Leon & H. Blum v. Jones

25 S.W. 694, 86 Tex. 492, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 415
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1894
DocketNo. 107.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 694 (Leon & H. Blum v. Jones) 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
Leon & H. Blum v. Jones, 25 S.W. 694, 86 Tex. 492, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 415 (Tex. 1894).

Opinion

GAINES, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by the plaintiffs in error against the defendant in error, Jones, as sheriff, and other defendants as sureties on his official bond, to recover the value of certain goods seized by the officer under certain writs of attachment. The plaintiffs in the writs had given the sheriff a bond of indemnity, and therefore made themselves parties defendant. There was a verdict and *494 judgment for the defendants; and the judgment having been appealed from, was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. j

The plaintiffs alleged their property in the goods, and that they were-taken under writs of attachment issued against the effects of one Fried-lander.

The defendants in their answer justified the taking by virtue of the process, and alleged that the plaintiffs claimed the property under a transfer from Friedlander, the defendant therein, and that the transfer was-fraudulent and void as to Friedlander’s creditors. It was averred in the answer, in substance, that the transfer was effected in pursuance of a fraudulent combination between the plaintiffs and Friedlander, in which it was agreed that Friedlander should purchase upon a credit to the extent of his ability goods of merchants throughout the country, and should dispose of them to plaintiffs in satisfaction of an alleged indebtedness. In the second place, it was alleged, in effect, that Friedlander was not indebted to plaintiffs, and that the sale was pretended, and was without-consideration; and in the third, that if the indebtedness from Friedlander to plaintiffs which was purported to be extinguished by the sale, and debts-to others which the plaintiffs assumed to pay in the transaction, were real, that the value of the goods was greatly in excess of their amount, and that therefore the transfer was fraudulent.

In disposing of the questions presented in this court, we deem it proper to refrain as far as possible from commenting upon the weight of the testimony. There were circumstances adduced in evidence which tended to show that the sale of the goods was the result of a fraudulent combination between the plaintiffs and Friedlander, as alleged in the answer; and there was a conflict in the testimony upon the question, whether the value of the goods, at the time of the transfer, exceeded the credit given by the plaintiffs upon their own claim and of the indebtedness which they assumed to pay. i

The court, in connection with other charges, instructed the jury, in effect, that if Friedlander was justly indebted to plaintiffs as claimed by them, and to the others whose claims they agreed to pay, and that if the goods received from Friedlander by the plaintiffs was not more than was reasonably sufficient to pay the amount of their own claim which was satisfied in the transaction, and of the assumed debts, and if the sale was bona fide, they should find for the plaintiffs; but that if Friedlander was not indebted to plaintiffs, or if the value of the goods was more than was reasonably sufficient to pay the amounts which they were transferred to pay, they should find for defendants.

We think the testimony which is complained of in the second assignment of error was correctly admitted. There was an issue of a fraudulent confederation between Friedlander and the plaintiffs, and it was proper tó show confidential business relations between the parties.

*495 We are also of opinion that it was not error to admit the answers of the witness Blum to the cross-interrogatories propounded to him on behalf of the defendants, as to the manner in which his answers had been prepared and taken down, and as to the persons present at the time of taking his deposition.

On the other hand, we think that the testimony to the effect that the notary who took the deposition of Sylvan Blum, who was one of the plaintiffs, was an employe of the plaintiffs, should have been excluded. A deposition taken by an officer not legally competent for any reason to-perform that duty, ought to be suppressed upon a written motion seasonably filed. But if not suppressed, the party offering it is entitled to have it read, without the discredit which may attach to it in the minds of the jury by proof of the fact that the officer, by reason of his relation to the parties, was not legally authorized to take it. Such proof is calculated to prejudice the testimony with the jury; though, as we think, it is not legally competent to affect the credibility of the witness. The validity of the deposition is a question for the court alone, and if held valid, it should be given to the jury, unimpeached upon the ground that it was not lawfully taken.

The bill of exceptions shows that a motion to suppress the deposition upon the ground that the notary was in the employment of the plaintiffs had been made in limine, and had been overruled by the court. The defendants did not assign error upon the court’s ruling; nor, in fact, does it appear that any exception was taken to the court’s action in that particular. The question, therefore, is not presented for our determination.

But in view of another trial, we deem it proper to say that in our opinion the motion to suppress should have been sustained. Our statutes do not prescribe any qualifications for commissioners to take depositions, further than to restrict the authority to certain designated officers. But, the duties of the officers in taking down the answers of the witness involve in some degree the exercise of judgment and discretion, and it must be held on general principles that they should stand impartial as between the parties. Floyd v. Rice, 28 Texas, 341. Without attempting to define with precision the nature of the business relation between a party and an officer which should work a disqualification of the latter, we think that the fact that the officer is an employe in a mercantile establishment belonging to one of the parties ought to render him incompetent to take a deposition on behalf of his employer, and especially the deposition of the employer himself.

If the deposition in question had been suppressed, the plaintiffs would have been entitled to retake it; and hence it can not be said that the action of the court in admitting improper testimony to impeach it did not prejudice the plaintiffs.

*496 We are of the opinion, that the court also erred in admitting the testimony of Freidlander in reference to his statement of the value of the goods made to the agent of an insurance company; and also in admitting the written statement of their value made in the application for insurance. He was put upon the stand by the defendants, and was their own witness; and it was therefore not competent for the purpose of impeaching him. Neither the oral nor the written declaration were in derogation of the witness’ truth, and neither was admissible against his vendors on that ground. The statements were admissible, if at all, as the declarations of a coconspirator.

The law upon this subject is thus laid down by a text writer of reputed authority: “Another well known example of evidence admissible as part of the res gestae is supplied in the instance of prosecutions which involve a charge of criminal conspiracy.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 694, 86 Tex. 492, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leon-h-blum-v-jones-tex-1894.