P. J. Willis & Bro. v. Hudson

63 Tex. 678, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 148
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1885
DocketCase No. 1828
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 63 Tex. 678 (P. J. Willis & Bro. v. Hudson) 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
P. J. Willis & Bro. v. Hudson, 63 Tex. 678, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 148 (Tex. 1885).

Opinion

Willie, Chief Justice.

Much discussion has been had by counsel as to what defenses are admissible under the general issue in the various common law forms of action appropriate to the state of case made by the plaintiff’s petition.

We deem it unnecessary to enter into an examination of the principles governing the pleadings used in such actions, or the character of evidence admissible under each of them.

We have abolished all common law forms of action, and under our system a plaintiff states the very case upon which he seeks to recover, and a general denial puts him upon proof of at least every [682]*682affirmative allegation necessary to maintain his suit unless it be some allegation that by the rules of pleading must be met by a plea in abatement. Tisdale v. Mitchell, 12 Tex., 70; Texas Trans. Co. v. Hyatt, 54 Tex., 215; Porter v. Miller, 7 Tex., 473; Pridgin v. Strickland, 8 Tex., 434.

The defendant, in pleading to the action, looks to the petition — not to see whether it is trespass, trover or case, but to ascertain what are the facts he is expected to meet; what he must disprove under the general denial or confess and avoid under a special answer.

The present petition makes out a case where a merchant, who was owner and in possession of a stock of goods, and doing business with them, had been injured by an illegal seizure and conversion of his goods, and claimed damages, actual and vindictive, for the wrong done him. He sued P. J. Willis & Bro., together with Wilson, for the illegal seizure and conversion; claimed that Willis & Bro. instigated Wilson to make the seizure, and were actuated by malice, etc., against him in so doing, and that they had injured his credit and ruined his business as a merchant.

This is the case the appellants had to meet, and if established by prima facAe evidence on the part of the plaintiff, they could not successfully meet it except by disproving some of the material allegations of the petition; or by confessing them and justifying the supposed wrongs laid to their charge. If they relied on the inability of the plaintiff to prove any of these allegations, or upon their own ability to disprove one or more of them, the general denial was all they needed. For instance, if the ownership of the goods was a material issue between the parties, there was no necessity for a special denial of that fact, for such a plea would be included within the general denial of all material allegations. Herndon v. Ennis, 18 Tex., 412. They could not attack the general ownership by a confession and avoidance, for when the fact was admitted by this plea that question was at an end. If they wished to show that, whilst the plaintiff was owner as to every one else, he was not as to themselves, they should confess this general.ownership and show in avoidance the circumstances which made it void as to them. For instance, if the defendants proposed to show that the plaintiff’s title to the goods was derived by a conveyance from Hudson, Sr., or Hudson & Son, fraudulent as to themselves and other creditors, they must confess the ownership so far as it could be given by the conveyance, but allege its invalidity as to them because of its being fraudulent as to creditors. For such a conveyance is good between [683]*683the grantor and grantee, and void only as to the parties defrauded, or intended to be defrauded, by it.

The defendants did not, in this case, rely upon any fraudulent conveyance of the goods to show that the plaintiff was not the owner as against their right to levy upon them for the debts of his grantor; but they claimed that the goods did not belong to plaintiff as against any one, or in any sense whatever. It is clear that no special plea, nor any plea in confession and avoidance, was necessary or even proper to raise the issue of ownership under these circumstances, or to authorize evidence on either side of that issue.

The only question, then, is, Was the issue of ownership a material one in the cause?

It may lie admitted that in actions of trespass and trover, as known to the common law, a bare possession is sufficient title upon which to recover as against a naked trespasser.

It is to be remarked, however, that, at least in an action of trover, it has been held by respectable authority, that proof that the goods converted were not owned by the plaintiff is sufficient to defeat the action. Rotan v. Fletcher, 15 Johns., 207; Sheldon v. Soper, 14 id., 352; Tuthill v. Wheeler, 6 Barb., 362; Clapp v. Glidden, 39 Me., 448, 451.

Be this as it may, it is clear that the rules which govern these forms of action have no application to our system when the plaintiff recovers upon the special case made by his pleadings.

The defendant, sued in trespass or trover, had notice that the plaintiff might rely upon a mere naked possession, perhaps a wrongful one as against the true owner, and prepared himself accordingly. But who, when sued under such allegations as are contained in the present petition, would suppose that the merchant, owner of the goods seized, and in possession of them, whose business and reputation had been ruined by the seizure, and against whom the defendants entertained such malice as induced them to bring about this effect, would expect to recover by proving that he was the mere naked possessor of somebody else’s stock, and that other parties were doing business in his name? In fact that he expected to recover although he was no merchant, had no goods, was doing no business, and had not himself been damaged in the least by the conduct of the defendant?

A naked possessor may recover against a wrong-doer in this state as well as in England; but in such case it is more consistent with our system of pleading that he should so set forth his cause of action; or at least should not so qualify the statement of his possession, and [684]*684specify the facts which constitute it, as to mislead his adversary into pleading and preparing evidence upon a false issue, and one not intended to be raise upon the trial.

The present petition did not stop at a mere allegation of ownership and possession, but averred a state of facts surrounding the possession that would lead any one to suppose that a real ownership would be relied on, accompanied by a possession suchas persons doing a mercantile business have of their stock in trade; a possession and ownership that would give the merchant a standing and reputation in the commercial world, such as might be injured by a seizure and conversion of his stock in trade.

Taking all the allegations of the- petition together, we think the ownership of the goods was a fact material to the plaintiff’s recovery, and that it should have been proved as alleged, and might have been disproved under a general denial.

But if this were not so, the possession of the goods was certainly in issue under such a plea. The plaintiff offered evidence to show that he was in actual possession of the goods, whilst the defendants attempted to show that he was not, but that Thos. F. Hudson, Sr., ivas in possession of them. The plaintiff, as evidence both of his ownership and possession, showed, among other things, that the goods were bought in his name and consigned to him. The defendants sought to show that, whilst this was the case, Thos. F. Hudson, Sr.’s, money had paid for the goods, and they were really owned by him, and that Thos. F. Hudson, Jr., meant Thos. F.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Tex. 678, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-j-willis-bro-v-hudson-tex-1885.