Defective Service

December 14, 2012

Few defendants are willing to take the risk of not answering a lawsuit when service of process has been defective.  After all, moving to quash service in Texas only gets you additional time to file an answer (see TRCP 122), and there is always the chance that a default judgment will be sustained if the attack on service is unsuccessful.  But whether by  luck or design, Bailey’s Furniture, Inc. has reversed the trial court’s entry of default judgment by challenging the plaintiff’s attempted service of process.  According to the process server’s affidavit, he had attempted to serve “Defendant Charles Bailey” on five occasions.  But while the petition identified Charles Bailey as the registered agent of Bailey’s Furniture, nothing in the process server’s affidavit indicated that he was being served in that capacity, and he was not in fact the defendant named in the lawsuit.  Because proper service had not been made prior to entry of the default judgment, the trial court never obtained personal jurisdiction over Bailey’s, rendering the judgment void.  The court of appeals therefore reversed and remanded the case to the district court for further proceedings.

Bailey’s Furniture, Inc. v. Graham-Rutledge & Co., No. 05-11-00710-CV