Broussard v. Lawson

124 S.W. 712, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 415, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1323
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 7, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 712 (Broussard v. Lawson) 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
Broussard v. Lawson, 124 S.W. 712, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 415, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1323 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

— D. B. Lawson, appellee, having a judgment of the County .Court of Grimes County against C. M. Womack, on July 24, 1903, had an execution thereon levied by the *417 sheriff of Jefferson County on a crop of rice planted and growing upon 300 acres of land, which the said C. M. Womack had rented from the Beaumont Irrigation Company. The execution was returned for want of time to make the sale and a venditioni exponas issued under which the sheriff was ordered to make sale, and to deliver possession to the purchaser. This suit was then instituted against Lawson and the sheriff by Ottilie Womack, wife of C. M. Womack, to enjoin the sale of the property under the execution. It was alleged that the husband of plaintiff refused to join her in the suit, and she asked to be allowed to prosecute the same alone. The rice crop was alleged to be of the value of $5,000 and to be separate property of plaintiff, who further alleged that she was unable to give a claimant’s bond for trial of the right of property. On October 6, 1903, a temporary injunction was granted, the plaintiff executing an injunction bond in the sum of $1,000 with J. E. Broussard and A. B. Goodhue as sureties.

The sheriff answered by general denial November 4, 1904. On January 5, 1906, Lawson filed an amended answer, containing a general demurrer and special exception to the jurisdiction of the court, on the ground that the writ of injunction should have been returned to the County Court of Grimes County. The answer also contained general denial and special denial of plaintiff’s ownership of the property, with the allegations that the conveyance of the same to her by C. M. Womack, if any such was ever made, was in fraud of his creditors and especially of defendant; that upon the issuance and service of the injunction the rice crop had been turned over to said C. M. Womack and the sureties on his bond, and had been disposed of by them for their mutual benefit. With much fullness of averment it is charged that plaintiff’s claim, the injunction and subsequent proceedings were the result of a fraudulent conspiracy between plaintiff and her husband to defeat the just and lawful attempt of defendant to subject the same to his said debt. There is a prayer for the dissolution of the injunction and for judgment against plaintiff and the said sureties for the amount shown to he due upon his said judgment, and for his damages and costs and general relief.

On November 15, 1907, Lawson filed a further supplemental answer alleging that since the filing of the amended answer, Ottilie Womack had died intestate and wholly and totally insolvent, leaving no estate whatever, separate or community, and that there had been no administration on her estate; that since filing the suit the said C. M. Womack had been adjudicated a bankrupt and had been regularly discharged from all his debts. Upon these facts he prayed the court to permit him to dismiss his cross-bill as to the said plaintiff and to prosecute the same against the said sureties on her injunction bond and that he have judgment against them for the amount of his •original debt.

To the amended answer and cross-bill of Lawson filed January 5, 1906, Broussard and Goodhue, on March 8, 1906, filed their answer containing general demurrer and general denial, and further answering- they denied specially the charge of collusion and fraud on their *418 part, alleging that they became sureties on Mrs. Womack’s injunction bond under the belief in good faith that she was the owner of the crop of rice in question by a bona fide assignment and transfer of the same by her said husband; that the said Ottilie Womack is now out of Jefferson County and they do not know where either she or her said husband are to be found, and that both of them are wholly insolvent and unable to respond in damages in any sum whatever in this suit, and that it is necessary for the said sureties to defend the said cross-bill for their own protection. It is further alleged that the said rice crop was grown on land leased from the Beaumont Irrigation Company, and that even if the said C. M. Womack had been the owner of the same, yet the same would have been wholly valueless to any one who should have purchased the same at execution sale against him because wholly immature and requiring constant care, and a stranger to the rental contract would not have been admitted to the possession of the land. It is further alleged that the beneficial interest of the tenant, whether C. M. Womack or the said Ottilie Womack, had been entirely absorbed in payment of claims of the landlord for land rent, water rate and for advances to be used in making the crop, which amounted to more than the value of the • interest of the tenant.

On March 8, 1906, the plaintiff, Ottilie Womack, filed a supplemental petition, answering the original cross-bill of defendant Lawson, alleging that she is a married woman, living with her husband, and pleading in abatement of said cross-bill the failure to make her said husband a party thereto.

The case came on for trial December 5, 1908, without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for defendant Lawson on his cross-bill against Broussard and Goodhue for the amount of his original judgment against C. M. Womack, with interest and costs. All demurrers and exceptions were overruled. Preliminary to the judgment proper, and a part thereof, is the following recital and order:

“Thereupon the plaintiff’s attorney suggested the death of the plaintiff, and that her legal representatives had not been made parties. And it further being made to appear to the court that the death of plaintiff had been suggested to the court more than a year ago, and the cause continued to make parties, the defendant Lawson dismissed his cross-bill against the plaintiff, alleging the insolvency of the plaintiff’s estate, and asked leave to proceed on his cross-bill against A. F. Goodhue and J. E. Broussard, the sureties on the injunction bond of the plaintiff, Ottilie Womack. It was therefore ordered by the courts that the case of Ottilie Womack against D. B. Lawson and Ras Landry be dismissed and that the cross-bill of the defendant Lawson against the plaintiff, Ottilie Womack, be dismissed, and the case proceed to trial on the cross-bill of the said D. B. Lawson against the sureties on said injunction bond, A. F. Goodhue and J. E. Broussard, to all of which the said A. F. Goodhue and J. E. Broussard excepted.”

There are no conclusions of fact in the record, but from the statement of facts we make the following findings: The recovery of judgment by appellee against C. M. Womack and the issuance and levy of execution and issuance of order of sale xere established as alleged. *419 The crop of aice levied, upon was growing upon land rented by Womack from the Beaumont Irrigation "Company, of which Broussard was general manager and Goodhue president. Upon the granting of the injunction Ottilie Womack executed a bond in statutory form payable to appellee in the sum of $1,000. By the terms of the rental contract the landlord was to have one-half of the crop as compensation for water furnished and rent of land. They also made advances to the tenant in money and supplies for the purpose of enabling him to plant, cultivate and gather the crop.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 712, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 415, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broussard-v-lawson-texapp-1911.