Adoue v. Wettermark

82 S.W. 787, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 585, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 294
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 18, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 82 S.W. 787 (Adoue v. Wettermark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adoue v. Wettermark, 82 S.W. 787, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 585, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 294 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This is a suit by appellee against appellant to recover actual and exemplary damages for the alleged wrongful levy of a - writ of execution. Appellant filed a plea of privilege to be sued in Dallas County where he resided, and answered to the merits by general demurrer and general denial and various special exceptions and pleas, the nature of which, in view of the conclusion we have reached upon the facts disclosed by the record, it is unnecessary to state.

The facts shown by the record are as follows: Appellant resides in Dallas County. On April 12, 1898, he recovered a judgment in the District Court of the said county against the Petri Lumber Company for $13,882 with interest and cost and foreclosing a lien on certain machinery in possession of and claimed by Bermea Land and Lumber Company, which company was a party to the suit in which this judgment was rendered. The last named company appealed from the judgment and filed a supersedeas bond as provided by the statute. Appellee in this case was one of the sureties upon said bond. Hpon a hearing of the appeal the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District affirmed the judgment of the court below, and further adjudged “that the appellees, J. B. Adoue and the Petri Lumber Company, a corporation, recover of and from the appellant, the Bermea Land and Lumber Com- *586 pony, principal, and its sureties, B. S. Wettermark and Giles B. Crain, such amounts as were adjudged to them by the court below and all costs in this behalf expended, and this decision be certified below for observance.”

A mandate in usual form was issued and received by the District Court of Dallas County on July 10, 1899. On July 14, 1899, the clerk of the District Court of Dallas County issued an order of sale directed to the sheriff of Nacogdoches County. This order recited all the above-facts and commanded the sheriff to seize and sell the machinery on whicÉ foreclosure had been ordered, and that if the machinery could not be found or did not sell for enough to satisfy the judgment, then to make the balance out of any other property of Petri Lumber Company, Bermea Land and Lumber Company, B. S. Wettermark and Giles B. Crain, as in case of ordinary execution.

The written return of the sheriff of Nacogdoches County attached to said order of sale showed that he had sold this machinery for $1925; that he could not find any property of Petri Lumber Company, Bermea Land and Lumber Company or Giles B. Crain; that he had called upon B. S. Wettermark to point out property to levy on, which he had failed to ■ do, and that on August 5, 1899, he had levied the writ for the balance due theréon on nineteen tracts of land as the property of B. S„ Wettermark; and that on August 8, 1899, he had been served with a. writ of injunction issued at the suit of Wettermark out of the District Court of Nacogdoches County, and he therefore returned the writ without a sale of the land or taking any further proceedings under it. This return did not mention anything about a levy or attempted levy on an interest in a partnership or anything else except the land. On August 8, 1899, Wettermark obtained from the District Court of Nacogdoches County an injunction restraining the sale of this land.

Upon appeal to this court this injunction suit was dismissed on the-ground that the District Court of Nacogdoches County was without; jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause.

After /this, in 1901, the clerk of the District Court of Dallas County-issued a venditioni exponas commanding the sheriff of Nacogdoches-. County to sell these lands previously levied upon. Sale under this was enjoined by the District Court of Dallas County, and this suit was-finally affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals, Fifth District. In July, 1899, the clerk of the District Court of Dallas County issued an abstract reciting above judgments, appeal bonds, etc., and the attorney's forAdoue had this recorded in Nacogdoches County. With reference to-the above levy of the order of sale in August, 1900, the facts were as follows: Cobb & Avery were attorneys at law residing in Dallas- County and were the attorneys for Adoue in the original litigation and in collecting the judgment rendered therein, and they owned an interest in these judgments. J. M. Avery of that firm attended especially to these-matters. He advised Mr. Adoue as a matter of law that B. S. Wetter-mark had become liable for the balance of the original foreclosure judg *587 ment by reason of the supersedeas appeal bond and the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals at Austin thereon. Mr. Avery prepared the order of sale and the clerk signed and issued it in Dallas County. Avery obtained from Hoya & Gilbert, abstract and real estate men, a description of the lands levied on, and he had prepared in Dallas County a form of levy giving a description of these lands; at the same time he had prepared in Dallas County a 'form of notice and copy notifying Wettermark that his interest in the partnership of A. Wettermark & Son had been levied on under this order of sale; there was nothing for the sheriff to do but sign his name to these papers; Mr. Avery took these papers and went from Dallas County to Nacogdoches County and delivered the papers to Mr. Gunning, deputy sheriff, who had the order of sale in charge; the deputy signed the levy on the land and attached this paper to the order of sale; he also signed the notice and copy and took them to the place of business of A. Wettermark & Son in Nacogdoches and handed the copy to B. S. Wettermark, who read it over and handed it back to the deputy with the request to show it to his attorneys, Blount & Garrison. The deputy and Wettermark then went to the office of the latter’s attorneys, and Mr. Blount asked the deputy not to serve this notice or make this levy on said interest, and threatened the sheriff with a law suit for large damages if he did; the deputy then found the sheriff, Campbell, and the deputy and sheriff then consulted their lawyer, Judge Ingraham, who advised them not to serve this notice or make this levy unless Mr. Adoue would give the sheriff an indemnity bond; the deputy then found Mr. Avery and handed back to him the notice and copy, and told Mr. Avery he would not serve this notice or make this levy on said interest unless Mr. Adoue would give the sheriff an indemnity bond. This Mr. Avery refused to do and there the matter ended. The deputy did not intend to and did not think he had made any such levy, and so told several persons who asked him about the matter.

Blount & Garrison, attorneys for Wettermark, testified that in August, 1899, they saw on this order of sale a writing to the effect that said interest in the bank had been levied on, and that when they next saw the writ this writing had been erased by having a pen and ink run through it. Nothing of the above appeared in the sheriff’s return on the writ, which simply showed a levy on the land.

When Mr. Avery advised Mr. Adoue that in his opinion as a matter of law Wettermark was liable for the balance of the foreclosure judgment, Mr. Adoue told Avery that this was a question of law and he (Adoue) was no lawyer and could not decide it, but would have to leave the decision to Avery, and that if Wettermark was legally liable he wanted Wettermark to pay it, but otherwise he did not want him to do so, and that he did not want to get into any damage suits about the matter; Adoue did not know Wettermark and had never had any business with him or A.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W. 787, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 585, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoue-v-wettermark-texapp-1904.