James McCord Co. v. Rea

178 S.W. 649, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 790
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 1915
DocketNo. 8176.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 178 S.W. 649 (James McCord Co. v. Rea) 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
James McCord Co. v. Rea, 178 S.W. 649, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 790 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This suit was instituted in the Sixty-Seventh district court of Tarrant county by appellant against W. M. Rea, sheriff of Tarrant county, Tex., and W. M. Breckon, for an injunction to restrain the said Rea, as sheriff, from making a levy upon the property of said appellant under an execution issued out of the county court of Gaines county, Tex., upon a judgment obtained in said county court by the said W. M. Breckon against the said James McCord Company for the sum of $181, with interest and costs, and to restrain and enjoin defendant Breckon from collecting or attempting to collect his said judgment against the appellant until a certain judgment obtained in the county court of Tarrant county by James McCord Company against W. M. Breckon for the sum of $358.44, with interest and costs, had been satisfied. Plaintiff further prayed that it bo permitted to offset the judgment against it and in favor of the defendant Breckon with its judgment against Breckon, alleging that Breckon was insolvent, and that the plaintiff had therefore, and was at the time of the suit, unable to make its said judgment, or any part thereof, out of the said Breckon; that plaintiff had had execution issued on said judgment, and the same had been returned “nulla bona”; that defendant Rea was threatening and was about to levy upod the personal property of plaintiff under said execution issued out of the county court of Gaines county, and was about to sell plaintiff’s property to satisfy the judgment aforesaid, etc.

Defendant Breckon answered: First, by setting up the judgment obtained by him against plaintiff in the county court of Gaines county in the sum of $181, with interest and costs; second, that said judgment was obtained against the plaintiff and J. M. Coker, sheriff of Gaines county, for damages for “unlawfully levying upon and selling exempt property”; third, that said defendant had placed in the hands of W. M. Rea, sheriff of Tarrant county, an execution issued on the judgment aforesaid, and that, if the plaintiff was permitted to offset its judgment *651 against the defendant Breekon, “then the exemption statutes of the state of Texas would be held for naught, and would afford no protection, and would be of no avail”; fourth, that the injunction was obtained solely for the purpose of delay. Wherefore defendant prayed that the injunction theretofore granted be dissolved, and that the defendant Breekon be allowed his damage, etc. Upon a hearing the defendant Breekon’s motion to dissolve was granted, and it was ordered that plaintiff take nothing by way of an offset against the defendant Breekon, and that both defendants Breekon and Rea recover their costs. Defendant Rea filed no answer.

Appellant’s first assignment of error is directed against the action of the trial court in refusing to render judgment in its favor perpetuating the temporary injunction theretofore granted, because, as urged therein and limited by its first proposition thereunder, the suit being primarily against the sheriff to restrain him from making the levy, his failure to answer entitled appellant to the judgment perpetuating the injunction prayed for, as against Sheriff Rea.

[1] We do not think the contention is sound. The injunction was primarily against the judgment creditor, Breekon, and only incidentally against the sheriff, who was the instrumentality through which the judgment creditor was seeking to have his remedy enforced. The sheriff had no personal interest in the judgment, to satisfy which the levy upon and sale of appellant’s property was sought. He was merely the agency of the law upon which the defendant Breekon was forced to rely to collect his judgment. If the law were as contended by appellant, then in an injunction suit, in which the sheriff was made a party and wherein the sheriff failed to answer, the real party at interest, in this case the judgment creditor, would be precluded from asserting his rights or having them enforced by a court of competent jurisdiction, because of the omission to file an answer by the officer over whom he had no control. Such a construction of the law would be, in our opinion, illogical and unreasonable. The assignment is overruled.

[2-4] In its second assignment appellant urges error to the action of the court in failing to sustain its general demurrer to defendant Breckon’s first amended answer, for the reason, as contended in its proposition under this assignment:

“When the answer fails to set forth any facts showing a defense to the cause of action, but merely states the conclusion of the pleader that the judgment w.as obtained for wrongfully levying upon and selling exempted property, without setting forth such facts as would show the exempt character of the property levied upon, a general demurrer should be sustained.”

And in its third assignment complaint is made of the failure of the court to sustain plaintiff’s special exception directed to paragraph 2 of defendant Breckon’s amended .answer, which reads as follows:

“That said judgment was obtained against J. M. Coker, the James McCord Company, and others for damages for unlawfully levying upon and selling exempt property.”

These two assignments will be discussed together, as also the fourth assignment, which complains of the failure of the trial court to sustain a special exception directed to paragraph 5 of defendant’s amended answer, which reads:

“That, if the said James McCord Company is permitted to offset their judgment against this defendant, W. M. Breekon, then the exemption statutes of the state of Texas would be held for naught, and would afford no protection, and would be of no avail.”

We do not think that the answer of the defendant is subject to a general demurrer. While it is not as full or as definite in stating the defenses relied on as it might properly be, yet such defense is sufficiently stated, we think, to advise plaintiff of the nature thereof. It is evident from such answer that the defense relied on is that the judgment obtained by the defendant Breekon in the county court of Gaines county was for the levy upon and sale of exempt property, and we believe that would be a good defense of, and a sufficient answer to, the plaintiff’s suit for an injunction and prayer that the judgment against the defendant Breekon be permitted to offset the judgment obtained by Breekon against it. The fact that the judgment obtained by the defendant Breekon against the plaintiff was for the unlawful levy upon and' sale of exempted property would have constituted a good defense in this action. If a creditor can be permitted to seize and sell under an execution the exempt property of his judgment debtor, and if upon a recovery by* such judgment debtor for such unlawful levy and sale the plaintiff in the original action can at the same time hold the proceeds derived from such sale of exempt property, and also plead his judgment against the judgment creditor as an offset against the judgment of the judgment creditor, then, indeed, our exemption laws would become ineffectual in fulfilling the purposes for which they were passed. In an action to recover damages for the wrongful levy upon, or attachment of, exempt property, defendant cannot set off the debt on which the attachment proceedings were based. Wilson v. Manning, 35 S. W. 1079; Craddock v. Goodwin, 54 Tex. 578; Stagg v. Piland, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 245, 71 S. W. 762; Moore v. Graham, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 235, 69 S. W.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.W. 649, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-mccord-co-v-rea-texapp-1915.