152 S.W. 458 | Tex. App. | 1912
At the January term of the district court of Montgomery county in cause No. 4,490 a judgment by default was rendered in favor of the Willis State Bank against Joseph Hubbart and his wife for the sum of $683.41, with interest thereon at the rate of 10 per cent. per annum, together with foreclosure of mortgage lien upon certain personal property. This judgment was not entered upon the minutes during the term, but after the minutes had been signed by the judge, and after the court had adjourned. On February 24, 1909, an order of sale was issued thereon and levied upon personal property described therein, and the same advertised for sale on March 13, 1909. Thereupon this suit was instituted by appellants, praying that sale of said property be enjoined, and upon presentation of the petition to the district judge a temporary writ of injunction was issued, but on March 25, 1909, the same was dissolved, and the property was again advertised to be sold on April 7, 1909. Thereupon Hubbart and wife appealed from the order dissolving said injunction to the Court of Civil Appeals for the First Supreme judicial district at Galveston, which court forthwith issued its writ of injunction, restraining the proposed sale which was to be made on said April 7, 1909, and thereafter entered its order setting aside the judgment of the district court dissolving the temporary writ, and reinstating the same as it was originally granted. The opinion of the Galveston court was rendered by Judge Reese, and the case is reported in
From the statement which we have made, it will be noted that the writ of venditioni exponas, under which the property was sold, was based upon the original order of sale which was issued February 24, 1909, and appellants contend that, the Galveston Court of Civil Appeals upon the former appeal of this case having held such order of sale to be unauthorized and void, it therefore would not support the venditioni exponas, and the sale of such property thereunder was likewise unauthorized and void.
It must be admitted there are expressions in the opinion of Judge Reese upon the former appeal from which it might be inferred that the court held the issuance of the order of sale absolutely void. We fully concur in the views there expressed that the issuance of the order of sale prior to the valid entry of the judgment was unauthorized and an injunction properly issued to restrain the sale of the property levied upon thereunder, but such a holding does not necessarily imply that the order of sale was absolutely void. We have examined the three Texas cases cited by Judge Reese, and find nothing in them to support the view that such an order of sale should be so regarded. In Cyrus v. Hicks,
Subsequent to the rendition of the opinion by the Galveston court, and on July 14, 1909, the judgment nunc pro tunc was entered, and we think the effect of this entry was to relate back and vitalize the original judgment as of the date of its original rendition, and to have cured the irregularity in the issuance of the original order of sale. We find this view supported by *460 overwhelming authority. In the first place, articles 3715 and 3717 authorize the issuance of executions at the expiration of twenty days after the rendition of judgment, and provide, if no execution is issued within 12 months after rendition of the judgment, the judgment should become dormant. It will thus be noted that the time within which the execution may issue is regulated by the date of the rendition of the judgment, and not of its entry upon the minutes. We do not regard these provisions of the statute as controlling upon the question by any means, but refer to the same merely as illustrative of the view which we have that it is the rendition of the judgment itself which supports an execution or an order of sale, rather than the formal entry upon the minutes; that the entry upon the minutes is merely the evidence demanded by law of the fact that the judgment was rendered, and is not of itself the basis of the execution. As stated above, we concur fully in the view that, until this evidence of the rendition of the judgment has been supplied by the formal entry thereof in the minutes of the court, the clerk is not authorized to issue an execution upon the judgment, and, if he does do so, the same is such an irregularity as would authorize and demand the issuance of an injunction to restrain its enforcement. But in the light of the authorities which we now review we think the subsequent entry of the judgment nunc pro tune will cure the irregularity.
