71 S.W.2d 1087 | Tex. | 1934
There is pending in the District Court of Hardin County (75th district) a certain suit in trespass to try title, styled Marrs McLean et al. v. Houston Oil Company of Texas et al., which will hereinafter be called the McLean case or the McLean suit. The defendants in that suit, the relators here, have petitioned this court for the writ of prohibition to stop further proceeding in said suit. The respondents herein include Honorable Geo. C. O'Brien, the acting judge of said district court, and the plaintiffs and interveners in the McLean suit. In this opinion the term "respondents" will be used as referring only to said plaintiffs and interveners. The land sought to be recovered by the plaintiffs and interveners in said suit is the Eduardo Arriola league in Hardin County. The relators claim that the prosecution of said suit interferes with the enforcement of the jurisdiction of this court respecting the judgment of this court in the case of Houston Oil Company et al. v. McCarthy et al. (See
The McCarthy suit was one of trespass to try title to the Eduardo Arriola league, and was brought, on January 22, 1917, in the 9th District Court of Hardin County, by Edward McCarthy, G. G. Clough and the Village Mills Company, against the Houston Oil Company and numerous others. On February 4, 1918, G. G. Clough and the Village Mills Company, in a different suit in which they claimed to hold the title to the Arriola league, recovered, in the District Court of Hardin County, a judgment against the unknown Heirs of Eduardo Arriola for said league of land. This suit will be designated in this opinion as the "Unknown Heirs suit," and the judgment rendered *257
therein as the "Unknown Heirs judgment." Service of citation in that suit was obtained by publication, and the said heirs made no answer, except through an attorney ad litem appointed by the court. No motion for new trial was ever filed by any of said heirs or under authority from them. The attorney ad litem filed a motion for new trial a few weeks after the expiration of the term of court at which said judgment was rendered, and some five years later, the trial court entered an order purporting to grant said motion and set aside said Unknown Heirs judgment. During the pendency of the McCarthy suit in the trial court, G. G. Clough deeded to various persons an undivided interest in the Arriola league. At the time said deeds were made the respective grantees therein had actual knowledge of the fact that the McCarthy suit was pending. All said grantees, or their privies, are plaintiffs or interveners in the McLean suit. While the McCarthy suit was pending in the trial court, Marrs McLean, one of the above mentioned grantees, also acquired a claim to an undivided interest in the Arriola league, from one E. T. Stone, an alleged heir of Eduardo Arriola, who was a stranger to the McCarthy suit. In April, 1919, the McCarthy case was tried, resulting in a judgment that the plaintiffs "take nothing," by their suit. During the trial of the case, the plaintiffs therein offered in testimony the Unknown Heirs judgment, but same was excluded. The McCarthy case was appealed, and the Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court. The case was then brought to this court on writ of error, and this court entered judgment reversing the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and affirming the trial court's judgment. (
1 Before proceeding to the consideration of other matters, we shall take up for consideration the contention of counsel for respondents respecting the action of the district court purporting to set aside the Unknown Heirs judgment some five years after same was rendered. Article 2236 of the Revised Statutes, provides that "In cases in which judgment has been rendered on service of process by publication, where the defendant has not appeared in person or by attorney of his own selection, (1) the court may grant a new trial upon petition of defendant showing good cause, supported by affidavit, filed within two years after such judgment was rendered. * * *" Under this statute, a defendant cited by publication may obtain a new trial, for good cause, upon sworn motion for new trial filed within two years. The motion when filed by the defendant, *258
or under his authority, within the two-year period, is but the continuation of the original suit. Wiseman v. Cottingham,
2 We now pass to other contentions of the respondents. They say that since the Unknown Heirs judgment did not become final until after the McCarthy case was tried, said judgment, when it became final, had effect to invest them with the title to the Arriola league which was adjudicated in the Unknown Heirs suit, and therefore such title constitutes an after acquired title which they are at liberty to litigate in the McLean suit. The conclusion is fallacious. When the two-year period for the filing of a motion for a new trial in the Unknown Heirs suit expired, and the judgment therein became final, the effect was simply to render conclusive, as of the date of the judgment, the adjudications made. Although at the time the McCarthy suit was tried, the Unknown Heirs judgment, because of its inconclusive character, was not admissible in evidence to support the title which it purported to establish (Texas Trunk Ry. Co. v. Jackson,
3 However, the claim of title held by Marrs McLean, which he acquired from E. T. Stone, was not affected by the McCarthy judgment. This is so for the reason that Stone was a stranger to the McCarthy judgment and the claim acquired from him by McLean was not a subject of litigation in the McCarthy suit. The plaintiffs in the McCarthy suit could not put forward such claim as a basis for recovery. In respect of said claim there was no privity of interest between them and McLean. Even McLean himself could not, as a matter of right, have intervened and put such claim in issue in the McCarthy suit. Sherrod v. Terrell,
4 The question arises as to the jurisdiction of this court to issue the writ of prohibition sought by relators. The affirmance of the trial court's judgment in the McCarthy case had effect to make that judgment the judgment of this court. Where rights are established by a judgment of this court, the court has undoubted power to secure, by any proper writ necessary to the end, the enjoyment of the rights so established. Where a suit is brought in an inferior court, by any of the parties or privies *260
to such judgment, against those in favor of whom the judgment was rendered, or their privies, and the suit directly involves the re-litigation of rights established by the judgment, and is of such nature that, if successfully prosecuted, will result in a judgment which will purport the divesting of those rights, the prosecution of such suit will be prohibited as being an interference with the enforcement of the judgment of this court. Conley v. Anderson, 164 S.W. (Supt. Ct.), 985; Hovey v. Shepherd,
5 The adjudication of the rights of Marrs McLean under the deed from E. T. Stone properly belongs to the district court, and the prosecution of the claim there does not constitute such an interference with the rights established by the McCarthy judgment, as calls for action by this court. Further proceeding in the McLean case should not, therefore, be entirely prohibited. The writ of prohibition should issue commanding the respondents (including Judge O'Brien) to desist from proceeding further in the McLean suit except in regard to the claim just mentioned.
Adopted by the Supreme Court, April 18, 1934.