Green v. Cammack

248 S.W. 739
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1923
DocketNo. 877.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 739 (Green v. Cammack) 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
Green v. Cammack, 248 S.W. 739 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

The appellees, T. J. Cammack, E. D. Price and J. W. Price, who were the plaintiffs below, filed this suit in the district court of Tyler county on June 15, 1920, naming as defendants J. C. Shipp, J. E. Burton, C. M. Green, Henry Walker, Tom Miller, and E. H. Houchins. Plaintiffs, for cause of action, alleged, substantially, that on May 7, 1920, they made a verbal agreement with defendant Shipp to sell and deliver to him in Tyler county, Tex., 67 cows and 17 yearlings and calves, making in all 84 head of cattle; that Shipp was to pay cash for the cattle, the aggregate amount agreed upon being $2,760; that when plaintiffs came to deliver the cattle to him, Shipp, instead of paying cash for the cattle, as agreed, tendered to plaintiffs'his personal check on the First State Bank of Garrison, Tex., for the agreed purchase price of the cattle, and that Shipp, in order to induce plaintiffs to deliver to him the cattle, represented to them that he had sufficient funds in the bank to meet the check; that acting upon Shipp’s statement to plaintiffs, they accepted the check, but for collection only, and at the same time delivered to Shipp the cattle; that the check was promptly sent to the bank for collection, but. payment was refused because Shipp had no funds there; that in the meantime defendants Burton and Green had gotten possession oi 41 head of the cattle, and defendants Walker, Miller, and Houchins had gotten possession of the remainder of the cattle; that Shipp knew at the time he gave the check to plaintiffs he had no funds in the bank to meet it, and that his representation to the contrary was fraudulently made to induce plaintiffs to deliver to him the cattle, and that they were so induced; that defendants Burton, Green, Walker, Miller, and Houchins, who got possession of the cattle from Shipp, knew at the time they did so that the cattle did not belong to Shipp, but that he had gotten possession of them by fraud, or that by proper diligence they would have knowm such facts; and that therefore said defendants acquired no property rights in the cattle and had no right to withhold their possession from plaintiffs.

The prayer was for title and possession of all the cattle from all the defendants.

Shortly after filing-their petition, plaintiffs sued out several writs of sequestration, and these writs were, on July 21, 1920, levied upon a number of these cattle found in possession of the defendants other than Shipp.

All the above-named defendants were duly served with citation of plaintiffs’ cause of action, and all answered, defendants Burton and Green interposing a plea of privilege, which was afterwards abandoned, and they then answered to the merits.

Shipp’s original answer to plaintiffs’ petition consisted of a general demurrer and general denial. In his amended answer he admitted the purchase of the .cattle from plaintiffs, and admitted1 that he had not paid for them, and confessed .judgment in favor of plaintiffs for the purchase price of the cattle as claimed by the plaintiffs.

By way of cross-action against Burton and Green, Shipp alleged, substantially, that soon after he purchased plaintiffs’ cattle, he traded or exchanged them to Burton and Green for about 70 head of steers and a few head of yearlings; that Burton and Green represented to him that the steers and yearlings were sound and free from ticks, and that these representations induced him to make the trade with them; that at the time of this trade, Shipp had made a contract with *740 one J. H. Walker, by' the terms of wbicb Walker was to purchase these steers and yearlings from Shipp for the aggregate consideration of $3,026, provided these .steers and yearlings were sound and free from ticks; that before the deal could be closed with Walker, these steers and yearlings commenced dying from tick fever, and that they all died except $625 worth of them, and thereby Shipp lost his contemplated d'eal with Walker, and that in consequence he sustained damages in the sum of $2,401, for which amount he prayed judgment against Burton and Green. Burton was never cited on Shipp’s cross-action and never answered it. Green filed a plea of privilege as to the cross-action, and this was later overruled, and he answered to the merits.

On August 24, 1921, the plaintiffs, Cam-mack and others, filed their first amended original petition, in which they reiterated' all the material allegations of their original petition, as against all the defendants. The amendment further showed that the several writs of sequestration sued out by them had been levied upon most of the cattle, which they had delivered to Shipp, and that such cattle had been replevied by the parties in whose possession they were found. Thirty-eight head of the cattle were levied upon in the possession of Burton and Green, p.nd they, as principals, with Stroud Kelley, T. F. Cook, and J. E. Blankenship, as sureties, replevied these cattle; the bond therefor being in the sum of $4,000. It was further shown that some of the cattle were levied on in the possession of Henry Walker, and that these were replevied by Walker, as principal, and Burton and Green sureties on the replevy bond, which was in the sum of $450.

Trial of the cause was had on February 15, 1922, in the absence of Burton and Green, as well as in the absence of their only attorney in the case, and final judgment was rendered against them. We confess that we have had no little difficulty in trying to ascertain just what the judgment' provided; but, construing it in the light of the record, we have reached the conclusion that the court rendered the following judgment:

The original plaintiffs, Cammack and others, were awarded judgment against Shipp for $2,438.01. The same plaintiffs were also awarded judgment against Burton and Green and the sureties on their replevy bond above mentioned, Kelley, Cook, and Blankenship, in the sum of $1,520, and they were also awarded judgment against Burton and Green as sureties on J. H. Walker’s replevy bond above mentioned for $160.

On his cross-action against Burton and Green, Shipp was awarded judgment against them for $3,026, which was in excess of the amount sought to be recovered' against them by more than $600; and Shipp was also awarded judgment in the same amount against Kelley, Cook, and Blankenship, as sureties on Burton and Green’s replevy bond, with which Shipp was in no manner connected. The judgment further recites that the plaintiffs, Cammack and others, are entitled to a lien against' all the cattle that they delivered to Shipp, and the lien was ordered foreclosed as against all defendants. Other provisions of the judgment affect parties who have not appealed.

On February 16, 1922, the next day after the judgment was rendered, the attorney for Burton and Green, Hon. V. E. Middlebrook, reached the courthouse at Woodville, and filed a motion praying the court to vacate the judgment in so far as his clients were affected by it, and requested the court to grant them a new trial of the case on its merits. In this motion a number of grounds were advanced, and among them the fact that the judgment was rendered in the absence of himself and clients, and that such absence was, under the circumstances excusable. The entire motion, considered in connection with the exhibits attached, is quite lengthy, and no useful purpose would be served by setting it out in full.

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-cammack-texapp-1923.