Pumphrey v. Hunter

270 S.W. 237
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1925
DocketNo. 6798.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 270 S.W. 237 (Pumphrey v. Hunter) 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
Pumphrey v. Hunter, 270 S.W. 237 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

The opinions heretofore filed in this case are hereby withdrawn and this one substituted therefor.

Statement.

Appellant sued appellee National Bank of Commerce of Fort Worth, to recover a deposit of $750 in said bank, and for which the bank refused to account. Appellant made appellee T. H. Hunter a party defendant, upon the allegation that the bank had voluntarily paid him the $750 upon an invalid judgment against appellant, and upon an invalid writ of garnishment issued out of the suit in which the said invalid judgment was so rendered, the said Hunter representing to the bank that he had the matter in his hands, as attorney for settlement, by consent of all parties to the judgment; and further alleged that the said Hunter wrongfully appropriated said money to his own use.

Appellee Hunter answered by a general denial, a special plea of validity of the judgment on which the garnishment proceedings were issued, and that the $520 paid him by the bank was in satisfaction of a valid judgment rendered on its answer in garnishment that it was indebted to appellant in the sum of $750; that $230, the remainder of the $750 paid him by the bank, was returned to the attorney for the bank, that appellant’s suit was a collateral attack upon the judgment to which the garnishment proceedings and garnishment judgment were ancillary, and that the suit ought to be abated.

Appellee bank answered that it paid $520 in satisfaction of a valid judgment rendered against it in the ancillary garnishment proceedings, and filed a cross-action against ap-pellee Hunter for that amount in the event it was held that it had wrongfully paid said sum on said judgment to him, alleging that he had represented that as attorney he had the matter in his hands for settlement by consent of all parties, and that the money was in fact his by reason of a settiment with his client, one of the parties to the suit out of which the garnishment proceedings issued.

By supplemental answer, appellant alleged that the garnishment judgment relied upon by appellee for authority to pay the money on deposit in appellee bank to Hunter was void, because no writ of garnishment had ever been issued or served upon appellee bank by Van Dissen, who appellee Hunter represented. Other pleadings were filed by all parties, but under the view we take of the cause it is unnecessary to set them out.

The trial court instructed a verdict for ap-pellees bank and Hunter, against appellan't, also instructed a verdict for appellee Hunter against appellee bank on its cross-action. This appeal is from the judgment rendered against appellant in favor of both appellees bank and Hunter.

Appellant urges a number of assignments as to the invalidity of the judgment out of which the ancillary garnishment proceedings issued, principally because no citation was issued or served upon him. Whether the judgment out of which the garnishment proceedings issued was void or only voidable at the instance of appellant, or whether this suit by appellant is a collateral attack upon that judgment, we think are immaterial matters, and are not necessary questions for a decision here, since the record and judgment itself disclose that the garnishment judgment on which appellees both alleged they paid out appellant’s money was void. We therefore do not in any way pass upon the validity of the judgment out of which the garnishment proceedings issued, but such references as may be made thereto are for the purpose of making clear this opinion holding that the ancillary judgment is void. It seems, however, that in the original judgment out. of which the garnishment proceedings issued, one O. L. Holcomb sued one J. L. Yan Dis-sen for $500,' Van Dissen being duly served with citation therein.

Holcomb in his prayer in this suit against Van Dissen also asked for judgment against E. D. Davenport, W. L. Propst, Clay Cooke, C. J. Bathe, and R. W. Talbot, none of whom *239 he ever served with citation. Yan Dissen, through his attorney of record, filed a cross-action, praying judgment by reason of certain facts alleged therein against the said E. D. Davenport, Olay Cooke, and appellant E. F. Pumphrey for $1,000. No citation was issued or served upon these cross-action defendants, but the attorney of record for plaintiff O. L. Holcomb filed an answer for these defendants, which was in fact a confession of the cause of action asserted by plaintiff Holcomb. In this state of the record, on January 30, 1919, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff Holcomb for $500 against B. D. Davenport, Clay Cooke, W. L. Propst, and appellant, E. F. Pumphrey. No judgment was .obtained by him against defendant Van Dissen.

The court also rendered judgment in this cause in favor of Van Dissen on his alleged cross-action against E. D. Davenport, Clay Cooke, W. L. Propst, and appellant, E. F. Pumphrey, for $1,000. There is no connection between these two judgments, so far as the judgment discloses, although the pleadings probably show some connection.

Thereafter, on April 23, 1920, C. L. Holcomb, acting through his attorney, E. M. Barber, applied for and caused a writ of garnishment to issue on the above judgment in favor of C. L. Holcomb against Clay Cooke, E. F. Pumphrey, and W. B. Propst to the First Nátional Bank of Commerce of Fort Worth, Tex., commanding said bank to answer what, if anything, it was indebted to Van -Dissen, who was not a party to Holcomb’s judgment, and what it was indebted to E. D. Davenport, Clay Cook, W. L. Propst, and E. F. Pumphrey, who were defendants in his judgment. The garnishee bank answered that it had on deposit, subject to the check of appellant, E. F. Pumph-rey, the sum of $1,471.50. By agreement of counsel for garnishee bank and Pumph-rey, Pumphrey was permitted to withdraw all of said amount except $750. Before any judgment was rendered on this answer of garnishee bank, E. F. Pumphrey caused Holcomb, who had applied for the writ of garnishment, to be paid the full amount of his judgment, and obtained from him a release of the garnishment and delivered the release to the garnishee bank. Thereafter, Van Dissen, through his attorney, appellee Hunter herein, who had never applied for a writ of garnishment to issue to appellee First National Bank of Commerce of Fort Worth, Tex., without any notice to appellant, Pumphrey, caused the trial court to render the following judgment in his favor ágainst said appellee First National Bank of Commerce, of Fort Worth, Tex., on its answer to the writ of garnishment which Holcomb had caused to be issued against it, and which had theretofore been settled between Holcomb and Pumphrey, as above stated:

“J. L. Van Dissen v. National Bank of Commerce of Fort Worth, Texas. No. ¿5131. In the Seventy-Eighth District Court of Wichita County, Texas. September Term 1920. December 14, 1920.
“On this 14th day of December, 1920, came on to be heard the above , entitled and numbered cause, and it appearing to the court that upon the answer of defendant, herein filed, to a writ of garnishment served on it, the first day of May, 1920, issued out of the 78th. district court of Wichita county, Texas, wherein C. L. Holcomb is plaintiff and J. L. Van Dis-sen is defendant, that the said defendant, National Bank of Commerce óf Fort Worth, Texas, is indebted to the defendant, E. F. Pumphrey, in the sum of $500.00, and that the said J. L. Van Dissen has recovered judgment against the said defendants, E. D. Davenport, Clay Cooke, E. F. Pumphrey, and W. L.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W. 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pumphrey-v-hunter-texapp-1925.