56 Tex. 325 | Tex. | 1882
It is admitted by both parties that the land in controversy formerly belonged to E. Stone, under whom they each claim title.
Appellees claim to deraign title under a judgment rendered in their favor against E. & I. Stone on the 14th of April, 1877, under which execution issued and sale was made of the land on the first Tuesday in June, 1877, at which they became the purchasers.
Appellant deraigns title through a judgment rendered in the county court for Johnson county on the 19th of June, 1876, in favor of E. & J. Martin and against E. & I. Stone, under which an execution and order of sale issued on the 15th of August, 1876, under which the land was sold on the first Tuesday in September, 1876, at which appellant became the purchaser.
On the 5th of February, 1878, E. & I. Stone sued out a writ of error by which the judgment rendered against them in favor of E. & J. Martin was taken to the court of appeals, which upon hearing affirmed the judgment of. the county court upon the merits.
The suit in favor of E. & J. Martin was instituted in the district court for Johnson county in February, 1876, to recover $383.81 on a note executed by E. & I. Stone, and citation issued therein on the 19th February, 1876, which was served on I. Stone and returned not executed as to E. Stone, April 22, 1876.
On 3d of June, 1876, an alias citation to E. Stone was issued by the clerk of the district court for Johnson county, returnable to the June term of that court, and this was returned on the 5th of June, 1876, showing that the defendant E. Stone was not found in the county; after which the clerk of the district court for Johnson county issued a judicial attachment to enforce the attendance of E. Stone, and the same was levied on the 8th of June, 1876, on the lands in controversy as the property of E. Stone. The cause of E. & J. Martin v. E. & I. Stone
The judgment in favor of E. & J. Martin was by default, and on the same day the judgment was rendered E. & I. Stone filed a motion to set aside the judgment, alleging their ignorance of the service of the attachment, and on the next day they filed a motion to quash the attachment upon various grounds, both of which motions were overruled on the 20th of July, 1876. It seems that the citation under which service was made upon I. Stone was without seal.
This suit was brought by the appellees to recover the possession of the land and to remove cloud from their title, and there was a judgment rendered to that effect.
It is claimed by the appellees that the judgment under which the appellant claims title is void for the reason that the judicial attachment was issued by the clerk of the district court after the adoption of the present constitution, and was made returnable to that court; and for the further reason that the citation under which service was had upon I. Stone was not under seal.
The question of the validity of the process under which E. & I. Stone were brought into the county court of Johnson county was passed upon by the court of appeals upon the writ of error presented by them, and was held to be valid, and it is neither necessary nor proper that we should reinvestigate that question; and it only becomes necessary, in order to a proper determination of the rights of the parties in this cause, to apply to them the legal results of the judgments rendered by the county court and the court of appeals.
The appellees claim the land under E. Stone through a judgment rendered and sale made since the sale made under the judgment rendered in favor of E. & J. Martin against E. & I. Stone; such being the case, the appel
“The term privity denotes mutual or successive relationship to the same rights of property,” and it matters not whether such relationship be by voluntary or involuntary transfer. Freeman on Judgments, 162. If by reason of the proceedings had in the case of E. & J. Martin v. E. & I. Stone, title to the property in controversy passed, as against them or either of them, to the appellant, then the appellees are as much barred thereby as though they had been parties to that suit; for they claim to have succeeded to an estate in the same through E. Stone since the rights of appellant were acquired under that judgment.
Such being the case, it only becomes necessary to inquire as to the character and effect of the judgments against E. & I. Stone and in favor of E. & J. Martin.
If there was any question as to whether the county court for Johnson county acquired jurisdiction over the persons of E. & I. Stone, there can be no question that it had jurisdiction of the subject matter of that suit. That court adjudged that it had jurisdiction over their persons; and were the rights of the parties now before us dependent alone upon that judgment, the present attack thereon being strictly collateral, we should be bound to hold, unless the record showed to the contrary, that such jurisdiction was obtained. Fitch v. Boyer, 51 Tex., 344.
We are not, however, left in this cause to determine the rights of the parties by that judgment alone.
The county court having jurisdiction of the subject matter of that suit, the question of the correctness of its judgment in regard to its jurisdiction over the persons of E. & I. Stone could be, as it was, legally investigated and determined by the court of appeals, which is made by law the court of last resort in that class of cases. The
That judgment must be held conclusively to establish the validity of the judgment which the appellees claim in this court was void, and nothing can now be heard from the appellees to impeach its validity for the want of jurisdiction over the persons of E. & I. Stone.
The administration of all human laws must necessarily be as imperfect as are the instruments through which they are administered; and that in some instances the adjudications of the courts may operate a hardship upon particular individuals, furnishes no reason why a cause once determined upon its merits should not be held conclusive between the parties thereto and their privies, in reference to all matters therein involved and determined; the good of society and the preservation of rights and good order require that, when once the rights of parties have been determined by the ultimate tribunal provided by law for their adjudication, that the same shall pass from the field of strife forever; any other rule would but fill the courts with causes which have been once determined, and render all rights of property uncertain and the most solemn judgments a mockery.
The judgment of the court - of appeals affirming the judgment of the county court of Johnson county rendered in favor of E. & J. Martin against E. & I. Stone, the correctness of which we do not wish to be understood as questioning or passing upon, conclusively establishes' in favor of the appellant the question upon which the
Reversed and remanded.