Lee v. Wilkins

65 Tex. 295, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 657
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1886
DocketCase No. 1595
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 65 Tex. 295 (Lee v. Wilkins) 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
Lee v. Wilkins, 65 Tex. 295, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 657 (Tex. 1886).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

are many questions presented in this case, which, in view of one controlling question in the case, it is not deemed necessary to consider. It appears that, in 1860, the firm of Wilkins Bros., which was composed of W. G. and James A. Wilkins, became indebted to Emerson, Brewster & Co., soon after [297]*297which the firm of Wilkins Bros, was dissolved. The appellant Lee became the owner of the claim which Emerson, Brewster & Co. held against them. Prior to August, 1872, W. G. and J. B. Wilkins entered into a co-partnership, and were carrying on a mercantile business in Brenham, Texas, and, about that time, purchased goods in Yew York. Prior to that time, Lee had endeavored to collect the debt due to him from W. G. & J. A. Wilkins, but had not succeeded, The Wilkins had also attempted to compromise with him, by paying a part of the debt in satisfaction of the whole, but in this they had not succeeded.

Lee placed his claim in the hands of an attorney in Yew York, for collection, who, in the absénce of Lee from the city, finding some of the goods there which belonged to the firm composed of W. G. and J. B. Wilkins, brought suit, in which he alleged that they were the persons indebted to Lee, and, in that cause, he sued out an attachment, which was levied upon some of their goods. The ground for the attachment was the non-residence of the defendants.

The attachment proceedings were instituted on August 23, 1872, and Lee, returning to the city a few days afterward, discovered that his attorney had made a mistake in inserting in the petition and process the name of J. B. Wilkins, instead of the name of James A. Wilkins, as one of the debtors, and made that fact known to the court in which the action was pending, on September 5, 1872, whereupon the court caused the name of James A. Wilkins to be inserted in the several papers wherein the name of J. B. Wilkins appeared, and caused the title of the action to be amended.

Some correspondence then ensued between the parties, which resulted in a settlement, by which W. G. & J. B. Wilkins paid to Lee $600, and gave their note to him for $800, in satisfaction of his claim, and the goods attached were then released, sent to Texas and received by their owners. When the settlement was made, Lee transferred his claim on W. G. & J. A. Wilkins to W. J. & J. B. Wilkins.

The note for $800 falling due, and not being paid, this action was brought by Lee against W. G. & J. B. Wilkins, to recover the sum due on it. In this action they pleaded in reconvention, and sought damages for injury alleged to have been done to them by a wrongful suing out and levy of the attachment before referred to. Many grounds for damages, both actual and exemplary, were set out in their pleadings, which it is here unnecessary to state. A trial was had, which resulted in a judgment against Lee for $5,250 as actual damages, and $10,000 as exemplary damages. From that judgment there was an appeal, and, by consent of parties, the cause was decided by the [298]*298commission of appeals, which reversed the judgment, holding that there was no ground for exemplary damages.

After the cause was remanded, another trial was had in the district court, which resulted in a judgment in favor of Lee for the sum due on the note sued on, and in favor of the defendants for $7,500 as actual damages. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The court below gave the following instructions: “If you believe from the evidence, that the attachment was sued out against the firm of W. Gr. & J. B. Wilkins, and that said firm was composed of W. Gr. Wilkins and J. B. Wilkins; and if you further believe, from the evidence, that the debt sued on was due by the firm of Wilkins Bros, to the plaintiff, and that said firm of Wilkins Bros, was composed of James A. Wilkins and W. Gr. Wilkins, then the attachment was wrongfully sued out, and any amendment of the record, made after the issuance and levy of the attachment, would not relieve the proceedings of their original wrongful character.” “If you believe, from the evidence, that the attachment was wrongfully sued out, then the defendants are entitled to recover all such actual damages as the proof shows they suffered as the natural and proximate result or consequence thereof.”

This charge was erroneous. There can be no doubt that the firm composed of W. Gr. and James A. Wilkins, were indebted to the appellant, and they, as well as J. B: Wilkins, were non-residents of the state of Hew York. The facts of their indebtedness and non-residence entitled Lee, under the laws of Hew York, to an attachment. W. Gr. Wilkins was a member of the indebted firm then dissolved, and liable, individually, for its debts. He was also a member of the firm when the property was seized under the writ of attachment.

Ho injury resulted to J. B. Wilkins from the mere fact that a suit was brought against him through mistake, for which a civil action will lie, nor does he so claim. The brief of his counsel thus states the ground on which a recovery is sought: “The suing out of the writ of attachment and levying the same upon the defendants’ property, is the ground and foundation of the action.”

The mere suing out of the writ of attachment, although it directed the seizure of the property of W. Gr. & J. B. Wilkins, one of whom was not individually liable for the debt sued for, gave no cause of action. That a separate creditor of a partner may, by the levy of an attachment, acquire a lien on the debtor partner’s interest in the co-partnership property, and that by execution he may subject it to sale, is perhaps not denied by any authority. Par[299]*299sons on Part., 382, 388; Story on Part., 261, 262; Lindley on Part., 688, 690; Collyer’s Law of Part., 791, 793.

There is some diversity of opinion as to the manner in which the lien is to be made to attach, and as to the procedure through which the lien, when acquired is to be enforced, but it is very generally held that a sheriff or other proper officer may actually seize and take possession of partnership effects, under an attachment or execution, for the separate debt of one partner. Such, prior to the adoption of the Revised Statutes, was the rule in this state. DeForrest v. Miller, 42 Tex. 38; Longcope v. Bruce, 44 Tex. 436; Bradford v. Johnson, 44 Tex. 383; Thompson v. Tinnen, 25 Tex. sup. 56; Rogers v. Nichols, 20 Tex. 719; Converse & Co. v. McKee, 14 Tex. 28.

The same rule seems to exist in the state of New York—Moody v. Payne, 2 Johnson’s Ch. 548; Walsh v. Adams, 3 Denio, 127; Scrugham v. Carter, 12 Wend. 131; Phillips v. Cook, 24 Wend. 388; Waddell v. Cook, 2 Hill, 47; Adkins v. Saxton, 77 N. Y. 195.

The seizure, under the writ of attachment, made the basis of the plea in reconvention in this case, was not unlawful, for, as a partner, W. G. Wilkins had an interest in the property which was subject to seizure and sale for the debt which he*and James A. Wilkins owed to Lee. The extent of that interest depended upon the value of the partnership assets and the amount of the indebtedness of the firm.

It may have been a valuable interest, or one of doubtful or even of no real value, yet it was an interest upon which a lien might be fixed, or which might be sold, without its extent or value being first ascertained.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Tex. 295, 1886 Tex. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-wilkins-tex-1886.