OPINION
This is an appeal from an entry of default judgment. Appellees sued appellant and Scottey’s Roofing for damages sustained by their house during a heavy rainstorm totaling $7,159.75. Appellees alleged in their original petition that appellant had built the home and had subcontracted the roof to Scottey’s Roofing. Appellees further alleged that appellant was “a business located at 5794 Weber Road, Corpus Christi, Nueces County, Texas, whose agent for service of *723 process is Mike Catero...” Appellees had no address for Scottey’s Roofing. Following the filing of the original petition service was thereafter had on Mike Catero as agent for appellant. Appellant did not answer the lawsuit and an interlocutory default judgment was taken by appellee. The trial court thereafter granted appellees’ motion to non-suit Scottey’s Roofing and finalized the judgment as it pertained to appellant. In one of his two points of error on appeal, appellant questions the sufficiency of the service of process. We agree with appellant that the record does not show service of process sufficiently to sustain the default judgment entered against appellant.
Appellant has herein directly attacked the judgment of the trial court by writ of error. In contrast, to the usual rule that all presumptions including service of process will be made in support of a judgment, no such presumptions are made in a direct attack upon a default judgment.
McKanna v. Edgar,
In the instant case appellees allege in their petition only that appellant was a business and that Mike Catero was appellant’s agent for service of process. Nowhere in the pleadings or in the record does appellee even so much as intimate what type of business entity appellant is or what authority Mike Catero possesses to act as agent for service of process. The pleadings and the record are not supportive of any affirmative showing that Mike Catero was in fact the agent for service of process for appellant. A naked allegation of agency alone will not support rendition of a default judgment. [
White Motor Co. v. Loden,
This problem will not arise on remand since appellant’s appearance in pursuing this writ of error will suffice for appellant’s having entered an appearance at the trial court level for all further proceedings. Mega v. Anglo Iron & Metal Co., supra; Hanover Modular Homes of Taft, Inc. v. Corpus Christi Bank & Trust, supra.
Judgment of the trial court is REVERSED and the cause is REMANDED.
