35 S.W.2d 140 | Tex. Comm'n App. | 1931
"We adopt, as being substantially correct, the following statement of the nature of this case and the result of the suit made by plaintiffs in error in their application for the writ of error':
“This was a suit by Pauline Jennings against San Antonio Public Service Corporation, alleging that while a minor she was injured through the negligence of defendant in December, 1929, she then being a minor .about fourteen years of age and an orphan; that she was riding in an automobile and was struck by one of defendant’s cars in San Antonio and that she sustained injuries of serious and permanent nature and had never recovered therefrom. That shortly after she sustained the injuries her legal .guardian, J. C. Preston, filed a suit in one of the District Courts in San Antonio in her behalf against defendant; that thereafter without the knowledge of the said J. C. Preston or his attorneys, or of the court defendant made a pretended settlement, paying to a sister of plaintiff for plaintiff the'sum of $750.00 and that the original suit was dismissed for want of ■ prosecution,and .that plaintiff, as soon as she became of age, repudiated said pretended settlement, which ■ was grossly inadequate, and procured by fraud, and asked for a judgment in the sum of $50,000.00.
“Defendant answered by general demurrer, and set up a judgment of the Justice Court in St. Louis, Missouri, wherein plaintiff’s .sister appeared as next friend and a judgment was entered for $50.00, pleading said judgment as res adjudieata and setting up contributory negligence of plaintiff.
“Plaintiff filed her supplemental petition in which she alleged that the pretended settlement and judgment of the Justice Court in St. Louis was procured by fraud and were of no force and effect,' and were consummated without the knowledge of her legal guardian and were grossly inadequate and constituted a fraud upon the District Court in Bexar County where the original .suit filed by her guardian'was pending, and that no suit could be maintained in any justice court in Missouri, and that no one other than her legal guardian had any legal authority to submit to the jurisdiction of any other court, and that said court had no jurisdiction over the parties or the subject matter involved, and prayed as in her original petition.
“Defendant answered in its first supplemental answer by demurrers .and exceptions, all of which were' overruled, by the court, ' except one addressed to plaintiff’s prayer for damages accruing subsequent to the St. - Louis judgment.
“The cause was tried to a jury and at the conclusion of all the testimony, the court instructed a verdict for defendant, which was excepted to by plaintiff.' And on such instructed verdict the court entered a judgment in favor of defendant.
“Plaintiff seasonably filed motions for new trial which were overruled by the court; and plaintiff duly excepted and gave notice of appeal. ' '
“Shortly after the judgment was entered, plaintiff died, her death was suggested. afid her only surviving heir at law, Anna-Jennings Mitchell, joined pro forma by her husband, were substituted as parties plaintiff.
“Plaintiffs in error took the cause by writ' of error to the Oourt of Civil Appeals for the Fourth Supreme Judicial District, which affirmed the judgment of the trial court, and overruled plaintiff in error’s motion for rehearing.”
One of the two assignments of error presented in the applidation for the writ of error is to tile effect that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in sustaining the action of the trial court in giving a peremptory, instruction in favor of the defendant in error to the jury.
The record shows without dispute' the Paul-, ine Jennings was á minor 14 ¡years old at the
It is the contention of the defendant in error, a domestic corporation having the authority to do business alone in the state of Texas, that under the facts related the judg-. ment against it in favor of the minor for $50 rendered in- the justice court in the city of St. Louis in the state of Missouri, constitutes a conclusive bar to the demand asserted by Pauline Jennings in this suit, since it is now the settled rule of law that judgments rendered by courts of sister states are entitled to the same reoognition accorded the judgments of domestic courts. 34 C. J. 1125, 1126; Norwood v. Cobb, 24 Tex. 551; Hall v. Mackey, 78 Tex. 248, 14 S. W. 615.
