Fr. Beck & Co. v. Avindino

68 S.W. 827, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 358
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 68 S.W. 827 (Fr. Beck & Co. v. Avindino) 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
Fr. Beck & Co. v. Avindino, 68 S.W. 827, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 358 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

TEMPLETON, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought in 1888 by E. S. Avindino against Fr. Beck & Co. to recover the value of a stock of millinery levied on and sold under and by virtue of an alias execution issued on April 12, 1888, on a judgment for $765.51 rendered in 1886 in favor of Beck & Go. and against Avindino. It was claimed that the levy and sale were illegal and void because the levy was made without Avindino being called on to point out property to be levied on, and because he .protested against the levy and demanded that the writ be levied on two lots belonging to him situated on Bose Hill, in the city of Texarkana, Texas, and which were alleged to be unincumbered, not exempt, and of value more than sufficient to satisfy the writ. The case was tried and Avindino obtained a judgment, which was reversed on appeal in 1891. Beck v. Avindino, 82 Texas, 314. Mandate was filed in 1892, but the case was not put on the docket of the District Court or again-called for trial until 1897. In the meantime Avindino had died, and in *501 1897 his children made themselves parties and obtained a judgment on a trial when Beck & Co. were not represented, which judgment was also reversed. Beck v. Avindino, 20 Texas Civ. App., 330. Another trial was had before a jury and appellees were again successful, and Beck & Co. have again appealed.

The defenses relied on by appellants are: (1) That the lots were not subject to levy, because the same constituted Avindino’s residence' homestead. (2) That the note on which their said judgment against Avindino was based was secured by mortgage on the said lots given by Avindino; that Avindino defeated a foreclosure on the ground that the lots were his homestead; that if the lots were not homestead when pointed out for levy, Avindino was, for the reasons stated, estopped from asserting the fact. (3) That Avindino did not legally point out the lots for levy because he did not deliver to the officer a description thereof by metes and bounds; and (4) that Avindino, through a purchase in the name of his wife, recovered the goods sold under the levy for a sum less than the debt owing to them by him. We will state the material facts as briefly as possible, and will then consider the defenses urged by appellants in the order stated.

In 1882 Avindino resided with his family on the said lots and the same was the residence homestead. He owed a debt to Beck & Co. and gave a mortgage on said lots and a business lot situated on Broad street, in the city of Texarkana, to secure the debt. Avindino was a paper hanger and handled wall paper, a stock of which he kept in the house on the Broad street lot. His wife conducted a millinery business in the same building. Soon after the execution of the mortgage Avindino moved his family from the Bose Hill lots to the Broad street lot, which was thereafter'occupied both as a family residence and as a place of business. The move was made because the condition of Mrs. Avindino’s health made it necessary for her to be nearer her business. In the latter part of 1884 the Avindinos closed up their business at Texarkana, rented out all of their said lots, and moved to Temple, Texas, where they remained a little over two years. While at Temple they carried on the same business in which they had been formerly engaged at Texarkana. Soon after they left Texarkana, Beck & Co. brought suit on the debt owing to them by Avindino and sought to foreclose the mortgage given to secure the debt. Avindino resisted a foreclosure on the ground that the mortgage was void because of the homestead character of the mortgaged property. In 1886 a personal judgment for $765.51 was rendered against Avindino, a foreclosure being denied. In January, 1887, Beck & Co. had an execution issued on said judgment and caused the same to be levied on the Broad street property. There was a sale under the levy, Beck & Co. becoming the purchasers on their bid of $100, which was credited on the judgment. About this time the Avindinos returned to Texarkana. They had acquired no real estate during their sojourn at Temple. When they left Temple they closed out the business they were conducting there and desired to re-embark in business at *502 Texarkana. On reaching Texarkana they found Beck & Co. in possession of the Broad street lot. They thereupon rented another lot and opened a business thereon. They did not move back on the Bose Hill lots, but occupied the rented place of business, as a family residence. Avindino then sued Beck & Co. for the recovery of the Broad street lot, his contention being that the move to Temple was only temporary and was occasioned by Mrs. Avindino’s bad health, and that he had never abandoned the Broad street lot as his place of business. Pending the suit, Beck & Co. had an alias execution issued and levied on a stock of millinery belonging to Avindino, the business being conducted by Mrs. Avindino and in her name. This litigation followed, with the results stated. Avindino obtained a judgment in 1889 against-Beck & Co. for the recovery of the Broad street lot. The Avindinos sold one of the Bose Hill lots, and in January, 1890, moved back on the other Bose Hill lot, where Mrs. Avindino died in June of that year. Avindino then moved with his children to Jefferson, Texas, and later on returned to Texarkana. After the return from Jefferson, Avindino and his children lived on the Bose Hill lot until his death, which occurred in 1894. His children, the appellees, still own the said lot and the broad street lot.

1. Under their second, sixth, seventh, thirteenth, and fifteenth assignments of érror appellants present the following proposition: “The lots said to have been pointed out had been previously claimed and adjudged to be the homestead of Avindino and his family. If it had been lawful to subsequently point them out to the sheriff for seizure, it was necessary for him to have abandoned such use of them, with an intention never to return thereto, and to have acquired another and different homestead, and the burden of proof to show this was upon Avindino.” The trial court instructed the jury to find for appellants unless they believed that, prior to the time the lots were pointed out for levy, Avindino had abandoned the same as his homestead, with the intention of never returning thereto, and that on this issue the burden of proof was on the appellees, but declined to give a special charge requested by appellants to the effect that an abandonment was not shown unless Avindino acquired another homestead. The question to be determined is, whether abandonment of a residence homestead can be shown without proof that the owner has acquired a new homestead.

The contention of appellants that the acquisition of another homestead must be shown in order to establish an abandonment is based on that part of section 51, article 16, of the present Constitution, which reads thus: “Provided, that any temporary renting of the homestead shall not change the character of the same when no other homestead has been acquired.” Under previous Constitutions it was held that there might be an abandonment, although a new homestead has not been acquired. Shepherd v. Cassidy, 30 Texas, 30; Gouhenant v. Cockrell, 30 Texas, 97; Woolfork v. Ricketts, 41 Texas, 363. But these cases are not necessarily decisive of the question, as the Constitutions under which they arose contained no provision relating to the acquisition of *503 another homestead.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W. 827, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fr-beck-co-v-avindino-texapp-1902.