Gimbel & Son v. J. Gomprecht & Co.

35 S.W. 470, 89 Tex. 497, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 388
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1896
DocketNo. 414.
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 35 S.W. 470 (Gimbel & Son v. J. Gomprecht & Co.) 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
Gimbel & Son v. J. Gomprecht & Co., 35 S.W. 470, 89 Tex. 497, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 388 (Tex. 1896).

Opinion

BROWlSr, Associate Justice.

The Court of Civil Appeals for the First Supreme Judicial District has certified to this court the following statement and questions:

“Plaintiffs sued defendants in the County Court to recover the sum of *498 $764 upon an open account alleged to be due, and sued out an attachment and levied on defendant’s goods. The goods were sold under order of court for $885, and the money was deposited in court to await the result of the suit.

Defendants filed a plea seeking to abate the attachment, upon an allegation made under oath that the debt was not due when the suit was brought and the attachment sued out, and to have the money realized from the goods released to them. They also pleaded in reconvention for actual and exemplary damages on the ground that the writ was obtained wrongfully, maliciously and without probable cause. The actual damages alleged consisted of the difference ($797.21) between the actual value of the attached property ($1682.21) and the amount for which it had been sold; and the exemplary damages were alleged at $966, making the total damage alleged $1763.21. But defendants admitted that they owed plaintiffs the account sued on ($764) and that it was due when they filed their answer, and admitted plaintiffs’ right to have that sum deducted from the actual damages alleged, and therefore prayed that, after that should have been done, they have judgment for the balance of $33.21 and for the exemplary damages, $966. Plaintiffs excepted to the plea in abatement of the attachment on the ground that the writ could not be abated in such manner; and also excepted to the plea in reconvention -on the ground that the County Court had no jurisdiction.

The following questions are certified to the Supreme Court for its decision:

First: Did the County Court have jurisdiction of the cause of action for damages set up by the plea in reconvention ?

Second: Could the attachment be abated and the money released in the manner attempted?”

Answer to First Question:—The County Court has no jurisdiction to try a civil cause in which the matter in controversy exceeds $1000. (Const., article 5, section 16.) The plea in reconvention filed by the defendants in this case was in effect a suit by them against the plaintiffs,- and the amount in controversy was the damages claimed in that plea; that is, the actual damages, $797.21, and exemplary damages, $966, aggregating $1763.21. The fact that the debt of the plaintiffs was admitted to be due and agreed to be taken as a credit upon the claim set up by the defendants did not lessen the amount which was put in controversy by that plea. Under their plea the defendants must establish their damages before they were entitled to have the amount of the plaintiffs’ debt satisfied by their damages so recovered. By the proceeding here sought to be maintained the court inquired into the plaintiffs’ liability- for the damages to the amount of $1763.21 upon the ground that when established that amount would liquidate the indebtedness of the defendants to the plaintiffs. The defendants’ claim for damages did not operate as an ex-tinguishment of the plaintiffs’ debt, nor did the plaintiffs’ debt operate as an extinguishment pro tanto of the defendants’ claim for damages. The two classes of claims were not such as of themselves would have the *499 effect to extinguish each other until ascertained by the court and by its judgment thus applied.

Counsel for appellees cite in support of the judgment of the court below the case of Dalby v. Murphy, 25 Texas, 354. In that ease the defendant was sued in the Justice Court upon two notes amounting to $73.75. He plead that he had in payment of the notes sold to the plaintiff a horse for $125 and that plaintiff was indebted to him in the difference between the amount of the two notes and the price of the horse. This was a very different case from the one now before the court. That case was rightly decided, because thé sale of the horse had'extinguished the notes and left a balance due to the debtor, of which amount the Justice Court had jurisdiction. It came strictly within the rule often applied by this court that, where the original indebtedness was a sum exceeding the jurisdiction of the Justice Court, but had been reduced by payments or credits to a sum within the jurisdiction of that court, the court might entertain jurisdiction of a claim for the balance due.

Appellees’ counsel also cite Mulhaul v. Feller, 1 White & W. C. C., sec. 1162, in support of the judgment of the court. From the report of the case we cannot tell what the facts were upon which that judgment was sustained; as reported, the case is not in point as authority for the ruling of the court below.

We therefore answer that the County Court had not jurisdiction to entertain the defendants’ plea in reconvention in this case, the amount being for a sum greater than $1000.

Awsweb to the Second Question:—Articles 186 and 187, Eevised Statutes, prescribe the requisites of an affidavit for a writ of attachment, and article 189 is in this language: “The writ .of attachment above provided for may issue although the plaintiff’s debt or demand be not due, and the same proceedings shall be had thereon as in other cases, except that no final judgment shall be rendered against the defendant until such debt or demand shall become due.”

Heither in the articles which prescribe the requisites of an affidavit for a writ of attachment nor in the last quoted article is it required that the affidavit or the petition shall state what part of the debt is due or that it is not due. The right to sue upon a debt not due depends upon the issuing of the attachment, and, if that be quashed, the suit must abate, unless the debt has matured before the writ is quashed; in which event the plaintiff may amend his petition, setting up the maturity of the debt, and proceed with the case. (Culbertson v. Cabeen, 29 Texas, 247.) The validity of the writ of attachment does not depend upon the truthfulness of the allegations made in the affidavit or the petition, but upon compliance with the statute in making the affidavit. The truth of the affidavit cannot be controverted for the pqrpose of abating the writ. (Cloud v. Smith, 1 Texas, 611; Dwyer v. Testard, 65 Texas, 432.)

If the petition and affidavit incorrectly state the time when the debt became due, it may be so amended as to correctly state that fact with *500 out affecting the validity of the writ of attachment. (Donnelly v. Elser, 69 Texas, 282.) If an amendment can be made to the petition so as to change the alleged date at which the debt falls due and thus create a variance between the allegations of the petition and the affidavit, without affecting the validity of the writ, we cannot understand how an allegation which appears in the defendants’ answer and simply states a fact, which does not, if true, defeat the writ of attachment, could have the effect to abate that writ.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W. 470, 89 Tex. 497, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gimbel-son-v-j-gomprecht-co-tex-1896.