Branscum v. Reese

219 S.W. 871, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1369
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1919
DocketNo. 9188.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 219 S.W. 871 (Branscum v. Reese) 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
Branscum v. Reese, 219 S.W. 871, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1369 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

Article 3774, Vernon’s Sayles’ Texas Civil Statutes, provides that—

“When an officer has collected money on execution, he shall pay over the same to the *872 party entitled thereto at the earliest opportunity.”

The next article (3775) provides that—

“Should an officer fail or refuse to pay over money collected under an execution when demanded by the person entitled to receive the same, he shall be liable to pay to such person the amount so collected, with damages at the rate of five per cent, per month thereon, besides interests and costs, which may be recovered of him and his sureties by the party entitled to receive the same on motion before the court from which said execution issued, five clays’ previous notice thereof being given to said officer and his sureties.”

This proceeding was instituted by the appellant, Thomas Branscum, against John R. Bannister, sheriff, and Creek Brown, deputy sheriff, of Coleman county. The proceeding was first instituted in a justice court, the plaintiff alleging that the sheriff and deputy named had collected certain money by virtue of an execution in plaintiff’s favor that had been issued out of the justice court in which the proceeding was instituted, and the prayer ,was for the recovery of the money collected, which, it was alleged, had not been paid over, and for damages.

The defendants, having been duly cited, answered in the justice court by a general demurrer and general denial. The judgment in that court was in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendants appealed to the county court. In the latter court the plaintiff filed amended pleadings, seeking to recover the moneys collected and damages for its retention in the sum of $103.68. The defendants answered as before and in addition thereto specially pleaded, acknowledging the receipt of the execution upon which the plaintiff’s proceeding was founded and the collection of the money as alleged by plaintiff, but averred that at the time of said collection said sheriff then had in his hands an execution issued out of a justice court of Coleman county in favor of Jeff Reese and against the plaintiff for the sum of $117, and that the sum collected upon the execution in favor of the plaintiff had been applied by him (the sheriff) upon the said execution in favor of Jeff Reese. The result of the trial in the county court was a peremptory instruction to the jury by the court to find for the defendants, and the judgment was entered in accordance with the instruction and verdict, and plaintiff has duly appealed to this court.

[1] Appellant first'assigns error to the action of the court in overruling plaintiff’s special exception to the defendants’ said special plea. The contention is that under our rules of pleading a defendant cannot “for the first time, on appeal to the county court, plead in county court a counterclaim or set-off to the plaintiff’s debt.” The statute relied upon in support of this contention thus reads:

“Either party may plead any now matter in the county or district court which was not presented in the court below; but no new cause of action shall be set up by the plaintiff, nor shall any set-off or counterclaim be set up by the defendant which was not pleaded in the court below; and in all such cases the pleadings shall be in writing, and filed in the cause before the parties have announced themselves ready for trial.” Article 759, V. S. Tex. Civ. Stats.

It is quite evident from the reading of the statute that a defendant on appeal to the county court may plead in defense any new matter not presented in the court below, except only “set-off or counterclaim,” and the special plea of the defendants in this case, we think, fails to come within the meaning of these terms.

In 7 Words and Phrases, p. 6440, it is said, citing a North Carolina case, that—

“A set-off is a cross-action by the defendant against the plaintiff, which is allowed by statute to avoid a multiplicity of suits when the debts are mutual, that is, when the parties are the same and the debts are due in' the same right.”

Another' definition, citing a Georgia case, is that—

“A set-off means a cross-action for which an action might have been. maintained against the plaintiff; and it is very different from a mere right to a deduction from, or reduction of, plaintiff’s demand on account of some matter connected therewith and which might be given in evidence under the general issue, such as payment.”

In Simpson v. Huston, 14 Tex. 476, it was said that the object of set-offs is to adjust indebtedness between parties and permit execu-tory process only for balance due. And in Thomas v. Hill, 3 Tex. 270, it was said, in effect, that the object of the law in allowing set-offs is to avoid a multiplicity of actions, and hence where the respective demands of the parties are of such a nature as to admit of adjudication in one action the law intends that it shall be done.

In Gimble v. Gomprecht & Co., 89 Tex. 497, 35 S. W. 470, it was held, quoting from the headnotes, that—

“A plea in reconvention is, in effect, a suit against the plaintiff.”

In Lumber Co. v. Williams, 68 Tex. 656, 5 S. W. 672, it was said that a plea in reconvention is treated as a suit by the defendant against the plaintiff upon the cause of action set up in the answer.

It is thus seen that both set-off and recon-vention contemplate some demand upon which a right of action exists on the part of a de: fendant against the plaintiff and on which he (the defendant) could sue as a plaintiff had suit not been brought against him.

*873 In speaking of the essential elements of set-offs and counterclaims, and both are treated under the same general head, it is said in 24 R. C. L. p. 834, par. 41, that—

“No right of recoupment, as understood in modern times, or counterclaim, can exist in the absence of a cause of action in favor of the defendant. A cross-action is always implied in its terms, for in cases of this kind two actions are really combined in one; each party is plaintiff in respect to his own particular grievance, and each party is defendant in respect to the grievance of the other.”

It follows, we think, from the authorities noted, that the court below correctly held, as he in effect did, that the defendants’ said special plea was neither a set-off nor a plea in reconvention, .within the meaning of the prohibitory language of the statute. The plea that the defendants had collected the money, as charged, but had applied it upon another valid execution at the time in the hands of the sheriff, was, in its nature, a plea in confession and avoidance; and although such plea had not been presented in the justice court and was new matter, it was permissible to so present the plea in the county court. It set up no cause of action against the plaintiff. No fact was therein stated upon which the defendants, or either of them in the absence of the plaintiff’s suit, could have maintained an action against the plaintiff. The plea was purely defensive in character, and therefore not forbidden by the statutes. To illustrate, it was held in Gholston v. Ramey, 30 S. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 S.W. 871, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branscum-v-reese-texapp-1919.