160 S.W. 645 | Tex. App. | 1913
This was a suit by S. Joachim, for himself, and as temporary administrator of the estate of his deceased wife, in which his five minor children, the heirs of the wife, were also joined as parties plaintiff, against H. Hamilton, H. Prince, and A. E. Stimson, as defendants.
The pleadings are very voluminous, and for the purposes of this opinion it is sufficient to say the petition alleged that Stimson leased certain premises in the Sour Lake oil field, in Hardin county, Tex., to S. Joachim for the development of oil by contract dated May 15, 1903, by the terms of which Joachim was to pay to Stimson one-fourth of the gross output of any oil developed upon the premises. It was further alleged that Joachim entered into a contract and agreement with Hamilton and Prince by which Hamilton and Prince were to furnish certain moneys for the boring of the well upon said premises and the development of oil therein, the oil so developed to be owned by the three last-named parties in certain proportions. It was alleged that Joachim bored the well upon the premises, and developed oil, and that he was thereafter ejected from possession and control of the well and premises by Hamilton and Prince, who had failed and refused to account to him for his share of the proceeds of the oil produced by the well, and the damage by reason thereof is alleged at many thousand dollars. It was further alleged that on May 18th Hamilton and Prince, through their attorney, represented to Joachim that it was advisable that the contract with Stimson regarding the lands be in the name of Hamilton and Prince, and suggested to Joachim that he release to Stimson his rights under above-mentioned contract of date May 15, 1903, so that Stimson could contract direct with Hamilton and Prince. In accordance with such suggestion Joachim, on or about May 18, 1903, did release his rights to Stimson, which he acquired under the contract dated May 15th, and Stimson then contracted direct with Hamilton and Prince.
Plaintiffs, in their petition, prayed judgment for the various sums of money which they alleged they have been damaged by Hamilton and Prince by reason of the facts above stated, and also prayed that the contract between Stimson and Hamilton and Prince be set aside, annulled, and held for naught, and that the original contract between Joachim and Stimson dated May 15, 1903, be reinstated.
Upon trial the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs against Hamilton and Prince for the sum of $5,951.18, but in no wise disposed of Stimson or the issue raised by the pleading praying for the cancellation of the Stimson-Hamilton-Prince contract and the reinstatement of the Stimson-Joachim contract.
This appeal was formerly before this court, and it was dismissed because the judgment was not final in that it failed to dispose of all of the parties and issues raised by the pleadings. Hamilton v. Joachim, 146 S.W. 288. After the dismissal of the former appeal, the appellees filed a motion in the lower court, in which it was prayed: First, that the original judgment rendered herein be set aside and held for naught, because it was not a final judgment, and that a final judgment be then entered; second, if the court was of the opinion that the original judgment should not be set aside, then that it be amended nunc pro tune by the addition of an order thereto, dismissing Stimson, with his costs. In response to this motion, the court, on July 19, 1912, entered the following order: "It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the judgment of this court of date January 7, 1911, as entered, as the same appears in the minutes of this court, in volume 7, at pages 565, 566, thereof, be and the same is hereby and here now amended and made final in accordance with said motion filed herein May 20, 1912, in the following particular, to wit: That the defendant A. E. Stimson shall be and he is dismissed, and shall go hence without day as to any cause of action alleged against him in the petition of plaintiffs herein nunc pro tune as to judgment of January 7, 1911. And said dismissal is made as of said January 7, 1911, and is now entered as for then. And in all other respects the said judgment of January 7, 1911, remains in full force and *647 effect as the judgment of this court in regard to all matters therein adjudicated and entered. And the final judgment of this court in this case is as entered in said volume 7, at pages 565 and 566, of the minutes of this court, together with the further entry this day ordered as herein stated, which further entry shall be in words and figures as follows as a part of said judgment of January 7, 1911, herein. It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiffs take nothing as to defendant A. E. Stimson, and the cause of action of plaintiffs as to said Stimson is dismissed, and he shall go hence, with his costs against plaintiffs, and have and recover same against plaintiffs, for which let execution issue."
Appellants have again appealed, and their appeal must be again dismissed for the reasons which will now be indicated. The right at a subsequent term to enter a judgment nunc pro tune or to amend or correct a judgment theretofore entered is clear; but the office of such nunc pro tune entry is to formally record some act of the court done at a former term, but which, for some reason, was not spread upon the minutes. A judgment cannot be thus amended so as to vary the rights of the parties as fixed by the original judgment pronounced by the court, nor can it be employed to secure at a subsequent term the performance by the court of some act which should have been performed, but which was not in fact done at the term in which the judgment was rendered. The authorities are uniform upon this subject. 1 Freeman on Judgments (4th Ed.) par. 68; 23 Cyc. 866-868; Coleman v. Zapp (Sup.)
In order that a nunc pro tune judgment may ever properly be entered, there should be some affirmative showing that the court actually rendered the decision which it is sought by the nunc pro tune entry to formally enter upon the records of the court. The trial court and counsel for appellees testified upon hearing of the motion, and their testimony wholly fails to disclose that any order was ever made by the court dismissing as to the defendant Stimson, but, upon the contrary, very clearly, if not conclusively indicates that no such order was made. For a court, at a subsequent time, under the guise of a nunc pro tune entry, to enter an order which was not in fact pronounced or made is wholly without warrant in law, and the order entered July 19, 1912, was unauthorized and void. As was said by Chief Justice Brown, in Reed v. Robertson (Sup.)
It should be stated, however, that, if the evidence were sufficient to warrant the entry nunc pro tune of an order of dismissal as to Stimson, the judgment would still be lacking in finality, because of its failure to dispose of the issue raised by the pleadings relating to the cancellation of the Stimson-Hamilton-Prince contract and the reinstatement of the Stimson-Joachim contract. This is an issue raised by the pleadings, quite separate and distinct from the right to recover of Hamilton and Prince the personal money judgment prayed for. A dismissal of Stimson, in so far as he is concerned, would probably eliminate this issue, but not so far as concerns appellees on the one part and Hamilton and Prince on the other part. For the reasons indicated, the judgment is not final, and the appeal must be dismissed.
It is so ordered.