Citizens National Bank v. Interior Land & Immigration Co.

37 S.W. 447, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 301, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 319
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 S.W. 447 (Citizens National Bank v. Interior Land & Immigration Co.) 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
Citizens National Bank v. Interior Land & Immigration Co., 37 S.W. 447, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 301, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 319 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Appellant recovered a judgment in the District Court of Harris County against the Interior Land and Immigration Company and several individuals upon which an execution was issued and levied upon real estate, which was advertised for sale on the 5th day of March, 1895. On that day, appellees, the defendants in execution, filed in that court, which was in session, their application styled and numbered as of the suit in which the judgment had been rendered, in which they set forth the advertisement of sale which had been published by the sheriff, pointing out certain alleged defects therein, an d praying that it be vacated; and in which they also asked that a writ *303 of injunction be issued to restrain the sheriff from making the sale. The writ was issued as prayed for.

The advertisement set forth in the petition states the date of the levy upon the land, by virtue of the execution, giving its date, under a judgment rendered in the District Court of Harris County, giving its date, in favor of the Citizens National Bank of Decatur, Illinois, against the Interior Land and Immigration Company, A. M. York, J. W. York, I. B. Holmes and T. W. Lee, but does not state the amount due upon the judgment.

The lands levied upon and advertised are described as being in Harris County, and further, as follows: First, as subdivisions, the numbers of which are given, of the W. B. Lawrence subdivision of the Johnston Hunter and W. P. Harris surveys, as shown and marked out on the Interior Land and Immigration Company’s abstract map of the town of La-Port, made by C. G. Cambridge and George Sclman in May, 1893. Second, blocks, the numbers of which are stated, as shown and marked out on said map of LaPort. Third, other blocks, numbers of which are given, as shown and marked out on the map of LaPort, recorded in vol. 72, pages 4 and 5 of the records of deeds of Harris County, Texas. Fourth, other blocks, by numbers, as shown on map of LaPort, recorded in vol. 58, pages 462 and 463 of the records of deeds of Harris County, Texas. Fifth, other blocks, by numbers, as marked on map of LaPort, recorded in vol. 57, pages 320, 321 of the records of deeds of Harris County, Texas. Sixth, still other blocks, by numbers, as marked on map of LaPort, recorded in vol. 58, pages 460, 461 of the records of deeds of Harris County, Texas. Seventh, other blocks, by numbers, as marked on map of LaPort, recorded in vol. 60, pages 112, 113 of records of deeds of Harris County, Texas. All of the above property situated in the town of LaPort. Eighth, 553-|- acres in the William Jones survey, of which metes and bounds are given.

The advertisement was signed by the sheriff, but did not state that the property was levied upon as that of defendants.

The objections taken in the application to the advertisement were: First, that the blocks mentioned had been divided into lots, most of them containing twenty-eight or thirty-two lots each, which subdivision was shown by the maps referred to, and that this was a fact material to a description of the property of which the advertisement did not inform the public. Second, that it failed to show whether the property was levied on as the property of all or a part of the defendants, or that it was levied on as the property of any of them. Third, that it did not describe the judgment by stating the amount unsatisfied. Fourth, that there remained due on the note only about §2550, while the property levied on was worth at least $300,000, and that the levy mentioned was excessive. Fifth, that these circumstances would cause the property to sell for less than it would otherwise bring.

Appellant filed exceptions and an answer to the application with a motion that the injunction be dissolved, and that judgment for ten per *304 cent damages for delay be entered against appellees and their sureties.

Appellees filed another pleading, endorsed: “answer and replication,” in which, for the purpose of showing that plaintiff had sustained no damage from the injunction, they alleged ‘ ‘that at the time it was granted, no levy had in fact been made, either by endorsement on the writ, or by the making of any memorandum of any character with reference to same, or in any manner whatsoever.” This was not sworn to.

The case was heard on the motion of appellant to dissolve injunction and to adjudge damages for delay. The evidence consisted of the execution and the return, written on a paper pasted thereto, by which the levy was shown in the same language as that used in the published advertisement set out in the petition, to which the sheriff’s signature was attached, and which showed that the sale had not been made at the advertised time, because of the injunction; and of the testimony of one of appellees’ counsel, to the effect, that, when the petition or motion was filed, he examined the execution and there was no endorsement on it and no paper attached to it showing a levy, but, accompanying it, was a separate paper, wholly unsigned, which bore no evidence of having ever been in any way attached to the writ, on which was written the levy as it now appears pasted to the execution and stated in the advertisement.

A judgment was rendered overruling appellant’s motion for a dissolution of the injunction and for damages, and adjudging the costs against appellant. From this judgment the present appeal is prosecuted.

Opinion.—It will be seen that the judgment does not, in terms, dispose of the application which was filed by the defendant in execution, nor of the injunction granted. It is not expressly adjudicated that the levy or advertisement was bad and should be quashed or vacated, nor that the sale should be stayed, nor that the injunction should be perpetuated. The judgment is not such as ought to have been rendered, to finally dispose of the case, and we have had doubts whether or not it is such a final adjudication of the controversy as can be appealed from. We have concluded, however, that its practical effect is to determine all that was in issue. The time for the sale had passed, and the injunction had served its purpose. All that was left to be determined was, whether or not appellees had shown sufficient grounds for their action to protect them against appellant’s claim for damages and entitle them to costs. The judgment, in effect, decides both of these issues, and its finality should not be made to depend upon its form alone.

The assignments of error complain of the refusal of the court to sustain exceptions to the proceeding instituted by the defendants in execution. The first in order of these is that an injunction was not the appropriate remedy, as the law furnished a remedy in a motion to the court to quash the advertisement and thereby stop the sale. The answer to this is, that this proceeding should be classed as such amotion.

In Lockhart v. Stuckler, 49 Texas, 765, suit was brought to have a *305 retaxation of costs, charged in an execution which was in the hands of the sheriff, and an injunction was sued out to stay the writ until the question could be adjudicated. Chief Justice Roberts said, “It will not do to regard the petition in this ease as a bill in equity, but rather as a motion to retax costs, with an order or mandate of the court from which the execution was issued to supersede the execution until the motion could be tried.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 447, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 301, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-national-bank-v-interior-land-immigration-co-texapp-1896.