Fleming v. Pringle

51 S.W. 553, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 225, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 324
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 51 S.W. 553 (Fleming v. Pringle) 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
Fleming v. Pringle, 51 S.W. 553, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 225, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 324 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinions

The appellee J.M. Pringle, as assignee of A.M. Pringle, brought this action against A.H. Casteel and his wife, *Page 226 Mary J. Casteel, for the recovery of a certain sum of money which it was alleged the said A.H. Casteel had promised to pay A.M. Pringle. Casteel and his wife answered that they had been served with writs of garnishment at the suit of C.E. Fleming and J.C. McBride, and asked that Fleming and McBride, as well as A.M. Pringle, be made parties to the suit. Fleming and McBride both appeared and answered and prayed judgment for the amount of their respective claims against Casteel and wife. No answer was filed by A.M. Pringle, and it does not appear that he was ever served with process except by a recital in the judgment to that effect, and that he had made default.

The facts adduced at the trial below show that Casteel was the owner and holder of two vendor's lien notes against two tracts of land of 320 acres each with deed of trust for the enforcement of the payment of the notes. These tracts of land known as the Robert Hoppel and A.H. Jackson surveys were situated in Galveston County, and had been sold in a body to one Dennis, whose notes for the unpaid purchase money had been transferred to Casteel. Dennis conveyed the land subject to the purchase money notes, to A.M. Pringle, who assumed the payment of the notes and afterwards conveyed the Jackson survey to his sons C.R. and H.H. Pringle, and the Hoppel survey to C.E. Fleming through a mesne conveyance. Fleming undertook to pay in part consideration of the conveyance about one-half of the purchase money outstanding against both tracts of land, which had been assumed by A.M. Pringle. When Casteel was about to foreclose his deed of trust A.M. Pringle procured an agreement from him that if he became the purchaser thereof within a stipulated time, Casteel would convey the land to such purchaser and pay to A.M. Pringle the surplus of the purchase money over the amount of his debt, interest, and an agreed amount to cover expenses. Pringle procured one Bush to purchase the land at $10 per acre, which left a surplus of about $2300. This money Casteel deposited to the credit of his wife with Adoue Lobit, bankers. James Fleming, the father of the appellant C.E. Fleming, who is a feme sole, testified that A.M. Pringle made the agreement with Casteel with his knowledge and assent, acting for his daughter, and promised to share the surplus proceeds received from Casteel equally with her.

A.M. Pringle, by another conveyance and in an entirely separate transaction, conveyed to the said C.E. Fleming another tract of 100 acres of land in consideration of property then conveyed to him of the value of $2500, by a deed in which he warranted the title to the land conveyed. It turned out that C.E. Fleming lost and was ousted of this land by reason of an incumbrance placed thereon by A.M. Pringle before his conveyance to C.E. Fleming, and there was a breach of Pringle's warranty.

The money which Casteel had promised to pay to Pringle came into his hands April 8, 1897. On March 30, 1897, the appellant C.E. Fleming filed suit in the District Court of Galveston County against A.M. Pringle for damages for breach of warranty of title to the 100 acres tract *Page 227 of land, and applied for a writ of garnishment against the said A.H. Casteel. A writ was issued April 19, 1897, and placed in the hands of the sheriff, and by that officer returned with the following indorsement: "Received this writ on the 19th day of April, 1897, at 11:30 o'clock a.m., and executed the same on the 19th day of April, 1897, at 11:40 o'clock a.m. by serving a true copy thereof upon the within named A.H. Casteel, garnishee, in person, in the county of Galveston, Texas." (Signed) "Henry Thomas, sheriff Galveston County, Texas, by John A. Kirlicks, deputy." To this writ Casteel answered denying any liability to A.M. Pringle. Another writ was applied for against A.H. Casteel and Mary J. Casteel, on September 25, 1897, and was issued on October 16, 1897, and returned by the sheriff with an indorsement as to service on Mary J. Casteel in the same form as above recited. J.C. McBride also brought suit against A.M. Pringle in a justice court for $150 and garnished the said Casteel. The suit of C.E. Fleming v. A.M. Pringle, A.H. Casteel, and Mary J. Casteel, garnishees, was pending in the District Court of Galveston County undisposed of when this case was tried below. McBride had obtained judgment before the justice of the peace for his debt and costs, but the garnishment was pending.

A.M. Pringle made the assignment of the money held by A.H. Casteel for him, to J.M. Pringle, on the 9th day of July, 1897.

Upon the trial below the court directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of J.C. McBride for $150, but against C.E. Fleming, and in favor of J.M. Pringle against A.H. Casteel and his wife, Mary J. Casteel, for the balance of the fund, and judgment was entered accordingly.

While the garnishment suits of Fleming and McBride against A.M. Pringle were not consolidated with the suit of J.M. Pringle against A.H. Casteel and wife, yet all of the parties were before the court, the said Fleming and McBride having been brought in upon the interpleader of Casteel and wife, and the pleadings of Casteel and wife and of Fleming and McBride having brought all of the issues into this suit, they could be properly determined herein. It would not be proper to try this suit and shut off C.E. Fleming from resort to the fund garnished by her, because her suit against A.M. Pringle with Casteel as garnishee was still pending and undisposed of. All of the cases and issues were therefore tried in one suit and will be so treated.

The right of the appellant C.E. Fleming to one-half the money in the hands of Casteel was based in the evidence upon the promise of A.M. Pringle to her father, James Fleming, to pay one-half of the surplus. While the evidence tended to show such a promise, there was nothing in the pleading to support it, and consequently there could be no issue in that respect to submit to the jury. We are of the opinion, however, that the attitude of the parties with relation to the land and the incumbrance thereon, as shown by the evidence, would be sufficient to support such a promise. We do not think that the allegations of the petition are full enough to disclose such a trust relation between A.M. Pringle and C.E. Fleming as would hold him as trustee for her for any part of the surplus *Page 228 proceeds of the sale of the land independent of the promise sought to be shown by the testimony of James Fleming.

Writs of garnishment were served upon A.H. Casteel prior to the assignment of the claim by A.M. Pringle to the plaintiff. If these were valid writs, they would be sufficient to charge the garnishee as against the assignment. A.H. Casteel was indebted to A.M. Pringle, and it could make no difference where he deposited or what disposition he made of the money. So the fact that Mary J. Casteel was not garnished until after the execution of the assignment can not affect any question here involved. She owed Pringle nothing and was no more liable to him than were Adoue Lobit, with whom the money had been deposited.

Some question is made about a variance between the pleading in the suit of Fleming against Pringle on the breach of warranty and the evidence, it having been alleged in the petition that the purchase money was paid in "lawful money of the United States," but the answer and cross-bill of C.E. Fleming in this suit amends that averment so that there is no variance. Damages for breach of warranty are sufficiently certain to support attachment and garnishment.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W. 553, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 225, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-pringle-texapp-1899.