Dittman v. Myers

95 S.W.2d 1332, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 736
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 12, 1936
DocketNo. 2931.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 1332 (Dittman v. Myers) 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
Dittman v. Myers, 95 S.W.2d 1332, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 736 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

On September 24, 1934, appellee Myers brought this suit against appellants Fred Dittman, Carl Dittman, and A. E. Drew, and against J. C. Schoemaker and J. D. Hunnicutt, to recover damages for conversion of certain personal property, and for loss of earnings occasioned to appellee Myers by reason of being deprived of the *1333 use of said property in his printing business, and for damages for wrongful levy of a distress warrant on said property, thus taking the property out of his possession, and for exemplary damages, alleging said distress levy was done for the purpose of injuring, harassing, and ruining him.

Myers alleged that on May 14, 1934, he was engaged in publishing a newspaper in the city of Goose Creek, Harris county, Tex., known as “The Democrat,” and that at said time he was occupying certain premises leased from appellant Fred Dittman. That for the purpose of publishing the said paper, he had in the building where same was published certain enumerated property, tools, and apparatus, used in connection with the publishing of said paper, of the reasonable market value of $5,643. That on said date, May 14, 1934, appellants Fred Dittman and Carl Dittman, unlawfully and without just cause or excuse, and with intent to vex, injure, harass, and ruin appellee, sued out a distress warrant in the justice court of justice precinct No. 3 in Harris county, on the ground that he', appellee, was about to remove his said property from said leased premises without paying the lease hire or rent owed by him to said appellants, which was false and without foundation in fact, and that they, appellants, had a landlord’s lien on said property for the payment of said unpaid rent, which was not true because all of his said property sought to be distressed for rent was exempt property. That on said May 14, 1934, appellants unlawfully and without reasonable excuse or justification caused said distress warrant to be executed and thereby took possession of said premises and the property of appellee therein, and excluded appellee from the use and possession of same, and continued to hold said property without any further legal procedure and converted same to their own use and benefit. He prayed for damages in the sum of the value of the property so distressed, $5,643, and exemplary damages in the sum of $5,000.

Defendants J. C. Schoemaker, J. D. Hun-nicutt, C. B. Shannon, and A. E. Drew answered. Schoemaker was the constable who executed the distress warrant and closed up the building in which appellee had been publishing his newspaper. Hun-nicutt and 'Shannon were on Schoemaker’s official bond. Shannon died, and the suit as to him was dismissed. Carl Dittman and Drew were on the lessor Fred Ditt-man’s bond for the distress warrant. These defendants answered by general demurrer, general denial, and specially that they should not be held for damages claimed by appellee because defendant Schoemaker, constable1, acted in obedience to the distress warrant lawfully directing him to seize the property in question.

■ Appellants Fred Dittman and Carl Ditt-man answered by general demurrer, several special exceptions, and general denial, and specially denied that appellee was the owner of the property described in his petition, and specially denied that said property was of the reasonable market value alleged. They further specially answered that appellee occupied the building in which the property was situated by virtue of a written contract of date December 14, 1932, executed by appellee C. R. Myers and C. M. Cox, as lessees, and Fred Dittman, lessor, which provided, among other things, that appellee was to pay to lessor Fred Dittman the sum of $900 for rental on said building past due under the previous contract, and that said Myers was to proceed to pay off existing outstanding debts which he owed to other parties, which debts aggregated the sum of $3,000 and were secured by chattel mortgage liens on certain of the property, and that when said debts were paid by appellee, then said lessor, Fred Ditt-man, agreed to remit or credit the sum of $300 on said $900 past-due rent. They further specially answered that said rental contract of date December 14, 1932, provided that a rental of $50 per month was to be paid by said Myers monthly in advance; that in said contract Myers bound and obligated himself to vacate said rented premises upon failure upon his part to perform any of the provisions of said contract, and agreed that in event of such default by appellee appellant could cancel the contract and take possession of the premises; that failure to pay the monthly rental in advance should at the election of the lessor give him the right to cancel the contract upon 10 days’ notice in writing. That said Myers failed to pay off the debts owing by him to other parties, and failed to pay the monthly rental for the building, wherefore lessor had the right to cancel said rental contract and take possession of the rented premises, and that lessor accordingly gave *1334 written notice to appellee to vacate the premises more than 10 days prior to the execution of the distress warrant and the locking up of the building. They further answered that said Myers, after the distress warrant had been executed and the premises closed, requested lessor Fred Dittman not to file his petition or suit in the district court of Harris county because to do so would cause him, Myers, trouble and injure him, and that in accession to such request the petition or suit was not filed in the district court of Harris county. Other defenses were plead, but we do not think it necessary to mention them.

Appellants, in connection with their answer, filed a cross-action against appel-lee Myers, alleging that he was indebted to lessor Fred Dittman for past-due rent in an amount of $1,150; that lessor had a contract lien and a statutory landlord’s lien on the property in said rented premises to secure the payment of said rent; that they had demanded in writing possession of said premises, as provided in their rental contract, but that appellee Myers refused to pay the debt or any part of same, and prayed for judgment for the debt, and for a foreclosure of the contract and statutory liens on the property described by appellee in his petition, and for relief general and special.

Appellee replied to said cross-action by supplemental petition, and, among other matters, alleged: (a) That the court did not have jurisdiction of the cross-action of lessor for rents past due, because cross-plaintiffs had elected to assert their cause of action in the manner and form of distress proceedings which were still pending, though no petition or any pleadings had, under such distress proceedings, been filed in the district court of Harris county, the district court could not acquire jurisdiction through a cross-action of their suit for rent and foreclosure of their asserted liens in the absence of compliance with article 5239, R.S.1925, wherefore the cross-action should be dismissed; and (b) that the property upon which the foreclosure was sought was exempt from execution and so the landlord’s statutory lien did not apply, and there was no contract lien to be enforced.

The court sustained appellees’ pleas to the jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine appellants’ cross-action for rents and foreclosure of the liens asserted, and dismissed the cross-action.

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 1332, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dittman-v-myers-texapp-1936.