Freiberg, Klein & Co. v. Johnson

9 S.W. 455, 71 Tex. 558, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1183
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1888
DocketNo. 5987
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 9 S.W. 455 (Freiberg, Klein & Co. v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freiberg, Klein & Co. v. Johnson, 9 S.W. 455, 71 Tex. 558, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1183 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

Acker, Judge.

This was a motion by appellants against S. C. Johnston, ex-sheriff of Cooke county, and the sureties on his official bond, to recover for the injury alleged to have been sustained by appellants by reason of Johnston’s failure to account for a stock of liquors which, it was alleged, had been seized and taken into possession by Johnston, as sheriff, under and by virtue of a writ of attachment, issued at the suit of appellants, against H. Hyman; in which suit appellants had obtained judgment against Hyman for one thousand and twenty dollars, and foreclosing the attachment lien on the stock of liquors. Appellants sought to.obtain judgment against appellees for the amount of their judgment against Hyman, with interest thereon, and costs.

Appellants caused two writs of attachment to be issued on the same cause of action and in the same suit, one on October 3, and the other on October 10, 1884, both of which were delivered to appellee Johnston, each on the day it was issued.. The first writ being made returnable at an improper time, the second was issued to cure the defect in the first. The judgment of foreclosure was taken on the writ last issued without alluding to the prior writ. The same return was made upon each writ. At the time the first writ was placed in the hands of the sheriff, or soon thereafter, appellants delivered to the sheriff an indemnity bond, which he accepted. Appellees set up the following defense:

1. That the sheriff levied the first writ upon the stock of liquors found in the possession of Dwyer & Turner, who claimed the goods, and was proceeding to take an inventory, and move the goods to a place of safety, when he was directed by appellants, and their attorney, to leave the goods in the [561]*561possession of Dwyer & Turner; that the sheriff declined to be responsible for the goods if they were so left, and appellants assented thereto; and if the goods are lost, or can not be found, it is because of the directions given by appellants and their attorneys; that the sheriff’s return on both of the attachments stated that the goods were not removed from the possession of Dwyer & Turner, nor taken possession of by the sheriff.

2. That the goods levied on did not belong to Hyman, but belonged to Dwyer & Turner, who had purchased them and taken possession of them before the levy; that appellants become convinced of the ownership of Dwyer & Turner, and induced the belief upon the part of Johnston, that they acknowledged such ownership, and abandoned, all claim to the property; and having induced this belief, they set up no claim to the property, until after Dwyer & Turner had disposed of it; notwithstanding they knew that the goods were being disposed of by Dwyer & Turner, and also knew of the impression made on the mind of Johnston that they had abandoned all claim to the property.

3. That the second writ of attachment, upon which the judgment of foreclosure was taken, was never levied, nor were the goods taken possession of thereunder; that the return was made and endorsed thereon by direction of appellants’ attorney, by simply copying the return endorsed upon the first writ, and the return so made showed that the sheriff did not take possession of the property, but left it where he found it, in possession of Dwyer & Turner, by direction of appellants and their attorney.

Appellants replied to these defenses by supplemental petition, in which they averred that the goods were taken possession of by the sheriff and inventoried, and the inventory made part of his return upon the writ; that the goods were left in a safe place, and if they were taken therefrom, it was with the consent of Johnston, or by his mistake and negligence; that appellants delivered to Johnston a good and sufficient bond of indemnity; that if there was any sale of these goods from Hyman to Dwyer & Turner, it was fraudulent and void because made with intent to defraud appellants and other creditors of Hyman, of which Dwyer & Turner had notice, or could have known by the use of ordinary diligence. The first assignment of error insisted upon is as follows:

[562]*562“3. The court erred in charging the jury that if they believed the property levied upon, as shown by plaintiffs’ petiion, belonged to Dwyer & Turner at the time of the levy5 they should find for defendant, without considering any other fact, because this charge denies any effect whatever to the indemnity bond demanded and accepted by the sheriff, or to the return of the sheriff, both of which were in evidence.”

Under this assignment it is contended with much earnestness and plausibility that the acceptance of the indemnity bond by the sheriff estops him from defending against this motion upon the ground that the goods were not the property of the defendant in attachment at the time the writ was levied.

There is no doubt that respectable authority may be cited in support of the proposition contended for by appellants, but we believe it will be found that in none of these authorities was the fact of levy and possession by the sheriff controverted. Be that as it may, it has not been so ruled in this State, that we are aware of, and in this case the issue of ownership of the goods was tendered by the appellees and accepted by appellants, who also raised the question of fraud in the sale of the goods by Hyman to Dwyer & Turner.

It would be a judicial monstrosity to hold, under the facts alleged in appellee’s answer setting up the defense of ownership of the goods in Dwyer & Turner, that because the sheriff had accepted an indemnity bond at the time he levied a writ, which the statute requires him to levy at his own risk, he was thereby estopped to show that the’goods were not in fact subject to the writ. If this doctrine could be maintained, sheriffs and their sureties could be made to pay the amount for which attachment is taken in any case, by collusion between the debtor and creditor. Knowing that he levies the writ at his own risk, the sheriff will naturally accept the bond of indemnity when tendered him. The goods being found in the possession of parties other than the defendant in the writ, when the sheriff is in the act of reducing the goods to possession, the plaintiff in the writ could relieve himself of all liability for damages by preventing the sheriff from taking possession of the goods, and then, after the goods are appropriated by others, make the sheriff and his sureties liable for the value of the goods.

In immediate connection with the charge here complained [563]*563of, the court instructed the jury that the burden of proof was upon the defendants to show by a preponderance of evidence that the goods really belonged to Dwyer & Turner, and not to Hyman. If the goods really belonged to Dwyer & Turner, then they were not subject to levy at the suit of appellants against Hyman, and appellants have sustained no damage by reason of the sheriff’s failure to hold them under the writ. We think the sheriff might adopt either of two courses of action. He could hold the goods under the writ, and rely upon his indemnity bond for protection against liability in an action for damages for the conversion of the property; or, he could release the goods and take the burthen of defending against liability for their value by proving that they were not liable to the writ.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.W. 455, 71 Tex. 558, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freiberg-klein-co-v-johnson-tex-1888.