Axtell v. Lopp

152 S.W. 192, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1196
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 152 S.W. 192 (Axtell v. Lopp) 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
Axtell v. Lopp, 152 S.W. 192, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1196 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This is an appeal from an order dissolving a temporary writ of injunction issued by the county court of Tarrant county. The ease has been submitted to us upon the record without formal brief. In substance, stating it in its chronological order and omitting unimportant details, appellant’s pleadings upon which he bases his prayer for injunction, and upon which we base our conclusions, show that in 1910 the Union Transfer Company, a private corporation, doing business in Ft. Worth, instituted its suit against one A. B. Lopp for the recovery of certain horses, buggies, and harness described in the petition, and alleged to be of an aggregate value of several hundred dollars; that at the same time said transfer company sued out a writ of sequestration which was duly served, and upon the happening of which the defendant Lopp replevied the property sequestered giving as one of the sureties on his replevy bond F. W. Axtell, the applicant for injunction, it being alleged that both Lopp and the other surety on the replevy bond are now insolvent; that before the final trial of the suit between the transfer company and Lopp, to wit, about the 23d day of December, 1910, appellant becoming anxious about his liability induced the said Lopp to return to the transfer company all of the property that had been so sequestered save one bay mare which had been accidentally killed in the meantime; that, notwithstanding such return, the transfer company continued the prosecution of its suit, and the said Lopp continued his defenses, and afterwards, to wit, on the 22d day of April, 1911, the final trial was had in which the transfer company recovered judgment for the value of the property sequestered, to wit, $560.50 and $250.50, for the hire of the property “while in the possession of defendant” against both Dopp and the sureties on his sequestration bond, including appellant.

It was alleged that upon the final trial Lopp failed to set up the fact of his said return of the property in December, 1910, for the alleged reason that he did not thereby wish to prejudice his final effort before the court and jury. It was further alleged that thereafter, on the 10th day of June, 1911, the transfer company caused an execution to be issued when for the first time the plaintiff in this suit, Axtell, ascertained the fact that the judgment had not been credited as Lopp represented it would be, and as the plaintiff herein believed would be done, and that he, Axtell, thereupon began efforts to have the matter corrected. The details of such negotiations need not be set out. We think it sufficient to say that it is further alleged, among other things, that the plaintiff, Axtell, was delayed in suing out his injunction, the petition therefor not being filed until the 4th day of June, 1912, by the representations and assurance of Lopp that he was again in the employ of the transfer company, and that he had a “trade up or deal up with it,” whereby he himself would settle the judgment in full, if Axtell would “only keep still,” but that, if suit was brought to enjoin the execution, it would “spoil everything,” and prevent him from carrying out an arrangement with the company to discharge the judgment; that the plaintiff believed the assurances and representations, and was thereby misled and delayed from the institution of this suit to enjoin the execution until after the expiration of one year from the date of the original judgment. It is further alleged that Lopp in failing to set up the fact of said return of the property sued for and in assuring the plaintiff that he had made arrangements in substance to settle the judgment, etc., was acting in collusion with the transfer company and in fraud of the plaintiff’s rights. The court below sustained appellee’s motion to dissolve the temporary writ of injunction that had theretofore issued, and appellant has appealed as stated.

[1] In fairness to the trial court, it should perhaps be stated that some of the material, and perhaps some of the most material, allegations of appellant’s pleadings as we have stated them were presented by a trial amend-. ment, which appears from the recitations of the judgment to have been filed the day after the court sustained the motion to dissolve the injunction. While we have found no precedent plainly sustaining our conclusion, we, nevertheless, as indicated, have considered the allegations in the trial amendment. The same judgment which recites that the court sustained several special exceptions presented by the defendant and dissolved the injunction continues under the date of the following day, and recites that the defendant was required to give a refunding bond in the sum of $1,500, and that the application of the plaintiff, Axtell, to file a trial amendment was granted, and further recites, “But the court is of the opinion that the plaintiff’s prayer to set aside the order heretofore entered dissolving the injunction should be and the same is hereby refused *194 and denied. To which action of the court plaintiff excepts and gives notice of appeal,” etc., thus, as we think, indicating that after the hearing upon the original petition for injunction, and after the court had indicated itfe judgment that the petition was insufficient for the reasons urged against it, the court, nevertheless, continued to hold the matter in abeyance until the next morning when the final orders were made, as above stated. We are of the opinion, if necessary to our conclusion, that • the final order of the court refusing to set aside its order dissolving the injunction was in its effect tantamount to a refusal to perpetuate the injunction upon both original and amended plea’dings.

[2] So construing the pleadings and so concluding, we are of opinion that the court erred in its judgment. If it be true, as alleged, that pending the suit Lopp, in fact, returned the property, for the title and possession of which the suit had been instituted, the basis of the transfer company’s suit ceased to exist, and it was, to say the least of it, contrary to good conscience and inequitable to months thereafter take judgment against the surety on the replevy bond, not only for the full value of the property that had been returned, but also for the value of its hire and use during the period that the plaintiff in the suit had been so in possession. Courts of equity are not without remedy to afford relief for such wrongs. See Clay v. Clay, 13 Tex. 195; Dickenson v. McDermott, 13 Tex. 248; Babcock v. Marshall, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 145, 50 S. W. 728. In the ease first cited, in discussing the contention that the defendant not having offered his payments in evidence on the original trial he was precluded from availing himself of them as grounds of defense in a suit brought upon such judgment, our Supreme Court say: “It is admitted that the position in its gen-' eral application is .well sustained by authority, and its effect would extend even to a case of judgment on a note wholly paid. But the defense of payment by some accident not being set up,- judgment would go for the whole amount of this extinguished debt, and the defendant could not recover the money which he might be forced a second time to pay on this judgment, nor could he set up such payments as a defense to an action on the judgment.

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Related

Babcock v. Marshall
50 S.W. 728 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1899)
Williams v. Lumpkin
26 S.W. 493 (Texas Supreme Court, 1894)
Clay v. Clay
13 Tex. 195 (Texas Supreme Court, 1854)
Dickenson v. McDermott's E'xors
13 Tex. 248 (Texas Supreme Court, 1855)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 192, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/axtell-v-lopp-texapp-1912.