239 S.W. 277 | Tex. App. | 1922
On February 16, 1920, appellant, a nonresident, filed this suit to set aside a judgment rendered against him on the 18th day of August, 1916, on certain vendor's lien notes executed by him in part payment for the land involved in this suit, and foreclosing a vendor's lien against the land; also to set aside the sheriff's sale and deed under that judgment of foreclosure. His principal contentions — and the only ones necessary to discuss — were that the description of the land as given in the judgment foreclosing the lien was fatally defective, and that the citation, which was by publication, was insufficient to give notice that the plaintiffs in that suit were seeking to foreclose the vendor's lien. At the time the suit was filed, and also at the time of service, appellant was a nonresident.
The only criticism of the description of the land is that it did not give the county and state in which the land was located. That omission is not necessarily fatal to the description. Langham v. Gray (Tex.Civ.App.)
No point was made against anything done or omitted by the sheriff in the sale of the land. In the foreclosure sale it was bought by a stranger to the judgment, who bought in good faith, with no knowledge of any defect in the judgment, and as far as the record shows, paid for the land its reasonable market value. In every sense of the word, he was an innocent purchaser for value, without knowledge of any defect in the judgment. The same thing can be said of those holding under the original purchaser down to McHard Miller, the present claimants under the foreclosure sale. All the subsequent purchasers under that sale were strangers to the judgment. The judgment rendered against appellant contained a recitation of due service of citation upon him and of his failure to appear in answer thereto.
On these facts, the trial court properly instructed a verdict for McHard Miller for the land. When the judgment contains a finding of due and legal service of citation on the defendant, a stranger purchasing under an order of foreclosure in such judgment, in good faith and without knowledge of any defect in the service and paying for the land its reasonable market value, acquires title, even though, in fact, there was no service of citation. Seguin v. Maverick,
But we believe that the citation in the original suit was good. No question was made by appellant against its due service, but only that it did not give notice by its terms that the plaintiffs were seeking to foreclose a vendor's lien. The citation, in giving the nature of plaintiffs' cause of action, copied almost literally every statement in plaintiffs' petition, except the prayer. It showed (1) that plaintiffs were seeking to recover the land under the usual allegations of trespass to try title; (2) as an alternative plea plaintiffs plead the due execution by appellant of the notes sued on, the sale by them to him of the land involved, the reservation of the vendor's lien against the land to secure the payment of the notes; in fact, every element of plaintiffs' cause of action on the notes and for the foreclosure of the lien was set out in the petition and given in the citation. Appellant concedes that the citation was sufficient to give notice that judgment for the amount of the notes was being sought. The allegations as to the amount of the notes and as to the relief plaintiffs were entitled to on them were no fuller than plaintiffs' allegations as to a vendor's lien.
The judgment of the trial court, instructing a verdict for appellees, is in all things affirmed.