52 Tex. 603 | Tex. | 1879
To the introduction in evidence in this case of the judgment of E. Miles, a justice of the peace, in the suit before him of Overstreet & Rogers y. A. S.
The admission of the certified copy of the judgment of the justice of the peace, over this objection, is assigned as error, and brings up for our consideration the most material question in the case.
The general rule is, that the law will presume that a domestic court of general jurisdiction had power to make the judgment rendered by it, unless the contrary is shown by the record. The same presumption will not be indulged in favor of the judgment of a court of limited or special jurisdiction, but the facts necessary to the exercise of its jurisdiction must affirmatively appear upon the record.
All our courts are limited in their jurisdiction; but those created by express constitutional enactments, with general and exclusive powers to hear and determine all controversies within their particular judicial sphere, cannot be said to be courts of limited or special jurisdiction within the meaning of the above rule. (Bumpus v. Fisher, 21 Tex., 567; Guilford v. Love, 49 Tex., 744.)
In the case of Bumpus v. Fisher, 21 Tex., 567, in commenting upon the judgment of a justice of the peace, it is said:
“ It is the tendency of American decisions to liberalize the rule of construction with reference to the inferior courts. Our Probate Courts generally would strictly come under the denomination of courts of special and limited jurisdiction. Still, liberal presumptions are indulged in reference to their orders and judgments, although that which gave the power to act, as the predicate for talcing jurisdiction, might not appear in the record.
“ The rule, then, with respect to courts of limited jurisdiction, that everything must appear on the record strictly and affirmatively which will give them jurisdiction to hear and deter
It was argued by the learned justice who delivered the opinion in the above case, that public policy, the nature of the powers and duties of justices of the peace, and the order of legal capacity which must be employed to fill this office, forbid that their judgments should be construed with every intendment against them, as if they were pleas in abatement, which had to be certain to a certain intent in every particular. (21 Tex., 569.)
In the elaborate opinion of Chief Justice Roberts in the subsequent case of Guilford v. Love, 49 Tex., 740, it was decided that our Probate Courts, though having, under the Constitution, only limited and special powers, are courts of general jurisdiction within the division of subjects allotted to them, and that their orders and judgments made within this scope should be upheld and shielded from collateral attack, the same as those of any other court of general jurisdiction.
It. is said by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, that “ a justice of the peace exercised his jurisdiction mainly according to the course of the common law; his court is for many purposes a court of record, to which a writ of error will lie.” (Martin v. The Commonwealth, 1 Mass., 347, 389; Thayer The Commonwealth, 12 Met., 9; Valier v. Hart, 11 Mass., 300; Arnold v. Tourtellot, 13 Pick., 172; Gay v. Richardson, 18 Pick., 417.)
In our view, the rule which makes the judgment of a court of record binding upon the parties until reversed by proper proceedings therefor, although jurisdiction of the person was' not properly obtained, is applied as well to a judgment of a justice of the peace as to one of a court of general jurisdiction. (Hendrick v. Whittemore, 105 Mass., 28.) In that case it is held, that there is a broad distinction • between a case where the justice assumed to exercise a judicial power which he did
The case of Mitchell v. Runkle, 25 Tex. Supp., 132, cited by appellant, was a summary proceeding, penal in character, and not within the ordinary jurisdiction of the justice of the peace.
The judgment in this character of case should be strictly construed. As said by Chief Justice Marshall in Thacher v. Powell, 6 Wheat., 127: “ In summary proceedings, where the court exercises an extraordinary power under a special statute prescribing its course, we think that course ought to be exactly-observed, and those facts especially which give jurisdiction ought to appear, in order to show that its proceedings are coram judice.”
Courts of justices of the peace have been expressly provided for by our several State Constitutions, with certain defined limits, like our Superior Courts, within which they could exercise a general exclusive jurisdiction, and which, by the Constitution of 1876, was largely increased.
Doubtless hundreds of titles to lands in this State are based upon their judgments. To hold that these titles are void unless the record shows affirmatively all the necessary facts, would virtually defeat many of them, involve the country in litigation, and would be contrary to repeated rulings of this court, which hold that such proceedings should be liberally construed. (Freem. on Judg., sec. 53; Clay v. Clay, 7 Tex., 250; Davis v. Rankin, 50 Tex., 286.)
We are of opinion, that judgments of justices of the peace, when apparently within the ordinary scope of this power and jurisdiction, cannot, as was sought to be done in this ease, be collaterally attacked as being void for the reason that they do not show affirmatively all the facts necessary to have given the court jurisdiction.
It is further urged, that the court erred in admitting in evidence the execution issued upon this judgment and the sheriff’s deed b3T virtue of the sale made thereunder, I137 reason of variances between them and the judgment.
The sheriff’s deed is not set out; hence we cannot consider the objection in regard to it. The execution correctly described .the court before which the judgment was rendered, the date of its rendition, and the names of the parties to the suit, but misdescribed the amount of the judgment by reciting it as being for “thirteen dollars and thirty-seven cents debt due and interest,” when the judgment was for twelve dollars and fifty.cents principal and six cents interest. We do not think that this was such a material variance as should, on a collateral attack, avoid a purchase made by a third party at the execution sale,
Mr. Freeman says: “When an execution is not in proper form, or when it misrecites the judgment, as no one but the defendant can be injured, no one but he ought to be allowed to complain; and his complaint ought not to be heard when, by apathy, he has allowed the right of third parties to attach themselves .to the execution, or even when he has allowed plaintiff to be placed in a worse situation than though prompt complaint had been made. When sufficient appeared on the lace of the execution to connect it with the judgment, courts
There was some conflicting testimony as to a credit upon the judgment, of the merits of which the court below was the appropriate tribunal to determine.
The objection that “ the court permitted the plaintiffs, after they had closed the case and after the defendant had concluded his testimony, to introduce other evidence not in rebuttal to that of the defendant,” is not, we think, sufficient to reverse the judgment.
It has long been the practice to permit this, in the sound discretion of the judge presiding. It is expressly allowed by statute even in criminal cases, and in favor of the State. (R. C., Crim. Proced., art. 661; Paschal’s Dig., art. 3046.) And this is now the practice in civil cases, as provided by statute. (Rev. Stats., art. 1298.)
It is not believed there was error in not requiring plaintiff to show title from and under the sovereignty of the soil. The legal title to the land was in defendant in execution, A. S. Howell, under whom both parties claim. The fact that Hut-chins had conveyed it to Howell to prevent a law-suit with Cunningham, did not, in law, as between these parties, make it less the property of Howell. (Paschal’s Dig., art. 3876.)
There being no apparent error in the judgment below, the same is affirmed.
Ahirmbb.