Hickcock's Sons v. Bell

46 Tex. 610
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 46 Tex. 610 (Hickcock's Sons v. Bell) 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
Hickcock's Sons v. Bell, 46 Tex. 610 (Tex. 1877).

Opinion

Roberts, Chief Justice.

This is a motion by the sureties of plaintifis in error, upon their error bond, to set aside the judgment of affirmance rendered at this term, upon a certificate, upon the ground that their principals had been adjudged bankrupts after the citation in error had been served, and before said judgment of affirmance was rendered.

The citation in error was served on the 18th of October, 1876. The plaintiffs in error were adjudged bankrupts, as appears by certificate of the clerk of the District Court of the United States at Galveston, on the 18th of January, 1877. The transcript in said cause not having been filed, a judgment of affirmance, upon certificate, was rendered on the 13th of February, 1877, upon motion of defendant in error, made on the 30th of January, 1877.

The assignment of causes of this term, to which said writ of error was returnable, commenced on the 29th of January, 1877. The assignee in bankruptcy of plaintifis in error was appointed on the 17th day of February, 1877.

This motion was filed on the 16th of March, 1877, and in support of it the position is assumed in argument, that, if it had come to the knowledge of this court before the judgment of affirmance ivas rendered, as it is now made known, upon the application of the sureties, by the certificate of the clerk of the District Court of the United States at Galveston, that plaintifis in error had been adjudged bankrupts, the judgment of affirmance upon the certificate would not have been rendered, and that, therefore, upon this motion made by the sureties alone at the same term by the sureties the judgment should be set aside as to them.

[613]*613We are not prepared to sanction this proposition. The object of a writ of error is to show that there have been such errors in the proceedings of the District Court in the trial of the cause, as that the judgment rendered therein should not be enforced. In order to suspend its enforcement until it can be examined in the Supreme Court, the sureties upon the writ of error bond, in effect, under our statute, make themselves parties jointly with the plaintiff in error, and liable to a judgment against them in conjunction with the plaintiff in error, for the amount that may be adjudged against him in the Supreme Court.

A writ of error is treated in this State as a continuation of and as one of the modes of continuing the proceedings in a suit, in which a final judgment has been rendered, similar to the proceeding by appeal, and not a new suit. To supersede the judgment therein rendered in tire District Court, the plaintiff in error is required to give his “ obligation, with good and sufficient security, to be approved by the clerk, payable to the adverse party, in a sum equal to double the value or amount of the judgment, order, or decree, upon which the writ of error is obtained, conditioned that the party obtaining such writ shall comply with the judgment, order, or decree of the Supreme Court upon such writ, and well' and truly pay all such damages as may be awarded against him; which bond shall have the force and effect of a judgment against all the obligors, upon which execution may issue, in case of forfeiture.” (Paschal’s Dig., art. 1495.)

The legal effect of a bond, which is declared by statute to have the force and effect of a judgment, has often been decided by this court to bind the sureties on the bond, as coobligors with the plaintiff in error, andliable to have judgment rendered against them by the Supreme Court, when the cause is adjudged against lfim; and when so rendered, it relates back and operates as a lien upon the land of all the obligors from the date of the bond, the same as any other judgment of that date. This judgment is rendered in the [614]*614Supreme Court against the obligors in the bond, without any further, notice to the sureties, than that which they have by. entering themselves as parties in the proceedings in the act of executing the bond.

Lest there should some injustice result from this course of proceeding, it is provided by our statute, that “the obligors, or any one or more of them, whose name or names appear to any statutory bond, concerning which it is or shall be provided by law, that it is to be or shall become a judgment, or have the effect thereof, shall have one year, next after the actual or ostensible forfeiture of the same, to move the proper court to quash said bond, or otherwise to move for and have an issue or issues, and a jury to try the same, or any other matter of fact which, on a regular action on such bond, might ¡properly defeat or modify a recovery thereon against such obligor or obligors.” (Paschal’s Dig., art. 4625.)

These two statutes have been considered together, and the latter has been regarded as furnishing remedies in which issues of law may be presented to the court, or issues of fact may be tried by a jury, in order to correct any error or injustice that may have been committed, to the prejudice of the obligors, in the rendition of the judgment under the former statute. It has been held that said remedies are not confined to a mere motion in the Supreme Court, but although a motion is mentioned, it was evidently designed, to embrace any suit or proceeding that might be necessary under the circumstances of the case.

In support of the views here presented in the construction of these statutes, and the effect given to such bonds, in reference to the legal obligation of sureties thereon, the following decisions of this court may he referred to: Janes v. Reynolds, 2 Tex., 251, 255; Perry v. Gregory et al., 13 Tex., 328; Robertson v. Morer, 25 Tex., 442; Berry v. Shuler, 25 Tex. Supp., 140. The same effect is given by statute to sequestration bonds and injunction bonds, but not to attachment bonds, replevy bonds, and claim bonds, which are given to secure [615]*615the redelivery of property, and are not declared to have the force and effect of a judgment. (Paschal’s Dig., arts. 150, 3778, 3779, 3936, 3938, 5100, 5101; Testard v. Neilson, 20 Tex., 139.)

The ground upon which it is contended that this motion should prevail is, not because there is anything apparent in the record that vitiates the judgment which has been rendered in the Supreme Court, but because of the extraneous fact, that the original defendants in the District Court, the plaintiffs in error, were adjudged bankrupts after the writ of error had been taken and the citation therein served, and before the return day of said writ, and before said judgment was rendered in the Supreme Court against them and them sureties on the writ of error bond. That persons adjudged bankrupts are dead in law, (civiliter mortuus,) is true only in a qualified sense. Until an assignee is appointed to represent them, they may do what may be necessary to protect them interests in a suit then pending, in whatever stage it may be. “The bankrupt may continue to prosecute a pending action until the assignee is appointed and an assignment made to him, for he holds the title, and there is no one to take his place until that time.” (Bump, 7th ed., 128, citing Sutherland v. Davis, 42 Ind., 26.)

The plaintiffs in error could have procured and filed a transcript of the record at the proper time in the Supreme Court, and they should have done so if they desired to have the judgment against them reversed. And so should the sureties have had it filed, if they desired to be z’elieved from their joint responsibility as obligors in the writ of error bond.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Tex. 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickcocks-sons-v-bell-tex-1877.