithstanding the change in the time for beginning the terms of the court. Where, however, as in this case, the judgment was rendered during a term of the court which had begun and was concluded previous to the day to which the defendant was cited to appear, evidently the judgment was rendered at a term of court to which the defendant had not been dted to appear. The defendant was not served according to law in respect to the term of court which was actually held; he was regularly and legally served, however, at the date at which process issued and was executed in respect to the terms of court under the law as it existed at that date.
To render the citation valid and legal as to the term which was actually held, it must have stated “ the time of holding the court.” Art. 1431, Pasch. Dig.
In Neill v. Brown, 11 Tex., 17, where an act was passed on the 7th of February, A. D. 1853, to take effect from its
The other assignments of error need not be noticed, as we regard the assignments which we have already considered as decisive, and the other points which are made relate merely to the sufficiency of the petition. There was no appearance, answer, nor motion in arrest of judgment, and we will not consider alleged defects in the petition, where facts are alleged which may, by proper amendments hereafter made, render the cause of action complete and unexceptionable. It is sufficient that the plaintiff’s petition affords a sufficient basis upon which to render a judgment upon facts on which a cause of action may be predicated.
We conclude that there "was error in .the judgment, for which it must be reversed and the cause remanded, and shall award accordingly.
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.