Patton v. Crisp & White

11 S.W.2d 826
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 1928
DocketNo. 8069.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 826 (Patton v. Crisp & White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patton v. Crisp & White, 11 S.W.2d 826 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

The questions presented in the appeal arise out of a garnishment proceeding in the county court of Uvalde county and chiefly concern the validity of that proceeding. «It appears that Crisp & White, a partnership composed of D. H. Crisp and J. W. White, recovered a money judgment, by default, against J. M. Patton on November 20, 1917; that execution issued thereunder to Uvalde county on December 19, 1917, and alias execution to Kinney county on December 20, 1917, and to Uvalde county on November 25, 1927, but no property was found in either instance.

On March 29, 1927, Crisp & White applied for and obtained writ of garnishment in the case against John N. Garner, who answered that he was indebted to the judgment debtor, Patton. Patton contested the garnishment proceeding, contending that the original judgment was invalid, and that the writ of garnishment was improperly issued. One Baylor intervened in the suit as a claimant of part of the amount Garner owed Patton, but judgment was rendered against him and he has prosecuted no appeal. From a judgment against Patton as defendant, and Garner as garnishee, Patton has appealed.

Appellee objects to the consideration of appellant’s propositions of law because they are merely copies of the several assignments of error. We overrule this objection. The assignments are simply submitted as propositions, which is permissible when they amount to propositions .of law.

Appellant’s first assignment of error, submitted as a proposition, is that: “Because the court erred in overruling his motion to quash the writ of garnishment in said cause for the reason that the judgment upon which said writ of garnishment was based was not a valid and subsisting judgment when the affidavit and application for said writ were made.”

The assignment is too general to require consideration as a proposition of law, on appeal, even if sufficient as an assignment of error, which is very doubtful. The general contention that the judgment in controversy was “not a valid and subsisting judgment” encompasses every conceivable vice which could operate to invalidate a judgment, and yet points out not’one of those vices, which is the true office of a proposition of law. The office of an assignment of error is to “distinctly specify the” ruling of the court or other procedure objected to, as provided in rules 24, 25, and 26, and that of the propositions thereunder is to point out the reasons why the matter objected to constitutes error. No reason is pointed out in the assignment, whether viewed as an assignment or as a proposition of law, why the judgment is not “valid and subsisting,” and therefore the assignment fails as a proposition within itself, and is not fortified by any other proposition. Appellant’s third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, and tenth assignments of error, submitted as the only propositions thereunder, are equally general. However, we have nevertheless considered appellant’s contentions under those assignments, and overrule them, for reasons to be set out later.

In his second proposition appellant takes the position that the writ of garnishment was improperly issued for the reason that the judgment upon which it is based was dormant at the time the writ was applied for, and ¿till is dormant. The vitality of the judgment was preserved, if at all, by the issuance of execution within one year of the rendition of the' judgment. As has been shown, original and alias executions were issued within the 12-month period. But appellant contends that each of those executions was void, and therefore could not serve to revive, or preserve the vitality of, the judgment.

The principal contention of appellant is thal the writ of garnishment was improperly issued because the judgment supporting it was dormant, in that it was rendered on November 20, 1917, was not vitalized by valid execution, and was therefore dormant when the writ of garnishment was applied for on March 29, 1927. It is conceded that original and alias executions issued on the judgment within a year of the date of the judgment, *828 but it is contended that these executions were void, and therefore did not serve to preserve the vitality of the judgment, as contemplated in article 3773, R. S. 1925 (article 3717, R. S. 1911, then in force). Writs of garnishment may be issued “where the plaintiff has a valid, subsisting judgment” against the defendant. Article 4076, R. S. 1925.

A dormant judgment is not a “valid, subsisting judgment” and will not support a writ of garnishment. Carlton v. Hoff (Tex. Civ. App.) 292 S. W. 642; Friedman v. Gro. Co., 22 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 54 S. W. 278; First Nat. Bank of Morgan v. Brown, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 584, 92 S. W. 1052. A contrary rule seems to have been propounded in the opinion in Tripplett v. Hendricks (Tex. Civ. App.) 212 S. W. 754, but the holding there was based upon Citizens’ Bank & Trust Co. v. Rogers (Tex. Civ. App.) 170 S. W. 258, in which the court expressly declined to pass upon the question. In the decision of the Supreme Court in White v. Casey, 25 Tex. 552, cited by appellees and adverted to in Citizens’ Bank & Trust Co. v. Rogers, it was held, only, that the garnishee could not set up the dormancy of the judgment in answer to the writ. It is true that it was said in Bank v. Rogers that the right of the garnishee to make this defense was probably identical with that of the defendant, but this suggestion was purely dicta. That there is a distinction between the rights of the garnishee and of the defendant in such case is forcefully urged in Friedman v. Gro. Co., supra. We hold that a dormant judgment is not a “valid, subsisting judgment,” as contemplated in the stat-' ute authorizing issuance of writs of garnishment, and will not support such writ, at least over the objection of the judgment defendant, seasonably interposed.

As against a direct attack a voidable execution will not preserve the life of a judgment and prevent it becoming dormant at the end of a year from its date, and, this being’a direct attack (Carlton v. Hoff, supra), it becomes necessary to decide the controlling contention of appellant that the executions in the case presented were invalid.

The first objection urged against the original execution is that it failed to give the names of the judgment creditors, and therefore was not in compliance with the requirement of the statute that the execution “shall correctly describe the judgment, stating * * * names of the parties” thereto. Article 3729, R. S. 1911 (article 3783, R. S. 1925). The parties plaintiff were Crisp & White, a partnership or firm composed of D. I-I. Crisp and J. W. White, and it was so recited in the pleadings and in the judgment on which the execution issued. But the execution described the judgment as one recovered by “Crisp & White” against appellant, omitting the individual names of Crisp and White. Appellant contends that this omission was fatal to the validity of the execution, because it neither correctly described the-judgment nor stated the names of the parties. We overrule this contention. The recitation, as to the parties plaintiff was sufficient to-identify the judgment rendered with that referred to in the execution, which was the-purpose contemplated in the requirement of the statute.

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11 S.W.2d 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patton-v-crisp-white-texapp-1928.