181 S.W. 765 | Tex. App. | 1915
"When any process shall have been improperly served, or shall not have been returned, or shall have been returned without service, it shall be the duty of the clerk, upon the application of any party interested, his agent or attorney, to issue other process, directed to the sheriff or other officer of the same or any other county, as the party applying may direct."
The section just set out of the act referred to is the same as article 1866, Vernon's Statutes, and has been the law since its enactment in 1846. The Supreme Court, in Lauderdale v. Ennis Stationery Co.,
The effect of the rulings made in the two cases last cited, if it affirmatively appeared that the citations issued to and served on appellants, L. B. Pierson and Sylvia White in Bexar county were alias, and not original, writs, would be to require us to presume the existence of a state of facts which authorized the issuance of the alias writs, and to overrule their contention. The question is: Should the presumption be indulged and the contentions overruled because it does not affirmatively appear from anything in the record that the citations served on them were not alias writs? We are of the opinion the question should be answered in the affirmative. The burden is on appellants to show error entitling them to the relief they ask at the hands of this court. They have not shown it, but are in the attitude of asking this court, as a basis for sustaining their claim of error, to presume that the clerk, in violation of his duty, did not issue the citations to Cameron county as prayed for in the plaintiff's petition, but, instead, in the absence of facts which would have authorized him to do so, and, therefore in violation of law, issued the citations to Bexar county. The writer is further of the opinion, notwithstanding the rulings to the contrary made in the cases referred to, that, even if it conclusively appeared that the citations issued to Bexar county and served upon said appellants L. B. Pierson and Sylvia White were not alias, but were the original citations, the service on them should be held to have been sufficient to authorize the judgment by default rendered against them. They were duly served with the notice they, as defendants in the suit, were entitled to by the terms of the law, and he does not think the mere fact that service of that notice was had on them in another county in the state than the one they were alleged to reside in is a reason why they should not be held to have been bound to answer the suit.
The other contention, made on behalf of the appellant Selma Pierson, that the judgment is erroneous in so far as it is against her personally, is sustained. It appeared from the allegation in the plaintiff's petition that she was the wife of appellant L. B. Pierson, and neither that petition nor the intervener's petition disclosed that the debts respectively sued on, or either of same, were contracted for the benefit of her separate estate, or any other fact that authorized such judgment against her. Trimble v. Miller,
The judgment will be so reformed as to deny to appellee Beard and also to appellee bank relief against Selma Pierson other than the foreclosure awarded against her of their respective liens. As so reformed, the judgment will be affirmed.