80 Tex. 678 | Tex. | 1891
The sole and decisive question for our determination on this appeal is as to the validity of the judgment of the County Court of Mitchell County, rendered on the 18th day of January, 1883, upon service by publication, in cause Ho. 27, pending in said court, wherein W. H. Snyder was plaintiff and S. P. and John Crockett,, composing the firm of S. P. Crockett & Co., Were defendants, in personam, for $904.83, and the consequent validity or not of the subsequent execution, levy, and sale of the land in controversy thereunder, as well as the sheriff’s deed, under all of which the appellees claim said land and recovered it in the court below. There is no statement of facts, but the record brings up the trial judge’s conclusions of fact and law. It does not appear that the above mentioned judgment contained any recitation or finding of the manner in which the citation was made, or of its character. The records of that court, however, as found by the court below, showed that it was by publication on an affi-. davit that the residence of the defendants was unknown, not that they, or either of them, were nonresident or absent from the State. There was no fact affirmatively appearing on or disclosed by the record showing, according to the findings of the district judge, that the defendant S. P. Crockett, who is admitted to be the common source of title and who owned the land when said suit was filed, was a nonresident of this. State. The following are the conclusions of law found by the District Court on the above state of the case, viz.:
“The record in the cause No. 27, W. H. Snyder v. S. P. Crockett & Co., not showing affirmatively that the defendants were nonresidents-of the State, in a collateral proceeding it will be presumed that the court rightfully exercised jurisdiction, nor can a fact rendering such judgment invalid be shown by parol or by evidence aliunde the record. I therefore conclude that said judgment was not void, and it can not: be attacked in this case.
“The title of defendants being the older one they are entitled to-judgment in this case.”
Since the decision of the Supreme Court in Guilford v. Love, 49 Texas, 715, the County Court has been uniformly held to be a court of record and of general jurisdiction in its appropriate sphere, under the Constitution and laws. Its judgments, therefore, on collateral attack
As to the admission of evidence aliunde there is now a recognized exception where the judgment assailed is that of a court of a justice of the peace and where such judgment is silent as to the fact of notice (Wilkinson v. Schoonmaker, supra,), but this does not obtain when the judgment is that of a court of record and of general jurisdiction. It follows that as the records of the County Court do not affirmatively show that S. P. Crockett was a nonresident of this State when the citation was made, that the rulings of the court below in holding that the judgment of the County Court of Mitchell County was valid and binding in so far as the question of notice was concerned, and that it could not be collaterally impeached by proof of facts dehors the record, were correct. This conclusion is not in conflict with th'e doctrine of Pennoyer v. Neff, but is based entirely upon the absolute presumptions which the law indulges in support of a judgment of a domestic court of general jurisdiction and of the verity of its records. It must now be regarded as the settled rule of decision in this State that when applicable the chief principle announced in Pennoyer v. Neff will be observed, and that when it affirmatively appears from the record that a purely personal judgment has been rendered against a nonresident, and citizen of another State, without appearance or waiver by him, upon citation by publication alone, or by process beyond the State, such judgment can not be enforced and is subject to collateral attack. This is the extent to which the decisions in this State go. Northcraft v. Oliver, 74 Texas, 169; Scott v. Streepy, 73 Texas, 547; York v. The State, 73 Texas, 651; Kimmarle v. Railway, 76 Texas, 695.
This rule of decision, however, can not, as we have seen, be invoked in this case, because unsupported by the records of the County Court.
Affirmed.
Adopted May 5, 1891.