Fatheree v. Williams

35 S.W. 324, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 430, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 87
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 S.W. 324 (Fatheree v. Williams) 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
Fatheree v. Williams, 35 S.W. 324, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 430, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 87 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

— This suit was brought by appellant against the appellee, J. M. Williams, sheriff of Zavalla County, and the other appellees as sureties on his official bond. A general demurrer and special exceptions were sustained to the petition, and, appellant declining to amend, the judgment was rendered against him from which he appeals.

The petition, after averring the election and qualification of Mr. Williams as sheriff, and the execution of his official bond by himself as principal and his co-appellees as sureties, alleges, substantially: That on the 10th day of May, 1895, plaintiff and his wife were the joint owners and in possession of 140 head, more or less, of beef cattle, of *431 the market value of $25 per head, and of the aggregate value of §3500, which facts were then well known to appellees. That on the 16th day of April, 1895, an execution was issued out of the County Court of Zavalla County upon a judgment therein recovered by A. Harris against plaintiff, for $401.94, besides $5.05 costs, and directed to and placed in the hands of J. M. Williams, the sheriff of said county, commanding him to make the amount specified out of plaintiff’s property. That said Williams, acting in his official capacity, by virtue of said writ, wrongfully, unjustly and oppressively levied upon 60 head of plaintiff’s beeves, of the aggregate value of $1500, and on the 10th day of May, 1895, the date of the levy, advertised them for sale on the 21st day of that month. That on the 12th day of May, 1895, another execution was issued from said court upon a judgment rendered therein on the 10th day of the same month and year, in a cause wherein W. Y. Davidson was plaintiff and W. T. Fatheree and his wife, Katie, were defendants, for $411.62, and $7.55 costs of suit, which was likewise directed to and placed in the hands of the sheriff of Zavalla County; and that, by virtue thereof, said sheriff wrongfully and oppressively, and without regard to the rights of plaintiff, did seize and take into his possession the residue of his beef cattle, numbering 80 head or more, of the aggregate value of $2000, and on the same day advertised them for sale on the 23d of May, 1895. That when each of said executions were levied plaintiff owned 250 head of stock cattle and eight head of horses subject to levy and sale, of ample and sufficient value to satisfy both executions, but that defendant Williams never at any time requested or demanded him to point out property upon which to levy said writs, and that he was requested by plaintiff to levy the second execution upon the stock cattle, which were then in a pasture near the town of Batesville, the county seat of Zavalla County, and would have been pointed out and delivered to the sheriff,.had he not refused to levy upon them by virtue of said writ. That by reason of the oppressive acts of defendant Williams in making such excessive levies and taking into his possession all of plaintiff’s beef steers, and his failure to call upon or permit him to point out other property belonging to him upon which to levy said execution, and his failure to levy upon other property when requested, plaintiff was damaged in the sum of That after the levy of the first execution, with the intention and for the purpose of paying off said judgments with the proceeds, he effected a sale of 50 head of the beef cattle not covered by that writ, at an advantageous price and in excess of the sums called for in both executions, and, before the levy of the second execution, had gathered the number sold as well as the others not levied on for the purpose of shipping and delivering them to the purchaser in San Antonio, in order to carry out the sale so effected, and was in the act of making the shipment, when defendant Williams came to him while holding the cattle, and, being informed by plaintiff of the effected sale, and that his purpose in making it was to obtain the money by which he could satisfy said executions held by the sheriff against him, *432 wrongfully and excessively levied the second execution upon all his beef cattle not before seized by him under the first writ, and thereby prevented him from consummating such sale. That before such levy was made he requested said sheriff to levy upon the 250 head of stock cattle and eight head of horses before mentioned, and, after the seizures, tendered him his check on the parties in San Antonio to whom he had effected the sale for the aggregate amount, principal, interest and costs, due on said executions. That plaintiff after the seizure of his cattle, in order to prevent them from being sacrificed at forced sale in Zavalla County when there was no market for them, at the expense and loss of time amounting to $150, procured a buyer who agreed to ]lay him $1Y per head for said cattle, and upon the sale of the cattle he gave ihe sheriff (Williams) his draft on the purchaser for the full amount due on said executions and costs, which he accepted in satisfaction of the writs and released the cattle from the levy thereunder. That such sale, though for a sum in excess of what the jjroperty would have brought under execution, was virtually a forced sale caused by its detention under execution, without which the cattle would not have been sold for less than $25 per head. That on account of the wrongful and oppressive acts of said sheriff, plaintiff has sustained an actual loss of $8 per head upon said 140 head of beef cattle, and the further sum of $150 in loss of time and money expended in his endeavors to find a purchaser for the cattle; which was rendered necessary by reason of the wrongful and oppressive acts of the sheriff as before stated; and that the acts, injuries, trespasses and oppressive acts alleged constitute a breach of the conditions of the sheriff’s said official bond, upon which judgment is prayed for the damages occasioned by such wrongs, trespasses, injuries, etc.

After the general demurrer, the special exceptions interposed were, (1) the petition does not show that the alleged damages were the necessary and proximate result of the alleged excessive levy; (2) it is defective, in that it does not show that plaintiff placed the sheriff in possession of the property which he pointed out to be levied upon, nor that he informed the sheriff where the property was located, nor does it show such jiroperty was free from liens or incumbrances; (3) it is defective in its attempts to allege a tender of payment in satisfaction of the executions, in that it states a tender of a check and not of money; (4) the expense of procuring a purchaser is not an element of damages, malice not having been alleged; and (5) because the difference in the alleged value of the cattle and the price realized therefor at the sale made by plaintiff is not the true measure of damages, and the plaintiff cannot recover therefor because such sale was by him voluntarily made.

Opinion. — It is said by Mr. Justice Cooley in Handy v. Clippert, 50 Mich., 355, 15 N. W. Rep., 507, and quoted with approval in Freeman on Executions, 253: “The officer is or should be a minister of justice, not of oppression; and he should execute every writ put into his hands in such manner as to do as little mischief to the debtor as possible.” He *433 should act in obedience to the command of a writ and, without delay, levy upon sufficient property of the defendant to satisfy the execution.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W. 324, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 430, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fatheree-v-williams-texapp-1896.