Craven v. Buchanan

248 S.W. 89
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 8, 1922
DocketNo. 6491.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 89 (Craven v. Buchanan) 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
Craven v. Buchanan, 248 S.W. 89 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Findings of Pact.

JENKINS, J.

P. A. Craven and W. B. Stanford each owned a five-passenger Ford automobile, which automobiles were stolen from them. Guy Simms was in possession of a five-passenger Ford automobile, which Craven claimed was stolen from him. He instituted suit against Simms to recover this automobile. Craven requested Bob Buchanan, sheriff of McLennan county, to take possession of said automobile as stolen property, and to hold the same subject to said suit. Buchanan took possession of the automobile. During the pendency of this suit, Stanford claimed to Buchanan that he was the owner of the automobile which had thus been taken from Simms. Buchanan delivered tie automobile to Stanford and received from him $100 reward for recovering the same.

Craven' recovered judgment against Simms for title and possession of said. automobile. A writ of possession was issued and placed in the hands of Buchanan, commanding him to deliver possession of said automobile to Craven, “as against said Guy Simms and all persons claiming same under or through him since the institution of this suit.’,’

When said writ was received, Stanford was in possession of the automobile, having received such possession from Buchanan as hereinbefore stated. He was claiming same, not under Simms, but as having been stolen from him by Simms.

Buchanan demanded and received from F. A. Craven .an indemnity bond. F. A. Craven gave such bond, with A. R. Craven and Louis Lipshitz, appellants herein, as sureties, which was as follows:

“F. A. Craven v. Guy Simms. No. 11654. Whereas, a writ of possession has been issued in an action pending in the county court in and for the county of McLennan, state of Texas, in favor of the above-named plaintiff, against the said Guy Simms as defendant, which by the direction of the plaintiff has been levied by Bob Buchanan, sheriff of McLennan county, upon certain goods and chattels, viz.: One five-passenger Ford automobile, original state license No. S94588, said number having been changed and the present number as follows: Engine No. 3745261, oh said number is 3745267, and the present license number of 431532: Now, therefore, in consideration that the said Bob Buchanan, as sheriff, has levied (or shall levy) said writ of possession upon the above-described property, we, F. A. Craven, as principal, and the other signers hereto as sureties, acknowledge ourselves bound to pay to Bob Buchanan, sheriff as aforesaid, the sum of one thousand 00/ioo dollars, conditioned that the above bound F. A. Craven shall well and sufficiently indemnify, save and keep harmless the said Bob Buchanan, sheriff as aforesaid, from all costs, damages and suits that he may incur, or become liable to, in consequence of the levy of the said writ of possession, and shall pay off, cancel and discharge all judgments, damages and costs that may be rendered against the said Bob Buchanan, as sheriff, by reason of said levy.
“Witness our hands, this 2d day of Nov., A. D. 1926. [Signed] F. A. Craven.
“A. R. Craven.
“Louis Lipshitz.”
“The foregoing bond approved, this 2d day of Nov., A. D. 1920. Bob Buchanan, Sheriff, McLennan County, Texas, by [Signed] I. M. Wood, Deputy.”

Buchanan executed said writ by taking possession of the automobile and delivering the same to F.' A. Craven. Thereafter Stanford brought suit against Craven and Buchanan for the conversion of said automobile, and recovered judgment against them, jointly and severally, for the sum of $600, the alleged value of the automobile. This judgment has not been paid in whole or in part. No appeal was taken from either of said judgments.

The appellants, who were sureties on Buchanan’s indemnity bond, were not parties to this suit, nor were they legally notified of the same by Buchanan, nor were ' they requested by him to defend same.

After Stanford recovered judgment against F. A. Craven and Bob Buchanan, Buchanan, the appellee herein, brought suit against the principal and sureties on said indemnity bond, and recovered judgment against them for $600, with interest thereon from November 3, 1920, and $46.45, costs in the suit of Stanford v. F. A. Craven and Bob Buchanan, and all costs in this suit.

This appeal is prosecuted by said bondsmen from the judgment last above mentioned.

Upon the trial of this cause, no evidence was introduced as to the value of the auto *91 mobile, nor as to Stanford’s ownership thereof. The judgment recites as a basis therefor:

“That said judgment as rendered in said cause No. 11775 (Stanford v. F. A. Craven and Bob Buchanan) is a valid outstanding judgment, and has not been paid.”

Opinion.

The principal issues presented on this appeal arise from the contentions of appellants that—

(1) The indemnity bond executed by appellants is void, for the reason that the ap-pellee, sheriff of McLennan county, having received from a court of competent jurisdiction a writ of possession issued on a valid judgment, commanding him to do what he did do, namely, seize and turn over to IP. A. Craven the automobile described in said writ, he was bound to obey said order, and had no legal right to demand an indemnity bond of said Craven.

(2) That if said writ did not authorize the appellee Buchanan to seize the automobile, he had no legal right to require indemnity against the consequences of his illegal act.

(3) That the judgment in the case of Stanford v. Buchanan was not binding on appellants, for the reason that they were not parties to said suit, and were not legally notified as to its pendency.

It is true, as a general proposition, that an officer is bound to obey the legal orders of a court, and is not entitled to be indemnified for so doing.

Without entering into a discussion of this proposition’, it is sufficient to say that in the instant case the writ of possession was against Simms and those claiming under him, and did not authorize the sheriff to take the automobile from the owner of same, who was not a party to the suit of Craven v. Simms. The sheriff found the automobile in the possession of Stanford, who claimed to be the owner thereof by title other than under Simms. Such claim may or may not have been well founded. To seize the automobile in the possession of Stanford was to commit a trespass, if it belonged to Stanford. Cabell v. Shoe Co., 81 Tex. 107, 108, 16 S. W. 811; Vickery v. Crawford, 93 Tex. 373, 55 S. W. 560, 49 L. R. A. 773, 77 Am. St. Rep. 891; Id. (Tex. Civ. App.) 57 S. W. 326; Campbell v. Ulch, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 618, 60 S. W. 272; Bassham v. Evans (Tex. Civ. App.) 216 S. W. 448. The sheriff was not required to determine the ownership of the automobile at his peril. He was clearly within his rights when he said to Craven: If you want this issue tried, give me an indemnity bond and I will seize the automobile and turn it over to you. It was held in Illies v. Fitzgerald, 11 Tex. 427, that the sheriff had the right to require an indemnity bond where he was honestly in doubt as to his right to make the levy. “The rule of law, that a contract to indemnify for doing an illegal act, is void, must be subject to the qualification that the act is known to be illegal at the time of entering into the contract.”

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248 S.W. 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craven-v-buchanan-texapp-1922.