Mayer, Kahn & Freiberg v. Walker

17 S.W. 505, 82 Tex. 222, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1106
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1891
DocketNo. 3174.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 505 (Mayer, Kahn & Freiberg v. Walker) 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
Mayer, Kahn & Freiberg v. Walker, 17 S.W. 505, 82 Tex. 222, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1106 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

Appellants brought an action against E. M. and A. C. Walker on a promissory note signed “E. M. Walker,” alleging that the defendants were partners doing business under that name, and in that action they sued out a writ of attachment that was levied on a stock of liquors as the property of the firm, which during the pendency of the action was sold as perishable property. A. C. Walker denied the .partnership under oath, but subsequently both defendants withdrew their answers; whereupon the action was dismissed as to A. C. Walker and judgment was taken against E. M. Walker alone for the sum sued for, which established a lien on the proceeds of sale then in the custody of the clerk. Soon after the termination of that action A. C. Walker brought this suit against the plaintiffs in the former action to recover damages for the seizure of the property under *224 attachment, Walker alleging that the property when seized belonged to himself, and denying the existence of a partnership at any time between E.M. Walker and himself, and the action resulted in a judgment in his favor.

Appellants pleaded that E. M. and A. C. Walker were partners at the time the note sued upon in the other case was executed and at the time the liquors were seized under attachment, and that the firm business was done in the name of E. M. Walker and the debt a partnership debt; and further, if they were not partners in fact, A. C. Walker held himself out as a partner; that credit was given under a belief that the partnership existed as alleged in the former case. They further pleaded that if no partnership existed between E. M. and A. C. Walker the sale of the liquors claimed to have been made by E. M. Walker to A. 0. Walker, about the time the attachment was levied, was made with intent to defraud the creditors of the former.

On May 30, 1888, plaintiff filed a second amended petition, and on December 15, 1889, he filed a third amended petition, but when the cause was called on the next day defendants asked a continuance on the ground of surprise, claiming that the last amendment filed setup cause of action not theretofore set up, and upon argument and inspection of the pleadings the court indicated an opinion that defendants were entitled to a continuance on the ground on which it was claimed. When this occurred plaintiff was permitted to withdraw his third amended petition, to readopt his second amended petition, and he then announced ready for trial upon that, to which defendants objected on the ground that the second amended petition went out of the case when the third was filed, and thereby the cause of action therein set up was abandoned and could not again be asserted, unless by the institution of a new action or by filing another amendment; against which the statutes of limitations might be urged.

The second amendment set up no cause of action not set up by the third, and it may be doubted if the latter set up any cause of action not asserted in the former, though the prayer for relief was extended in the third, and the averments may have been amplified.

There was no request for continuance or postponement of the trial because the court permitted plaintiff to reinstate his second amended petition, but it is now urged that the court erred in allowing plaintiff to abandon his third amendment and to try the case upon the second. This contention is based on Eule 14, which provides that “unless the substituted assignment shall be set aside on exception for a departure in pleading, or some other ground, the instrument for which it is substituted shall no longer be regarded as a part of the pleading in the record of the cause, unless some error of the court in deciding upon the necessity of the amendment, or otherwise in suspending it, be complained of, and it is presented in a bill of exceptions.”

*225 While the third amendment constituted the petition in the case the second was of no effect, but on leave to amend the amendment filed would supersede the third, and no one would doubt the right of the plaintiff on such leave to reinstate and file as his fourth amended petition a pleading containing the averments contained in the second amendment and none other. An amendment may be made by abandonment of averments of fact as well as by stating facts not before pleaded. The rule referred to has application to an original or amended petition abandoned by filing an amendment, but when the latter is abandoned we see no reason why a plaintiff may not adopt the original or amended petition which the abandoned pleading superseded.

Appellants objected to the use of the second amendment with the exhibit originally attached thereto, on the ground that it could not be considered a pleading in the case; but we are of opinion that the court did not err in this. If plaintiff’s reliance on the second amended petition in any way operated as a surprise to defendants, upon application the court below would doubtless have continued or postponed the case; but no claim of that was made.

An instruction was asked to the effect that the action was barred by limitation if the goods were seized more than two years before the 6th day of December, 1889, which was the day on which the third amended petition was abandoned, and this the court refused to give. The third amendment set out fully the same cause of action asserted in the second, and it is not claimed that this was not asserted in former, petitions filed within less than two years after the seizure. The filing of the third amendment did not operate an abandonment of any cause of action asserted in it, and its abandonment could only operate as an abandonment of a cause of action asserted in it, if any, and not asserted in the amendment on which, the cause was tried. There was no error in the ruling of the court in refusing to give the charge requested.

After defendants had closed their evidence, two witnesses were introduced, who testified to some matters in rebuttal of evidence introduced by defendants, a part of which might properly have been introduced by plaintiff in making out his case, and it is urged that the judgment should be reversed for that reason.

Plaintiff in offering evidence made such proof as showed that no partnership existed between B. M. Walker and himself, and to show that he was a purchaser in good faith, which unrebutted was sufficient to entitle him to a verdict on these questions; but the defendants offered evidence tending to contradict this, and to strengthen his case upon these points the evidence objected to was introduced. That under such circumstances the evidence was admissible is settled by former decisions of this court. Mahan v. Wolf, 61 Texas, 489; Ayers v. Harris, 77 Texas, 120; Railway v. Robinson, 79 Texas, 608.

*226 The court in effect instructed the jury that the verdict should be for the defendants if they believed from the evidence that E. M. and A. C. Walker were partners at the time the goods were purchased for which the note sued on in the former case was given and at the time the seizure under attachment was made. It can not be denied that the proposition contained in the charge was correct; and if it was believed, as is now "contended, that the defendants would have been entitled to a verdict in the event the note was given for a debt growing out of a purchase of goods bought by a copartnership composed of E. M. and A. C.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Livestock Feeder Company v. Few
397 S.W.2d 297 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1965)
Weld-Neville Cotton Co. v. Lewis
208 S.W. 731 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)
Day v. Van Horn Trading Co.
183 S.W. 85 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.W. 505, 82 Tex. 222, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayer-kahn-freiberg-v-walker-tex-1891.