Huggins v. Johnston

3 S.W.2d 937
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 8, 1927
DocketNo. 584. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 937 (Huggins v. Johnston) 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
Huggins v. Johnston, 3 S.W.2d 937 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

This suit was filed by ap-pellee against appellant for injunction to restrain appellant from issuing or causing to be issued, recording or causing to be recorded, in Liberty or Chambers county, Tex., or elsewhere, any abstract of judgment on a certain judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff and against defendants in the cause styled Schloss Bros. v. W. M. Huggins and R. B. Johnston, No. 10653, on the docket of the district court of Navarro county, Tex., and from issuing or causing to be issued any writ of garnishment or other process for the enforcement of said judgment, as against appellee or the Humble Oil & Refining Company, which was made a party defendant to the suit. Appellee further alleged, in substance, that he was the owner of a one-sixth interest in certain lands in Liberty and Chambers counties, and that he, as administrator of the estate of Mrs. M. A. Johnston, deceased, leased said lands to said oil company for a cash bonus of $36,800; that his one-sixth interest amounted to $5,695.17; that appellant had caused abstracts of judgment to be issued on the judgment in said cause No. 10653, styled Schloss Bros. v. W. M. Huggins and R. B. Johnston, and recorded in said counties, and that said oil company required said abstracts of judgment to be released before it would pay the purchase money for said mineral lease, and that, in order to close said lease, appellee allowed said oil company to retdin his one-sixth of the consideration for said lease, to wit, the sum of $5,695.17, to be paid over to appellee when said objection to the title had been met. Ap-pellee prayed that his title to said one-sixth interest in said lands, mineral estate and bonus money coming to him be quieted, and that the apparent interest of appellee be removed as a cloud from his title. The court granted a temporary injunction, restraining appellant from doing any of the things of which complaint is made, upon appellee executing bond in the sum of $500.

Appellant, in addition to a plea to the jurisdiction, demurrers, exceptions, and general denial, pleads specifically, in substance, that on October 7, 1919, in the district court of Navarro county, in cause No. 10653, Schloss Bros, recovered a judgment against appellee and appellant herein for $4,750; that the cause of action was not primarily the obligation-of either appellee or appellant; that they were mere guarantors to Schloss Bros, for the Crescent Clothing Company, which was, at the time said suit was filed, insolvent; that, after said judgment was rendered and abstract of said judgment issued and filed in Navarro county, said judgment was bought from Schloss Bros, by J. A. Thompson for the Corsicana National Bank, and that thereafter appellant, in order to save his property from being levied upon and to protect all of his rights against appellee on said judgment, bought said judgment from the Corsicana National Bank, paying therefor the sum of $4,-750, and took a transfer from the bank, and thereby acquired all the rights, liens, etc., of the original creditor; that the liens fixed by him by filing abstracts of judgment in Liberty and Chambers counties were valid liens against the interest of appellee in said lands, and appellant was entitled to have same foreclosed ; that appellee had never paid any part of said judgment; that the plea of limitation by appellee had no application, as this was an equitable proceeding and all parties and the subject of the suit were before the court and the court had full power to do equity as to all the parties; that it was not necessary for appellant to have brought a separate suit against appellee on the judgment, etc.; and that he had a right to recover against appel-lee in this proceeding for contribution for one-half the amount of the judgment, etc.

The Humble Oil & Refining Company answered and tendered the $5,695.17 into court and prayed for attorney’s fees, and that it be protected, etc.- The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered making the injunction permanent, adjudging that appellee was entitled to the money tendered into court by the oil company, decreeing appellant had acquired no lien upomthe property of appellee, and ordering abstracts of judgment filed against the land in which ap-pellee was interested canceled and appellee’s title to said property quieted, etc. Appellant presents the record here for review.

Opinion.

We will not undertake to consider the assignments in regular order. Under his eighth assignment.and propositions presented thereunder, appellant contends, in effect, that a purchase by one joint and several debtor of a judgment for full value from a third party to whom said judgment, including all rights thereunder, had been transferred by the original judgment creditor, said judgment having been kept alive and the purchase having been made by said judgment debtor to protect his property from execution and his rights against his co-obligor in said judgment, does not constitute payment of the judgment so as to extinguish it. The court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and, as bearing upon the question here involved, found:

“That R. B. Johnston and W. M. Huggins, about 1916, signed'a written guaranty for Crescent Clothing Company, guaranteeing a line of ■ credit for said company to Schloss Bros., not to exceed $5,000, and that thereafter the Crescent Clothing Company went into' bankruptcy. That the plaintiff, R. B. Johnston, and the defend *939 ant, W. M. Huggins, herein, as a result of said guaranty, executed their written promissory note in the sum of $4,000, * * * and made the same payable on demand, and then indorsed said note to Sehloss Bros., to whom said guaranty had been previously given. That they thereafter defaulted in the payment of said note, and Sehloss Bros, sued the makers of said note, R. B. Johnston and W. M. Huggins, the Orescent Clothing Company not being a party to said note, in the district court of Navarro county, Tex., same being No. 10653, and, upon service being had, said R. B. Johnston and W. M, Huggins wholly defaulted and judgment was rendered against them jointly and severally for the amount of the note. ⅜ * * R. B. Johnston and W. M. Huggins, as defendants in said suit, filed no pleadings whatsoever, and the court, in rendering judgment, rendered same against Johnston and Huggins jointly and severally, and the judgment in no wise provided for subrogation of either of said parties if they paid off said judgment. Execution was issued on said judgment and placed in the hands of the sheriff, but was never served and no return inado thereon. While the execution was in the hands of the sheriff, J. A. Thompson purchased said judgment from Sehloss Bros., * * * tdking an assignment of said judgment from Sehloss Bros. A few days thereafter J. A. Thompson * * * transferred said judgment to the Corsicana National Bank and gave said bank an assignment to the same. * * * A few days after the bank acquired said judgment, W. M. Huggins, the defendant herein, paid to said bank the full amount of said judgment, paying something over $4,700, and took from said bank an assignment and transfer of said judgment. The judgment records in the district court of Navarro county was not marked as satisfied at the time W. M. Huggins paid the bank the full amount of said judgment * * * and had the same transferred to him * * * R. B. Johnston had no property whatever and no lien of any Idnd existed securing said judgment, and none had attached by virtue of execution issued and abstract of judgment filed in Navarro county, Tex. Said judgment was transferred to W. M.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huggins-v-johnston-texapp-1927.