It is a settled rule in Texas that a judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction cannot be collaterally impeached unless the record affirmatively shows the want of jurisdiction. Williams v. Haynes, 77 Tex. 283, 13 S. W. 1029, 19 Am. St. Rep. 752; Holmes v. Buckner, 67 Tex. 107, 2 S. W. 452. A litigant in questioning the jurisdiction of the court in which judgment has been rendered, to which he is a party, can only successfully do so by showing that the proceedings and the judgment resulting from the proceedings are void, and therefore the supposed record is not in truth a record. If a court has jurisdiction of the person of the defendant, and of the subject-matter of the suit, its judgment imports absolute verity and precludes further examination; but if the court has no such jurisdiction, the proceedings will nullify the character of a record and it will not be entitled to faith and credit as such-The question of jurisdiction becomes an issue which is open to examination and determination. If a court acquires jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the person of the defendant and renders judgment, it cannot be set aside under the rule in Texas, except by a suit having for its purpose a
Section 1165,- R. S. of the State of Missouri, reads as follows: “Suits by infants may be commenced and prosecuted, either: First, by the guardian or curator of such infant'; or, second, by a next friend appointed by him in such suit.” Section 2758 of said statutes, in part, reads as follows: “No suit shall be instituted by an infant plaintiff until a next friend of such infant shall have been appointed,. [Italics ours.] Whenever requested, the justice shall appoint some suitable person, who will consent thereto in writing to be named by such plaintiff, to act as his next friend in such suit.” These articles were agreed to be in force at the time the aforesaid judgment was rendered. We also find an agreement that the justice of the peace, who rendered the judgment, had jurisdiction of the amount recovered in the judgment. The -law of Texas on this particular subject is substantially the same as section 1165 of the state of Missouri quoted, being article 1994, and reads as follows: “Minors, lunatics, idiots, or non compos mentis who have no legal guardian may sue and be represented by ‘next friend.’ ” It will be noted that under section 1165 the guardian or curator has the preference right to commence and prosecute suits in behalf of infants, while section 2758 prohibits the institution by an infant plaintiff of any suit until a next friend shall have been appointed, and it further appears that from said article that before the institution of any such suit there must he a request presented to the justice to appoint a suitable person to act as next friend, and that this person, in order to be so authorized to act, must consent thereto in writing. In the absence of proof to the contrary, the courts of Texas will place a construction upon statutes of another state in harmony with the construction which has been placed upon similar statutes of this state. In Texas it is provided by statute (article 4164) that the guardian of the estate is entitled to bring and defend suits in behalf of the infant, except, and unless, it shall appear to the court that the guardian has been negligent in the particular matter, or has refused to act, or when the interest of the guardian is antagonistic to that of his ward. The law of the state of Missouri requires as a prerequisite to giving the court jurisdiction of the person of the minor, where the minor is not represented by a guardian or curator, that the court shall appoint some suitable person to act as next friend in commencing and prosecuting the suit, and even then the person appointed is not authorized to act in commencing the suit until such person shall have consented to do so in writing. Until the provisions of sections 1165 and 2758, in the particulars above mentioned, shall appear from the record, to have been followed, it is our opinion that the court did not acquire jurisdiction of the person of the minor, who is in fact the real plaintiff in such a proceeding, by reason of the failure to comply with these plain provisions of the law of the state of Missouri. The record affirmatively shows that these provisions were not followed. It merely shows that the justice of the peace, after the cause of action had been filed but on the same day, approved the appointment of Anna Mitchell, who assumed to act in commencing the suit as a next friend to the minor, Pauline Jennings. Clearly, the justice court did not acquire the jurisdiction of the minor at the time the justice of the peace assumed to approve the appointment of Anna Mitchell as next friend, since at the time this was done there did not exist in Anna Mitchell any right to commence the suit. Evidently the statutes of Texas, giving to the guardian the right and placing upon him the duty to commence suits in behalf of a minor, is not so restrictive as to deprive the guardian of this right and to relieve him of this duty where the minor’s interest demands the commencing of a suit in a court of competent jurisdiction in a sister state. This is especially true in view of the provision of section 1165 of the law of Missouri that the same privilege to commence a suit is given the guardian or curator, where one exists, as is given by the law of Texas, under the construction given this law by the courts of Texas. “Jurisdiction” is the right and power of a court to determine a controversy between individuals, and as we have seen the court of the Fourth district of the city of St. Louis of the state of Missouri did not have jurisdiction over the person of the minor, Pauline Jennings, at the time the judgment pleacLed in bar was rendered, and its rendition was subject to collateral attack. That this is the correct construction of section 1165 is shown by the provisions of sections 1166 and 1167 providing that the appointment of a next friend for an infant must be made by the court in which the suit is intended to be brought, and that such appointment shall be made on the petition in writing of the infant, if of the age of 14 years, and the written consent of the person proposed to be the next friend acknowledged or proved to the court making the appointment. As we have seen, none of these provisions were complied with, and being jurisdictional in their nature, they were essential.
However, it further conclusively appears, from the record, that at the time the proceedings were had in the justice court
It may be that the present plaintiff in error, as sister of the minor, has been guilty of such conduct as will preclude her by estoppel from asserting any rights against the plaintiff in error, but that is a question of fact to be determined by the jury. If. in
We recommend that the judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and of the district court be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and district court are -both reversed, and cause remanded, as recommended by the Commission of Appeals.
We approve the holdings of the Commission of Appeals on the questions discussed in its opinion.