Jones v. Bull

37 S.W. 1054, 90 Tex. 187, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 460
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 S.W. 1054 (Jones v. Bull) 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
Jones v. Bull, 37 S.W. 1054, 90 Tex. 187, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 460 (Tex. 1896).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

From the record in this case we glean the following statement as the facts upon which the proceeding was based: The plaintiff in error, G-. A. Jones, held a mortgage on a certain tract of land of one acre, with gin machinery situated thereon, in Eastland County, then owned by his son, J. S. Jones. The mortgage is not assailed in any way by the proceedings, and we presume that it was regularly recorded and held its lien as against the defendant Bull.

J. S. Jones was indebted to T. D. Bull, who sued out a writ of attachment in the County Court of Eastland County against said J. S. Jones and had the attachment levied upon the gin machinery, but not upon the land. Subsequent to the levy of the writ of attachment Bull made application to the county judge for an order to sell the said gin machinery; we presume, because it was regarded as perishable property, but this is not made plainly to appear upon the record of this case. *190 The property was sold under order of the county judge and purchased by T. D. Bull, but remained attached to the land as it was before the levy, until at a subsequent date, which is not made to appear clearly, the plaintiff G. A. Jones, in a suit in the District Court against J. S. Jones, foreclosed his mortgage upon the said land upon which the machinery was then situated. When the order of sale was issued out of the District Court, the defendant in error Bull filed an affidavit as the claimant of the said property, describing it as “one Simmons cotton press; one eighty-saw Brown cotton gin feeder and condenser complete; one twenty horse-power engine, stationary, manufactured by Sinker, Davis .& Co., Indianapolis, Ind.;” stating that the said property had been lately levied upon as the property of J. S. Jones by the sheriff of the ■county under order of sale issued upon the judgment foreclosing a lien ■of the mortgage upon the said land.

T. D. Bull, as principal and claimant of the said property, with J. P. Shannon and L. C. Downtain as his sureties, executed a statutory claimant’s bond payable to G. A. Jones in the sum of $1800, and conditioned as the law requires for such a bond. The sheriff delivered the machinery described in the claimant’s affidavit to T. D. Bull, who removed the same from the premises.

The case was tried in the District Court, in which the claimant T. D. Bull recovered judgment against G. A. Jones, which judgment was by the Supreme Court reversed and the cause remanded. A subsequent trial was had in the District Court, when G. A. Jones recovered judgment against T. D. Bull and his sureties, which judgment was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Second Supreme Judicial District, and the cause remanded for another trial; after which G. A. Jones filed what is termed his “first amended petition and tender of issues,” which was filed in lieu of all previous pleadings.

The pleading last mentioned above was filed on the 14th day of May, 1895, and, in substance, alleged that, at the time the defendant Bull filed his affidavit of claim to the property and gave the bond, the plaintiff was in the possession of the property in controversy; and further alleged that, at the time the issues then presented were filed, the plaintiff was the lawful owner of the property described in the affidavit of the defendant. It is alleged that at the time of the levy of the writ of attachment under which the defendant Bull claimed the property it was attached to and a part of a tract of land consisting of one acre, of which the plaintiff then had possession as mortgagee, holding the same under a valid mortgage to secure a debt of $1000 due from J. S. Jones to him; that in levying the writ of attachment the sheriff did not detach the property levied upon from the land, but left it as it was—in the possession of the plaintiff; and that, after the said levy was made, the defendant Bull, in a suit in his favor against J. S. Jones in the County Court of Eastland County, in which suit the writ of attachment was sued out, procured from'the judge of that court an order for the sale of *191 the said property, under which order the property was sold and bought in by the defendant Bull, but was not removed or disconnected from the land, but that it still remained as a part of the said land, attached thereto and in the possession of the plaintiff; that, after the sale of the said property and purchase by Bull, the plaintiff foreclosed his mortgage upon the land and the machinery then being upon it in a suit in the District Court against J. S. Jones, a decree being rendered in the said cause foreclosing the lien of the mortgage in favor of the plaintiff and ordering a sale of the said premises; that an order of sale was issued out of the District Court in favor of plaintiff against J. S. Jones to the sheriff of Eastland County, directing him to sell the said land upon which the said machinery was then situated, whereupon the defendant Bull made and filed the affidavit of claim of the said machinery and executed and delivered his bond in accordance with the statute for the trial of the right of property, whereupon the sheriff of Eastland County delivered the machinery to Bull, who removed it from the land and converted it to his own use.

As a part of the foregoing pleading and denominated “the second count,” the plaintiff set up that in case he was not entitled to recover upon the grounds alleged in the preceding part of the pleading, he then made the following allegations as entitling him to recover from the defendant Bull and his sureties Shannon and Downtain: In substance he alleged that on the 28th day of June, 1889, he was in the lawful possession of the tract of land, describing it, upon which the machinery in controversy was situated and to which it was attached as a part thereof, and that he was at that time the owner of the said land and the machinery; that the said Bull, Shadnon and Downtain combined and confederated together to deprive him- of the possession of the said machinery, and, under the semblance of a legal proceeding, made the affidavit and claim bond before described, and by means of .such unlawful proceeding procured from the sheriff of Eastland County possession of the said machinery, separated it from "the land, carried it away and converted it to the use of said defendant Bull. This plea set up the bond given and sought to recover upon it as a common law bond. The allegations of the plea were such as to embrace both an action for the tort in removing and converting the property, as well as upon the bond given by the defendants.

To this pleading defendant Bull made no answer and seems not to have appeared upon the trial, but the defendants Shannon and Downtain filed a general demurrer and special exceptions to the said pleading. Among other things, they excepted specially upon the ground that the cause of action as set out in the pleading was barred by the statute of limitations of two and four years.

The District Court sustained the exceptions setting up the statute of limitations and, the plaintiff refusing to amend, the court dismissed the proceeding as to Shannon and Downtain and entered judgment against *192 Bull. The plaintiff duly excepted to the action of the court in sustaining the exceptions and dismissing his case as to the defendants Shannon and Downtain and appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, which affirmed the jiTdgment of the District Court.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W. 1054, 90 Tex. 187, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-bull-tex-1896.