Emerson, Talcott & Co. v. Skidmore

25 S.W. 671, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 641, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 373
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1894
DocketNo. 636.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 671 (Emerson, Talcott & Co. v. Skidmore) 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
Emerson, Talcott & Co. v. Skidmore, 25 S.W. 671, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 641, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 373 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

COLLARD, Associate Justice.

We adopt the appellants’ statement of the nature and result of the suit, which is as follows:

This action was brought Jby appellee, T. F. Skidmore, against appellants, Emerson, Talcott & Co., a corporation doing business in Texas and chartered under the laws of Illinois, J. M. Wendelkin, and 27. A. McMillan, for damages claimed by him growing out of the levy of a writ of attachment upon certain merchandise of the alleged value of $2000 belonging to the plaintiff, in the town of McGregor, in McLennan County, on the 4th day of November, 1889. He alleged in his petition that the attachment was sued out by Emerson, Talcott & Co. *643 against himself and one T. C. S. Hatch, in Dallas County, and that defendants Wendellcin and McMillan were sureties for Emerson, Talcott & Co. on its attachment bond, and that the attachment was sued out wrongfully, maliciously, and without' probable cause, and that the plaintiff, Skidmore, was damaged thereby $10,000, for which he prayed judgment, etc.

Defendants answered by general demurrer, special exception, general denial, and specially answered, that on the 9th day of June, 1890, the defendants Emerson, Talcott & Co., in the District Court of Dallas County, in the same cause wherein the writ of attachment was sued out, recovered a judgment against plaintiff, T. F. Skidmore, and one T. C. S. Hatch, for the sum of $2140, with interest at 10 per cent per annum from date and costs of suit, and that said judgment was still unsatisfied, and a valid and subsisting judgment against said Skid-more in favor of said Emerson, Talcott & Co.

Plaintiff replied, by supplemental petition, that the said judgment had been fully paid off and satisfied by the proceeds of collection of certain notes delivered by plaintiff to Emerson, Talcott & Co., as collateral security for the debt upon which said judgment was obtained, amounting to $1200, and by the sale of the goods attached in the suit in which said judgment was rendered.

Defendants answered this supplemental petition by demurrer, general denial, and admission that Emerson, Talcott & Co. had collected $797.50 on notes held as collateral security for the notes of Skidmore & Hatch, since the said judgment was rendered, and by garnishment proceedings against the First ¡National Bank of McGregor and W. P. Gaines, and that it had paid costs of suit, amounting to $113.

The cause was tried before the court and a jury. On the 19th of October, 1891, the jury returned the following verdict: “We the jury find for plaintiff an amount sufficient to offset defendant’s judgment; also find for plaintiff exemplary damages to the amount of $1500. E. B. Levy, Foreman.” Hpon which verdict the court rendered a judgment against Emerson, Talcott & Co. alone, for the sum of $1500, and against all the defendants for costs of suit. Defendants moved the court for a new trial, which was overruled, to which ruling defendants excepted and gave notice of appeal.

■ Opinion.—The court instructed the jury as to the law upon which exemplary damages would be allowed plaintiff. Appellants say that no charge should have been given upon the subject, because the suit is upon an attachment bond in which Emerson, Talcott & Co. are principals, and there is no pleading or evidence in the case to sustain a claim for such damages against Wendelkin and McMillan, sureties on the bond, and the court did not limit the finding of such damages against the principals in the bond.

*644 The petition sets up facts authorizing a recovery on the bond for the wrongful suing out of the writ, and, in addition, the fact that it was maliciously sued out by defendants, and prays for actual and exemplary damages. If the exception to the petition was intended to call for a ruling on the point now made, it was not insisted on in the court below. There was no such ruling. The verdict separated the damages, actual and exemplary, and the judgment of the court, following and enforcing the law, was rendered only against the principals— Emerson, Talcott & Co.—for exemplary damages. The judgment corrects omission in the charge. The sureties on the bond can not complain.

Appellants assign as error the rendering of the judgment for exemplary damages against Emerson, Talcott & Co. alone, because the petition asks such damages against all the defendants, and the verdict is general—thus making a variance between the verdict and judgment.

The assignment is not well taken. The judgment is the legitimate and only legal result that can be derived from the facts. The law should be rationally applied to them as alleged and proved. Defendants could have compelled more definite averments as to sole liability of the principals for exemplary damages, by a special demurrer insisted on before the court. This was not done. The sureties could not be made liable for such damages under any kind of mere averment. The suit, construed by the law, is a suit on the bond against principals and sureties for actual damages, and against the principals for exemplary damages. The court, as before stated, controlled the matter in the judgment, as it should have done. It would have been patent and reversible error to have rendered judgment against the sureties for the exemplary damages. Such damages could only be against the principals on the bond. We can not say the judgment should have been rendered for exemplary damages against the sureties upon the ground that the verdict was general, and then reverse the judgment because the sureties could not be made so liable. The verdict discriminates between and finds separately the actual and exemplary damages, making the duty of the court clear in rendering judgment.

Appellants say that the court below should not have submitted the issue of exemplary damages at all, because the petition shows that defendant Emerson, Talcott & Co. is a corporation, and that the affidavit for attachment was made by an agent of the corporation, and there is no allegation of ratification or other act of the corporation that would authorize a judgment for exemplary damages.

The petition, in effect, charges that the attachment was maliciously sued out and caused to be levied upon plaintiff’s property by the plaintiff in the attachment suit. It alleges that the corporation, in so *645 doing, acted through its agents, but it alleges that the malicious acts were those of the corporation.

This was sufficient to admit proof of facts showing the company’s liability for exemplary damages, and authorized the charge upon that subject, if the facts warranted the submission of the issue.

There is no assignment of error as to the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the charge. But we think the facts were sufficient.

The defendant is a foreign corporation, organized under the laws of Illinois.

One E. S. Thorpe testified: “I am the agent of defendants, Emer-

son, Talcott & Co., and'the person who made the affidavit for attachment in the case of Emerson, Talcott & Co. v. Skidmore & Hatch, the suit on the two notes—one for $1400 and the other for $1000—filed in the District Court of Dallas County on November 2, 1889.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 671, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 641, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emerson-talcott-co-v-skidmore-texapp-1894.