Armstrong v. Ames & Frost Co.

43 S.W. 302, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 46, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 315
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 S.W. 302 (Armstrong v. Ames & Frost Co.) 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
Armstrong v. Ames & Frost Co., 43 S.W. 302, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 46, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 315 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

TARLTON, Chief Justice.

On December 24, 1894, Ames-& Frost Co. brought suit against the F. H. Collins Co., a private corporation organized under the laws of the State of Texas, and conducting a mercantile business in the city of Fort Worth. Plaintiff caused a writ of attachment to be levied upon the property of the F. H. Collins Co. One H. H. Fulton, the agent of the Ames & Frost Co., made the affidavit in attachment, alleging an indebtedness in the principal sum of $9673.19, and in the further sum of $127.61 interest; and further alleging, among other matters not necessary to mention, “that said defendant has disposed of its property in part with intent to defraud its creditors.”

The writ of attachment was levied upon the entire stock of merchandise, store fixtures, and furniture belonging to the F. H. Collins Co., the property being invoiced by the sheriff at the sum of $16,952.03, and its value assessed by that officer at $8476. The property was subsequently sold under an order of sale issued in the cause, and bought by Ames & Frost Co. for the sum of $6600. Afterwards judgment, with foreclosure of attachment lien, was recovered in the sum of $10,022.88 and costs, which was credited with the proceeds of the property previously sold.

On December 28, 1894, the F. H. Collins Co. executed to Marvin B. Armstrong a general assignment, exacting releases, under the provisions of Title 7a, Sayles’ Civil Statutes. The assignee, appellant herein, on January 26, 1895, brought this suit against Ames & Frost Co. and the sureties on its attachment bond to recover the value of the stock of goods which had been attached, alleging that the property had been wrongfully seized and converted by means of the attachment, and that the affidavit for attachment, in so far as it charged that F. H. Collins Co. had disposed of its property in part with intent to defraud its creditors, was untrue.

A trial of the case, had on ¡November 28, 1896, resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendants, appellees in this court. The jury in their verdict sustained the allegation in the attachment affidavit that the F. H. Collins Co. had disposed of its property in part with intent to defraud its creditors; and as this finding rests upon sufficient evidence, we are constrained to approve it.

*49 Opinion.—The finding by the jury averse to the appellant on the paramount issue of fact concerning the fraudulent disposition by the F. H. Collins Co., as charged in the affidavit for attachment, will require an affirmance of the judgment, unless error prejudicial to the appellant waa committed by the court in its instruction to the jury or in its action regarding the admission of evidence. Hence, we proceed to consider the several assignments of error complaining of the court’s action in the respects indicated.

1. In submitting the issue of the fraudulent disposition by the F. H. Collins Co. of its property, as charged in the affidavit for attachment, the court in its principal charge gave the following instruction: “You are instructed that Ames & Frost Co., by its contract with F. H. Collins Co., under which it sold goods to F .H. Collins Co., had no lien on the wheels sold by it to F. H. Collins Co.; and if you believe from the evidence in this case that said Collins Co. made no other disposition of the wheels bought by it from Ames & Frost Co. than to apply the proceeds of the same to the payment of its just debts, whether the debts owing to Ames & Frost Co. or to any other person or persons, and did not dispose of any of them with any intent to defraud Ames & Frost Co. nor any other creditor, and find also that it had not prior to the time the attachment was sued out,disposed of any of its other property other than what it obtained from Ames & Frost Co. with intent to defraud any of its creditors, then you will, in answer to the first question, find that the affidavit was untrue at the time it was made.”

In connection with this instruction, the court granted the following special charge requested by the appellee: “You are charged that any act done by a debtor with the intention to hinder or delay his creditor j a the collection of his debt, owing by the debtor to the creditor, and which has that effect, is a fraud on the rights of the creditor. If in this case you find that F, H. Collins Co. had disposed of any notes or money, the same being the proceeds of the sales of goods by the Ames & Frost Co. under the contract which has been introduced in evidence, otherwise than’ is provided in said contract, and you further find that said F. H. Collins Co. intended by such disposition of said notes or money to hinder or delay or prevent said Ames & Frost Co. from collecting their debt, then the affidavit for attachment would be true, and you will so find.”

In this connection the court also refused a special instruction requested by the appellant, to the effect that, in order to find for defendants on the issue as to whether or not the ground for. attachment, as alleged in the affidavit, existed, the jury must believe from the evidence that F. H. Collins Co. disposed of some portion of its property with intent to defraud its creditors; and that if said F. H. Collins Co. did not dispose of any portion of its property with such intent, the jury should find for plaintiff on such issue, though they might believe from the evidence that said F. H. Collins Co. failed to comply with its contract with Ames & Frost Co., and disposed of goods bought from said Ames & Frost Co. *50 to other persons, with no intention or purpose to pay Ames & Frost Co. therefor.

We overrule the tenth and eleventh assignments of error, first urged in the appellant’s brief, complaining of the action of the court in granting the special instruction requested hy the appellees, and in refusing that requested hy the appellant. The propositions of the latter, in so far as they were proper, wrere covered by the main instruction herein above quoted. The evidence tended to raise the issue presented hy the special instruction of the appellees. The first proposition embodied therein should, in its application, he referred to the facts stated in its concluding proposition.

The evidence upon which the special instruction rests consisted in the contract between the F. H. Collins Co. and Ames & Frost Co., admittedly executed February 2, 1894, and upon the testimony of the agent of the latter company, tending to show that, in violation of the terms of the contract, the F. H. Collins Co. had appropriated the goods' referred to in the instruction to a purpose other than that specified in the contract, and with the intention to hinder, delay, or prevent the appellee from collecting its debt. By the terms of this contract it appeared that, in consideration of an order for bicycles to be shipped during the season of 1894 hy the appellee to the F. H. Collins Co., and of an agreement hy the appellee to give to the F. H. Collins Co. an agency for the sale of Imperial wheels for 1894, the F. H. Collins Co. undertook to give to the appellee on the first of each month a three months note, hearing 8 per cent interest, for all goods shipped the previous month; that as collateral security to the notes thus given, the F. H. Collins Co.

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W. 302, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 46, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-ames-frost-co-texapp-1897.