Caldwell v. Lamkin

83 S.W. 316, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 29, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 429
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 1895
DocketNo. 1386.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 83 S.W. 316 (Caldwell v. Lamkin) 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
Caldwell v. Lamkin, 83 S.W. 316, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 29, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 429 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

COLLARD, Associate Justice.

This suit -was brought August 9, 1894, by the appellant, S. H. Caldwell, against appellee, L. A. L. Lamkin, for $3,787.30 due by note of date April 14, 1891, executed by appellee, Lamkin, to Y. Q. Caldwell and S. A. Miller as administrators of. the estate of E. D. Caldwell, deceased, which note was by the administrators *32 of the estate, for value, transferred without recourse to appellant S. EL Caldwell, who sued as owner and holder. On the same day attachment was issued against Lamkin to Caldwell County, Texas, and was on the same day levied on two tracts of land as the property of Lamkin, and a certified copy of the attachment, and return of levy was on August 9, 1894, deposited with the county clerk of Caldwell County for record, the land levied on being situated in Caldwell "County. September 4, 1894, in vacation, the plaintiff amended his petition, making W. E. Johnson and F. Flournoy parties defendant upon the alleged ground that they claimed to own the land levied on. Prayer for judgment for debt and foreclosure of attachment lien as against all the defendants. September 25, 1894, Lamkin filed an amended plea in abatement and asked the quashal of the writ of attachment upon the ground that the sureties on the bond for attachment, to-wit: A. B. Lamb and W. T. Wrather were non-residents of the State of Texas, and were resident citizens of the State of Tennessee, and had no property in this state, wherefore the bond furnishes no security to defendant and is not the bond required by law. But on October 19, 1894, defendant Lamkin, by leave of the court, amended this plea setting up the same facts and further showing how the clerk of the state court came to approve the bond. This plea was sworn to. On the same day that the first amended plea in abatement was filed, defendant Lamkin filed a general denial, expressly premising that it was done not waiving his plea in abatement. Defendants Johnson and Flournoy answered, each claiming one' of the tracts of land levied on and resisting the foreclosure of the attachment hen upon the grounds that they had valid debts against defendant Lamkin which had been respectively secured by mortgages on the land and deeds from Lam-kin to their respective surveys of land in satisfaction of their debts and mortgages. It is unnecessary, as we think, to further state the particulars of their pleas as, according to our views of the case, plaintiff was not entitled to a foreclosure of the attachment, because the attachment itself was properly quashed. On September 28, 1894, plaintiff filed a motion to substitute the attachment bond, tendering the bond with good sureties resident in the State of Texas. September 29, 1894, plaintiff filed a reply to the answer of Johnson and Flournoy which we deem it unnecessary to notice in detail.

On the same day that defendant Lamkin filed his amended plea in abatement October 19, 1894, plaintiff filed a motion to strike it out upon the ground that it was filed after a plea to the merits, that there was no> law requiring sureties on attachment bonds to be residents of the State, that the bond first filed was sufficient, being in form and approved by the clerk of the court constituting a full compliance with the statute.

. On October 19, 1894, the case was tried by the court without a jury, when the court overruled plaintiff’s motion to substitute attachment bond, and the motion to strike out defendant Lamkin’s amended plea in abatement, sustained the plea, abated the bond, quashed the attachment and. rendered judgment for the plaintiff for the amount of his debt against *33 Lamkin for $3,787.30 and 6 per cent interest per annum from April 18, 1891, and against the plaintiff and in favor of defendants Johnson and Flournoy, the plaintiff talcing nothing against them and that they recover their costs of plaintiff.

Plaintiff has appealed.

Opinion. — The first error assigned is “that the court erred in allowing defendant Lamkin to amend his plea in abatement and file a second amended plea, after motion to strike out his first amended plea had been sustained by the court and after he had answered to the merits; because the amendment was not authorized by law and came too late after answer to the merits, and because having amended the plea once and going to trial thereon and it having been stricken out on motion of the plaintiff, no further plea on that subject could have been legally made. The original and first amended pleas in abatement are not in the record. It seems, however, that the original plea was filed before Lamkin’s original answer, us the answer commences: “Come defendant Lamkin, and not waiving his plea in abatement denies,” etc. The order acting on the motion of plaintiff to strike out the second amended plea is in the first part of the final judgment as follows:

“On this October 19, 1894, this cause being regularly called for trial the parties plaintiff and defendant announced ready for trial on the law in the preliminary questions. The defendant, L. A. L. Lampkin, having by leave of the court filed his second amended plea in abatement to abate the attachment bond in this cause for reasons set out in said plea, the plaintiff moved the court to strike out said plea for reasons stated in said motion, which motion was by the court heard and overruled, to which action of the court plaintiff at the time in open court excepted. The plaintiff then in open court tendered a new attachment bond, signed by plaintiff and James G. Burleson, A. B. Chew and Eugene Clark as sureties, by motion asked leave of the court to substitute said new bond for and in lieu of the first and original attachment bond filed in this court, for the reasons set out in said motion to substitute, which said motion was by the court overruled, to which action of the court the plaintiff at the time in open court excepted; then came L. A. L. Lamkin and presented his second amended plea in abatement asking the court to abate the attachment bond filed in this cause, and quash plaintiff’s writ of attachment and the affidavit of B. T. Palmer therewith filed, for reasons set out in said plea, which plea was by the court sustained, said bond abated and the plaintiff’s attachment quashed, to which actions and rulings of the court the plaintiff at the time in open court excepted: 1st. Because said bond being sufficient in amount and conditioned as required by law and signed by a sufficient number of sureties and approved by the proper officer, said bond was a full and complete compliance with the attachment laws of this State, and there was no statutory authority for going behind and questioning the validity of an attachment bond, when said bond was prima facie good on its face. 2nd. Because said bond being prima *34 facie good, evidence was necessary to overcome its validity, and no evidence was offered by defendant in support of said plea in abatement: whereupon both parties, plaintiff and defendant announced ready for trial on the merits of the case a jury being waived,” etc.

The motion to strike out the second amended plea in abatement, among other reasons for the ruling asked, set up that it was filed after answer to the merits and after issue joined. It does not appear as stated in the assignment of error that the second amended plea was filed after his first amendment had been stricken out on motion of plaintiff. It does not appear but that it was filed by leave of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.W. 316, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 29, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-lamkin-texapp-1895.