Automobile Finance Co. v. Bryan

3 S.W.2d 835
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 18, 1928
DocketNo. 2948.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 835 (Automobile Finance Co. v. Bryan) 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
Automobile Finance Co. v. Bryan, 3 S.W.2d 835 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

JACKSON, J.

The appellees, W. C. Bryan and Newell Bryan, instituted this suit in the district court of Lubbock county, Tex., against H. L. Johnston, Citizens’ National Bank of Lubbock, and the Automobile Ei-nance Company.

Appellees allege:

That H. L. Johnston, the sheriff, and the Citizens’ National Bank of Lubbock, Tex., are both resident citizens of Lubbock county, Tex., and that the Automobile Finance Company, the appellant herein, is a private corporation, with its legal residence in Galveston county, Tex. That at all the dates alleged, appellees were partners, conducting their automobile garage and storage business in Lubbock, Tex., under the trade-name of Oakland Sales Company. That on August 15, 1925, J. G. McCaffree brought to them a Ford automobile and requested that they make certain repairs thereon and store it for a price agreed upon. That the repairs were made and the car kept in storage for more than 60 days, after which, McCaffree having failed to call for the automobile, or pay the charges, the appellees, after duly advertising as prescribed by law, did, on February 20; 1926, sell the interest of McCaffree in 'said car for the sum of $35, which was less than the charges then due them on the car.

That on March 27, 1926, the appellant filed suit in the county court of Galveston county, Tex., No. 13573, naming J. G. McCaffree and the appellees as defendants, but that process in said Suit was served only upon W. C. Bryan. That the petition in said suit alleged in substance that J. G. McCaffree had purchased a certain Ford touring car from the Slaton Motor Company and executed a chattel mortgage note for part of the purchase money, payable to appellant in installments, which constituted a chattel mortgage lien upon the automobile. That the only allegations in the petition in said suit, relating to the appellees, were:

“That the defendants W. C. Bryan and New-ell Bryan, individually and operating as Oakland Sales, are asserting some character of claim to the automobile hereinbefore described, and according to plaintiff’s information are in possession thereof. Wherefore, because of the matters and things hereinbefore alleged, a cause of action hath accrued in favor of plaintiff and against the defendant McCaffree for the recovery of said balance of $118.36, with accrued interest and attorney’s fees, as hereinabove set out, and in its favor against all of the defendants for foreclosure of its chattel mortgage lien against and upon said automobile in satisfaction of said indebtedness.”

That in its petition, the Automobile Finance Company prayed that:

“It have judgment for its debt and for foreclosure of its chattel mortgage lien, for costs and all' such other and further relief, legal and equitable, general and special, to which it may be entitled.”

That at the time service of said suit was had on the firm, appellees were not claiming any interest in the automobile, did not have possession thereof, filed no answer, and made no appearance in said suit, because, under the pleadings, no cause of action was alleged against them, and no personal judgment sought and no relief asked against them except the foreclosure of the alleged mortgage. That in its petition said company did not allege that its chattel mortgage had been registered in Lubbock county, where the car was situated, nor that the appellees had actual knowledge or constructive notice of its claim when they made the repairs, and appellees allege that they did not have such notice and charge that said mortgage was never registered in Lubbock county. That said petition did not allege the exercise of any unlawful dominion or control over the car by appellees, and did not allege any facts showing they had converted the car to their .use and benefit, nor did the petition allege any right to nor seek any personal judgment against appellees, but sought only a foreclosure of the alleged mortgage and the sale of the automobile to satisfy a personal debt against the said J. G. McCaffree. That although said Automobile Finance Company, in its pleading, sought no personal judgment against the appellees, on June 5, 1926, it fraudulently procured thS entry of a personal judgment in said cause against the appellees, for the sum of $144.51, together with 10 per cent, annual interest and costs, with an order for an execution to be issued on said judgment. ■ That the entry of the judgment was procured fraudulently and maliciously, with full knowledge that the Automobile Finance Company was not entitled thereto, and for the purpose of harassing and injuring the appellees and forcing them to pay off an unjust obligation through extortion and abuse of process. That appellees did not learn of the entry of such void judgment until in July, 1926, through a letter from the attorneys of the Automobile Finance Company. That said judgment, in so far as it decreed a money recovery against the appel- *837 lees, was and is absolutely null and void, because tbe pleadings would neither authorize nor support said judgment, of all of which ■the Automobile Finance Company knew and to which it agreed through its attorneys. That so far as appellees have been able- to learn, no execution on said judgment was ever issued to any county, and it is now dormant; no order of sale was ever issued thereon or any attempt made to locate and sell the automobile upon which the chattel mortgage was foreclosed. That ever since the institution of said suit, the Automobile Finance Company has known and it is a fact that the appellees were and are solvent and have property subject to execution many times the value necessary to satisfy said judgment.

That notwithstanding these facts, on December 29,' 1926, the Automobile Finance Company made and filed its affidavit for garnishment in cause No. 13791, in the county court of Galveston county, based on the judgment in cause No. 13573, in said court, in which it is alleged that the ’appellees had not sufficient property, within the knowledge of the Automobile Finance Company, to satisfy such judgment, and that it had reason to believe and did believe ⅛⅛ the Citizens’ National Bank of Lubbock was indebted to the appellees. That the allegations in said affidavit for garnishment were false and the Automobile Finance Company knew, or could have learned by ordinary diligence, that the appellees had sufficient property in Lubbock county, Tex., to satisfy such judgment by the issuance of ordinary process to Lubbock county. That the Automobile Finance Company made no attempt to locate and subject the car to the satisfaction of its judgment by order'of sale, but upon the strength of the affidavit procured the issuance of a writ of garnishment to Lubbock county and had the same served upon the Citizens’ National Bank of Lubbock, Tex., impounding the sum of $6,591.36, which the appellees had on deposit in said bank. That on account of said writ, the bank has withheld from the ap-pellees said sum of money since January 17, 1927, and they have been deprived of the use thereof, to their actual damage to the extent of interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per an-num from said date. That on June 10, 1927, the Automobile Finance Company, notwithstanding it had promised not to do so, wrongfully and fraudulently procured the entry of a judgment in said garnishment suit against the Citizens’ National Bank for the sum of $158.96, and for costs both in the main suit and the garnishment suit, and on August 10, 1927, caused a writ of execution to issue on the judgment in garnishment to H. L.

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3 S.W.2d 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/automobile-finance-co-v-bryan-texapp-1928.