171 S.W. 818 | Tex. App. | 1914
It will be noted that the prayer in the petition was for judgment against the plaintiff for the sum due on the notes. It is urged that the petition therefore was not sufficient to support the judgment by default against the defendant. The contention is overruled. So obvious an error on the part of the pleader could not have misled the defendant. And, besides, a petition good as against a general demurrer will sustain a judgment by default. Graves v. Drane,
Neither, the notice nor the copy of the petition served on defendant showed either "that an attachment had been applied for, issued, or levied, nor described the property seized." It is insisted the notice, therefore, was not sufficient to support the judgment, so far as it foreclosed a lien claimed against the land levied upon. The law, it seems, is to the contrary of this contention. Milburn v. Smith,
"The defendant was beyond the territorial jurisdiction of the court, and no jurisdiction over his person was obtained," and that "no jurisdiction to subject the land was acquired, because the publication of notice was made before the levy of the attachment, and at a time when the court had no jurisdiction of any character."
In support of the contentions made in that case it was asserted that the court acquired no sort of jurisdiction before the attachment was levied, and that the publication, made when there was no jurisdiction, could not be effective to convey notice to the defendant. In overruling the contentions, the court said:
"But the answer is that jurisdiction is acquired only by taking several steps — the institution of suit, the issuance and levy of the attachment, and the compliance with the law regulating publication of notice. Until these things, essential to jurisdiction, have all been done, the power to render judgment is not obtained. It cannot be said that the appropriate proceedings taken before attachment are void; for they are things required by law to give jurisdiction, as well as the attachment. All are essential, and when all have concurred, and not before, the power is complete. Property may be seized under the writ and brought within the power of the court; but where publication is required before judgment can be rendered, the court cannot proceed to judgment without it. The absence of the levy would defeat the notice, and the absence of the notice would defeat the attachment. The mere fact that one precedes the other, if this is authorized by the statute, and is due process of law, cannot prevent the jurisdiction from becoming complete when both concur. It is sometimes said that the question of jurisdiction is to be determined by the answer to the inquiry whether or not the court had power to take the first step. But, in cases like this, jurisdiction over the thing to be affected by the judgment does not arise until all of the steps which the law makes essential have been taken. To strike down any of the proceedings, because they were had before the power was rendered complete, would leave the court powerless to acquire jurisdiction at all. If the statute required the publication to follow the levy, it may be true that publication made before the levy would be ineffective, because it would not be a compliance with this requirement. But we find no such provision. The statute regulating attachments authorizes their issuance either at the commencement of the suit or at any time during its pendency (Rev. Stat. 1879, art. 154), and the same provision is made with reference to service of process by publication (Rev. Stat. 1879, art. 1235)."
After discussing the question further, the court, in the opinion quoted from, said:
"Unless required by statute, it certainly cannot be necessary to inform him (defendant) of the fact that his property has been seized; for the seizure is due process of law and gives notice of itself. Under our statute, both writs of attachment and citations by publication contain data by which they are connected with the suit in which they are issued, and with each other. A defendant, seeing one, can, by the information which it furnishes, easily find the other. One notifies of the character of the demand, the time and place when and where it will be heard, and when he shall present his defense; and the other informs him of the seizure of his property. They cannot, in the nature of things, be made exactly contemporaneous, in their execution; and the fact that one precedes the other is not a fundamental objection, and cannot, unless in violation of the statute, defeat the jurisdiction. * * * As to the proposition that, if issued before the attachment, the notice must show the purpose to attach, we think it is sufficient to say that, if publication before the levy does not charge defendant with notice, it would not inform him of such purpose, and, if it does notify him of its contents, it would inform him of the suit, and of the liability of his property, to attachment, and of its taking the subsequent seizure would inform him."
We have quoted at such length from the opinion in the Milburn Case because we think all that was there said is applicable to this case and conclusive of the contention made here.
Plaintiff does not claim, and could not (Pennoyer v. Neff,