16 Tex. 52 | Tex. | 1856
The question is as to the validity of the judgment under which the plaintiff claims to have derived title. It is not, it must be admitted, as full and formal as it might have been, or as a correct practice would require. But it is not, therefore, necessarily void. Though it does not specify the sum for which it was rendered, yet that may be readily ascertained by reference to the judgment of the Justice, which was" before the Court when it gave judgment, and remains there of record ; and though it is not in itself, certain as to the amount, it may thus be rendered certain. And it has been expressly decided,- that a judgment of affirmance, not stating the amount, is sufficiently certain, if it can be made certain by reference to the original judgment. (Benedict v. Dillenhunt, 3 Scam. 287.) So also it has been decided that a judgment entered, “ that the “ plaintiff recover of the defendant according to specialty, with " six per cent interest and costs,” on a verdict, “for the plain-M tiff according to specialty, with six per cent interest.” the
The practice of thus entering judgments, in cases appealed from the Justice’s Courts, is believed to have been not unusual. It was a loose practice, which is to be deprecated: and the more so, as the trial in the District Court was de novo :
It is objected that the judgment was void for the want el! jurisdiction in tho District Court to entertain the appeal; and1 it is supposed to come within the principle of the case of Titus v. Latimer, (5 Tex. R. 433.) The contrary, however, has been expressly decided, where, as in this case, the appeal was taken before the adoption of the State Constitution. (Sasse v. Schmidt, 6 Tex. R. 144, 147.)
It is further contended that the sale was void, and the execution and Sheriff’s deed were rightly excluded by tbs Court, because "less land was sold, than was levied on, by the officer: and this objection to the validity of the sale., is supposed to be supported by the decision of this Court in the case of Howard v. North, (5 Tex. R. 290.) But, E is to be observed, the sale, in that case, was under the provision of the statute which required appraisement: and tbs opinion and judgment of the Court were based upon tbs terms and requirements of that provision. (Id. 312 et seq.) Here the property was sold under a different provision of the statute, which did not require appraisement: and tbs reasoning and decision of the Court upon that point, in tl-s case of Howard v. North, has no application to the presc-si: case. The evidence was excluded on the ground of the supposed nullity of the judgment: and we are of opinion that tie Court erred in its rejection ; for which the judgment must fc reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.