B. F. Avery & Sons Plow Co. v. Mayfield

111 S.W.2d 1134, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1540
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1937
DocketNo. 13625.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 111 S.W.2d 1134 (B. F. Avery & Sons Plow Co. v. Mayfield) 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
B. F. Avery & Sons Plow Co. v. Mayfield, 111 S.W.2d 1134, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1540 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

This appeal involves a novel question relating to venue and the plea of privilege.

Appellant, B. F. Avery & Sons Plow Company, filed a petition against appellee, Tom H. Mayfield, Jr., in the Fourteenth district court of Dallas county, Tex., asking for a bill of discovery.

As grounds for the relief sought, allegations were made that on January 29, 1936, in the same court, under the same styled and numbered cause, appellant had recovered a judgment against appellee for $1,061.52; that there was no appeal from that judgment; that appellant had caused execution to be issued on the judgment on May 9, 1936, and had it placed in the hands of the sheriff of Nolan county, the county of appellee’s residence; that the execution was returned by the sheriff on May 15, 1936, indorsed “nulla bona.” A copy of the judgment was made a part of the petition for the bill of discovery. In the judgment appellant’s corporate name is not the same as in the petition here, but no complaint is made of that fact, and we shall treat it as a clerical error in the record. Additional allegations were made to the effect that the judgment is valid and subsisting; that it is unpaid in the balance of $1,061.52 plus costs of suit.

Interrogatories were attached to the petition inquiring of appellee as to any interest he may have in property, corporations, or partnerships, wherever located, and the amount of such interests, if any. If answered, these inquiries would disclose the location, kind, and amount of all assets belonging to appellee. Prayer was for notice on the petition and that appellee be required to appear and show cause why he should not be compelled to answer the interrogatories attached and that he be required to produce any set of books concerning his business or personal transactions now in his possession or under his control.

Instead of answering or otherwise ap: pearing in response to said notice, appellee timely filed his plea of privilege to’be sued; if at all, in Nolan county, Tex., the place of his residence. The plea contains all the requisites of article 2007, Rev.Civ. Statutes 1925.

Appellant filed its controverting affidavit in due time, and alleged the suit to be one on a promissory note and open account payable in Dallas county, Tex.; recitation is made of service, appearance, and trial resulting in the judgment in the amount and of date set out in the statement made by us, above, of appellant’s petition for discovery; the allegation was repeated which, in effect, alleged the judgment rendered by the court was a valid and subsisting judgment; that execution was issued thereon and sent to the sheriff of Nolan county, and returned “nulla bona”; that said judgment was unsatisfied; the petition in which judgment was sought on the note and account, as well as the one seeking the bill of discovery, is identified and made a part of the controverting answer. Grounds of venue were alleged in this language: “Plaintiff says that this court has venue of this suit because of the above facts, and particularly because the Bill of Discovery prayed for in this case is for the purpose of aiding plaintiff to recover on a judgment heretofore rendered in this suit, and said judgment was based on- written promises executed by the defendant and payable in Dallas County, Texas.”

Under the’ venue issues thus made, the court heard appellant’s testimony, which consisted of an agreed stipulation between the parties, substantially as alleged by appellant, with one exception. The agreed facts covered the execution and delivery by appellee of a note and account to appellant in which payment was promised in Dallas county; that suit was instituted thereon and judgment rendered in' the Fourteenth district court of Dallas county, Tex., on the date and in the amount alleged by appellant; that' no appeal was taken therefrom and that execution issued and was returned “nulla bona” on May 15, 1936; that this suit for discovery was in-j stituted on May 26, 193& .

The one exception to, appellant’s allegations, not covered by the stipulation, was that the judgment wa.s a valid subsisting judgment and was unsatisfied. •-

’Under these allegations on" the venue issue, the trial court sustained' the plea of privilege and entered suitable orders’ to that éffectr 'From this judgment-the appeal is prosecuted.' ' ■ ' • •

*1136 The combined legal and equitable remedy now known to us as the bill of discovery is authorized by the provisions of article 2002, Rev.Civ.Statutes, which reads: “All trial courts shall entertain suits in the nature of bills of discovery, and grant relief therein in accordance with the usages of courts of equity. Such remedy shall be cumulative of all other remedies.”

It is interesting to observe the origin of such a remedy. Under the common law the parties to a suit were incompetent as witnesses and no means were provided by which either could procure information from the other, no matter how valuable it might be to an adjustment of the rights between them. ThuS a person could suffer a wrong for which he would have no adequate remedy. “Equity will not suffer right to be without a remedy.” Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, 3d Ed., § 37, treats the equitable right of one person to require another to disclose such information as he has, which information is not in the possession of the other, as a legal form of “probing their consciences.” He says this gave interested parties a decided advantage in the discovery of the truth. That eminent writer, at section- 82, in discussing this procedure in the Chancery Courts of England, says: “A distinct department of equity jurisprudence which arose at an early day from the imperfection of the legal procedure was termed Auxiliary, since it was exercised, not to obtain any equitable remedy, nor to establish any equitable right or estate, but to aid in maintaining a legal right, and in prosecuting actions pending or to be brought in a court of law.”

Under our procedure, of course, parties to suits are competent witnesses and upon the trial either may call upon the other to testify, in most instances, to all matters relating to the controversy. We have gone farther and made provisions for the taking of the deposition, by one, of his adversary, in advance of the. trial. When any person in this state may anticipate the institution of a suit in which he may be interested, and may desire to perpetuate the testimony of a witness to be used in such suit, he may likewise take the deposition of such person, although he should later become a party to the contemplated action. Article 3742, Rev. Civ. Statutes, ,as amended by Acts 1927, c. S3, § 1, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. Art. 3742. These provisions are helpful in. arriving at the truth of matters under investigation or to be determined later. Yet the penalties governing such a procedure proved inadequate, and by way of strengthening the remedy article 2002, supra, was passed. The general definition and function of the bill of discovery is given in 18 C.J. p. 1057, § 1, as follows: “Discovery is the disclosure by defendant of facts, deeds, documents or other things which are in his exclusive knowledge or possession, and which are necessary to the party seeking the discovery as a part of a cause of action pending, or to be brought in another court, or as evidence of his rights or title in such proceedings.”

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 1134, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 1540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-f-avery-sons-plow-co-v-mayfield-texapp-1937.