Mr. Freeman, in his Work on Executions (volume 1, par. 24 [2d Ed.]) says: "If a writ so issued (referring to a writ of execution issued before formal entry of the judgment) were assailed and sought to be vacated, or otherwise avoided, it would generally be rescued from peril by a nunc pro tune entry of the judgment upon which it was based." 1 Black on Judgments, § 136, quotes with approval from Ludlow v. Johnston, 3 Ohio, 553, 17 Am.Dec. 609, as follows: "There can be no doubt that such an entry may operate so as to save proceedings which have been had before it is made. For instance, a judgment is actually made at one term, but through mistake or negligence is not entered of record. Subsequent to the term the plaintiff, under the impression that the business had all been correctly transacted, prays out execution. The property of the judgment debtor is levied upon and sold to a bona fide purchaser, who parts with his money in good faith. In such case the court may with propriety enter a judgment, to be considered of the term in which it was actually rendered and should have been entered. Such proceedings should be for the furtherance of justice. It would do no injury to the parties concerned, and would secure the rights of an innocent purchaser," 17 Cyc. § 136, says; "The irregularity of issuing execution before entry of judgment, or before the filing of the judgment roll, may generally be cured by subsequent entry of the judgment, or filing of the roll." The case of Doughty v. Meek,
In Graham v. Lynn, 4 B. Mon. (Ky.) 17, 39 Am.Dec. 493, it was held that an execution issued upon a judgment actually rendered, but not at the time fully and regularly entered, is not void, but voidable only, and may be completely validated by afterwards making a proper entry of the judgment on the record nunc pro tunc, and that such an entry would support and validate an execution issued prior to the nunc pro tune entry. In this case it was said: "The order of the 10th of December, 1840, made in the case of Graham, etc., v. Switzer, as it now stands on the record of that case, and as it was read in evidence in this case, shows that, as appeared by the record, a judgment was pronounced in court in favor of Graham v. Switzer, on the 6th of September, which by the mistake of the clerk was not then entered at *461 large on the order book, but was on the 10th of December entered nunc pro tune The court, by the instructions given to the jury, decided that, notwithstanding this order, an execution issued on the 17th of September, and returnable in November, purporting to be founded on a judgment between the same parties for the same debt, was void, as were the acts of the officer under it, and that the return of the sheriff thereon, importing that the defendant had no property, was not such evidence of diligence as would entitle the plaintiffs, who were suing the present defendant, as assignee of the debt, to a verdict. Waiving the question whether the return of the sheriff, who acted under the execution as a valid precept should not be regarded as being entitled to full weight as evidence of the facts therein stated, though it should afterwards be discovered that there was no valid judgment, we are of opinion that the court did not give proper effect to the order entering the judgment nunc pro tunc. The object and effect of such an order is to furnish proper evidence of acts properly done by the court, but not properly exhibited by its record, and such evidence is furnished nunc pro tunc, for the very purpose of supporting those acts which, though the proper consequences of a judgment, would seem to be irregular and void, because there is no proper evidence of the judgment. If the judgment be in fact rendered by the court, but not at the time regularly and fully entered, a fleri facias issued in pursuance of the judgment is not void, but voidable only, and capable of complete validation by afterwards making a proper entry of the judgment on the record, showing when it was in fact rendered, and entering it now for then. In the English courts a judgment is often rendered nunc pro tune, as of the time when it appears from the record that the plaintiff might and ought to have had judgment, though none was in fact rendered at that time (Tidd's Pr. 965, 972) `that the delay arising from the act of the court may not turn to the prejudice of the party,' as when a party dies after a special verdict during the time taken for argument or for consideration, or on a motion in arrest of judgment, or for a new trial. The court will, however, provide that other persons shall not be injured, and there `when leave was given to enter up judgment, as of a preceding term, nunc pro tunc, the court of king's bench, in order that it might not affect intermediary purchasers and mortgagees, ordered it to be docketed of the term in which the application was made.' Baker v. Baker, referred to in Tidd's Practice, 972. But application must be made in reasonable time, etc. It thus appears, as indeed is implied in the terms nunc pro tunc, that a judgment rendered nunc pro tunc might have a retrospective operation, even to the injury of strangers, unless it were expressly guarded against. With much more reason may the mere entry on the order book, nunc pro tune, of a judgment to which the plaintiff was not only entitled at a previous day, but which was then actually rendered, have a retrospective operation so as to support intermediary proceedings conformable with the judgment already rendered, and when the interest of no other party has been injuriously affected by the omission to enter it when it was in fact pronounced. Although, therefore, the writ of fieri facias in this case might have been quashed on motion, so long as no judgment appeared on the order book, yet the judgment might, if there were sufficient grounds for it, have been put there nunc pro tune even during the pendency of the motion, with the effect of removing the ground of quashal, and making good the writ and the acts done under it. And so, if the entry nunc pro tune were made on sufficient ground during the pendency of this trial, such entry read as part of the record of the case in which it was made would have removed all objections to the validity of the execution, and the verity of the officer's return thereon, so far as such objections were founded upon the mere fact that there was no judgment on the order book during the life of the execution."
In the case of Burns v. Skelton,
In the light of the authorities cited and discussed, we are of the opinion that the nunc pro tune entry of judgment on July 14, 1909, related back to January 12, 1909, upon which date judgment was actually rendered in the cause, and that the same became effective as of date January 12, 1909, and validated the irregularity of the issuance of the order of sale issued February 24, 1909, and that the sale of the property made on September 11, 1909, under the venditioni exponas based upon the original order of sale, was valid and authorized, and that the court therefore properly rendered judgment against the appellants.
Affirmed.