Johnson v. Stratton

25 S.W. 683, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 431, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1894
DocketNo. 186.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 683 (Johnson v. Stratton) 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
Johnson v. Stratton, 25 S.W. 683, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 431, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 11 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

The appeal in this case is from a judgment rendered against appellant for $2697, in a suit brought by appellee against one Charles E. Hicks and appellant for the conversion of property obtained by Hicks from him by fraud. It is alleged in the petition, that by reason of the representations of Hicks as to his being solvent and doing a good business, and owing very little on a stock of goods worth from $15,000 to $20,000, when he was insolvent and owing more than he could pay on the stock of goods, appellee had been induced to part with his goods on credit; and in furtherance of the fraudulent design of Hicks, he had afterwards executed a deed of trust on all his property, that of appellee being included, to appellant, D. C. Johnson; that a portion of the property, specifically described, was still in Johnson’s possession; that demand had been made for possession of it, and it had been refused. There was a prayer for judgment against Johnson for the property held by him, or the value thereof, and judgment for the balance due on the goods against Hicks.

A writ of sequestration was sued out and placed on the goods of appellee held by Johnson, and a writ of attachment placed on other goods of Hicks in the possession of Johnson as trustee.

There was judgment against Johnson and his sureties on his replevy bond for the value of the goods sequestered; also judgment against Johnson for $250, the value of the property converted by him after demand, not included inthe sequestration. The attachment lien was foreclosed, subject too decision in a trial of the right of the property between Johnson and appellee that was pending in the same court at time of rendition of judgment. It was also provided in the judgment that the title to $340 of the sequestered property await the decision in a claim case made by the Parry Manufacturing Company. The notes given by Hicks were cancelled.

D. C. Johnson pleaded a general demurrer, special exception to improper joinder of the two defendants, and misjoinder of cause of action, and general denial. The case was tried by the court.

We draw the following conclusions of fact from the record, to-wit:

1. On November 7, 1890, appellant being deceived and misled by the *433 false representations of Charles E. Hicks as to his solvency at a time when he was insolvent and knew it, as to his having nearly paid for his stock of goods when he owed large sums on the same, sold to said Hicks a lot of carriages, buggies, and phaetons, amounting in value to $5315.52, and received for them no cash, but four notes of like amounts, due in two, four, six, and eight months.

2. That Hicks had, before and on the day of the sale, represented to appellee that he was engaged in a prosperous business, and making money, and that nearly the whole of his stock of goods, which he then and there pointed out, had been paid for. That the stock of goods referred to was worth from $15,000 to $20,000.

3. That the statements made by Hicks to appellee, and upon which he was induced to part with his property, were false, and Hicks knew they were false when he made them.

4. That at the time Hicks made the false representations herein before set out, a large portion of the goods in his store house, and to which he had referred as being paid for, were goods belonging to Haydock Brothers, and were placed with Hicks on consignment to be sold by him on commission; that on the goods belonging to him, Hicks at the time of the sale had given a mortgage, amounting to $3000, to J. F. Camp, and was indebted in the sum of $500 to Haydock Brothers, to Embree McLain Carriage Company in the sum of $2100, and to L. Frank in about the sum of $500.

5. That the statements made by Hicks were for the purpose of obtaining credit from appellee and defrauding him, and that appellee accepted his statements as true, and relying on them, sold the property to Hicks, not knowing his real financial condition.

6. That about five weeks after making the false representations to appellee and thereby obtaining his property on credit, Hicks executed to D. C. Johnson, appellant, a certain chattel mortgage on all his property, among said property being a large part of the property sold to said Hicks by appellee, to secure certain creditors named therein, which mortgage was filed for registration on December 15, 1890, two days after its execution.

7. That on December 3, 1890, D. C. Johnson, as representative of Haydock Brothers, entered into an agreement with Hicks, called a commission contract, which provided, 1 ‘ That said agreement was to relate back so as to cover all vehicles and parts thereof unsold and now in possession of said defendant Charles E. Hicks, shipped by Haydock Brothers to Hicks under former contract between them of date December 13,1889, and other contracts, this last contract to stand in lieu of all others; and all sum and sums of money due upon former shipments sold by Hicks shall be subject to the terms of this contract.” This agreement was filed for record on December 13, the same day that the chattel mortgage was executed.

*434 8. That on December 19, 1890, appellee demanded of appellant, Johnson, the property in his possession that Hicks had obtained from him, and Johnson refused to surrender the property to appellee; and on December 29, 1890, appellant filed this suit against Hicks and appellant, Johnson, and on same day sued out a writ of sequestration against his property in Johnson’s possession, which property was taken in possession by the sheriff by virtue of said writ, and was replevied by appellant. That. $340 worth of the property was claimed by Parry Manufacturing Company, who gave bond for trial of right of property.

9. That after demand had been made upon appellant for the property, he converted to his own use $250 worth of the same.

10. That on January 1, 1891, appellee obtained a writ of attachment against Charles E. Hicks, it being alleged in the affidavit for attachment that the balance of appellee’s goods not found in possession of Johnson had been converted by Hicks to his own use and benefit, and that by reason thereof Hicks was indebted to appellee in the value of the goods-appropriated, which writ of attachment was levied upon goods belonging to Hicks in possession of Johnson, who gave claim bond for trial of the right of property.

The second, third, fourth, fifth, twelfth, and thirteenth assignments of error all involve the question of a misjoinder of actions and of parties, and for convenience we group them in our discussion of the questions which they raise.

We are of the opinion that there is no misjoinder of actions or persons.

The petition clearly alleges the misrepresentations, the deceptions produced, and resultant sale, and alleges that Hicks had fraudulently given a chattel mortgage to appellant as trustee, covering the whole of his-property, among the lot being the property sold by appellee to Hicks, and that a portion of that property was still in the possession of appellant. Of course, under the allegations of the petition, Johnson was not responsible for any of the goods except those that were in his possession at the time that demand was made; but the two actions were inseparable, one naturally growing out of the other.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 683, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 431, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-stratton-texapp-1894.