R. A. Toombs Sash & Door Co. v. Jamison

271 S.W. 253
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1925
DocketNo. 11312.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 271 S.W. 253 (R. A. Toombs Sash & Door Co. v. Jamison) 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
R. A. Toombs Sash & Door Co. v. Jamison, 271 S.W. 253 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

In this action appellee, J. B. Jamison, sought and obtained a temporary writ of injunction to restrain a certain judgment of the county court at law of Wichita county. The petition for the writ was filed by appellee on December 19, 1924. Therein appellee alleged, in substance, that on the 21st day of March, 1923, the R. A. Toombs Sash & Door Company, hereinafter referred to as the sash and door company, had filed suit in said court against Bert Adrian and S. A. Rosser on a certain promissory note in the principal sum of $270.63, signed by said defendants and payable to said sash and door company; that thereafter, on or about September 27, 1923, said defendants Adrian and Rosser answered by way of a general demurrer and a general denial to said cause of action against them, and in addition thereto brought a cross-action against the plaintiff, J. B. Jamison, appellee herein, alleging that said note sued on had been given by Adrian and Rosser to pay for certain material used in the construction of a house belonging to Jamison, and that such materials were purchased by them for said. J. B. Jamison apd under his authority and for his account, and that he had agreed to pay to Adrian and Rosser, or to the plaintiff sash and door company, the amount charged therefor.

It was further alleged that thereafter on October 22, 1924, the case came on for trial, and after a hearing of the evidence and argument of counsel the court adjudged and decreed that the plaintiff sash and door company recover from the defendants Adrian and Rosser, jointly and severally, the same sum of $394.09, and further that the defendants- *254 Adrian and Rosser Raye and recover judgment over and against defendant J. B. Jami-son for the sum of $336.93, costs of suit, etc.

We here quote the following from appel-lee’s petition:

“That the mill work and the staircase used in the construction of said house of the plaintiff, J. B. Jamison, was purchased and ordered by them from the Toombs-Sheppard Sash & Door Company, at the instance and request of the plaintiff, J. B. Jamison. That the amount of said purchase was charged to them by the said Toombs-Sheppard Sash & Door Company, or its successor, the R. A. Toombs Sash & Door Company, and that they had been billed for the same and had requested the Toombs-Sheppard Sash & Door Company to present said bills to the plaintiff J. B. Jamison for payment, and that he had failed and refused to pay the same. The said defendants Adrian and Rosser, upon their oath further testified that this material had never been paid for by the .said J. B. Jamison and had never been billed against him by themselves or by any other person, but that the said J. B. Jamison had wholly ■failed to pay the same or any part thereof.
“The said Adrian and Rosser upon their oath further testified that said material purchased by them for the said J. B. Jamison, from the said Sheppard-Toombs Sash & Door Company had not been included on the bill of Moore & Richolt Lumber Co., for the reason that the said Moore & Richolt Lumber Co. did not carry millwork, such as window sashes, and staircase in stock, and that the said J. B. Jamison had not paid for said material by paying his bill to the said Moore & Richolt Lumber Company.
“The said defendants, or- one of them, further testified upon the trial of said cause that they ha'd checked the bills of Moore and Richolt Lumber Company against the said J. B. Jami-son and had ascertained and determined that the said material alleged by them and testified by them to be covered by said promissory note sued on by the R. A. Toombs Sash & Door Company, successors to the Toombs-Sheppard Sash & Door Company, was not included in any of the bills of Moore & Richolt Lumber Company presented to the said J. B. Jamison and paid for by him.
“The plaintiff would further show to the court that at the time of the trial of said cause he was not in possession, nor had been able to obtain possession, of said bills of the said Moore & Richolt Lumber Company, nor had he been able to make a check of the same with the said defendants Adrian & Rosser or either of them. That in this connection he had often requested the said defendants Adrian and Rosser or either of them to check said bills with him, but that up to and including the date of said trial they, and both of them, had failed and refused so to do. And in this connection the plaintiff further alleges that up to and including the trial of said cause he had made repeated requests of the Moore & Richolt Lumber Company to furnish him a copy of said bills, which they had failed and refused to do, claiming that .the said bills could not be located.
“That by reason of the above the plaintiff herein upon the trial of said cause was unable to controvert the sworn testimony of the said Adrian and Rosser that the said material testified by them as being covered' by said note as being wholly oy in part paid for by the said Jamison through the Moore & Richolt Lumber Company.
“That after the trial of said case, as aforesaid, the plaintiff herein persisted in attempting to locate said bills of the Moore & Richolt Lumber Company, and by chance learned that' one of the defendants herein, to wit, Bert Adrian, was in possession of said bills, and after much difficulty has succeeded in obtaining possession of said bills of said defendant Bert Adrian. That an examination of said bills of the Moore & Richolt Lumber Company conclusively shows that the material testified by the defendants to be covered by the note given to the R. A. Toombs Sash & Door Company was in truth and in fact billed' to the Moore & Richolt Lumber Company and in turn billed by them to the plaintiff herein, J. B. Jamison, and that said material, with the exception of a small portion of said staircase, has been fully paid for by him. Plaintiff respectfully says in this connection that the testimony upon which this judgment was obtained is therefore shown to be false, and that said judgment has therefore been obtained through mistake or through fraud.
“Plaintiff respectfully prays that by reason of the above the judgment heretofore rendered by said court be set aside and the judgment and case reviewed and that a new trial be granted to the plaintiff herein.”

The petition further alleged in substance that- the appellants were attempting to enforce the judgment referred tó and had levied upon a described tract of land of 560 acres owned by appellee, and he prayed for the temporary writ.

The court granted the prayer for the writ of injunction, requiring of appellee a bond in the .sum of $500, which he gave, and the writ issued.

Article 4650, Rev. Statutes, in part declares that: ■

“If the injunction be applied for to restrain the execution of a money judgment or the collection of a debt, the bond shall be fixed at double the amount of such judgment or debt.”

Appellants insist that the failure to comply with this statute of itself requires a setting aside of the order under consideration. But regardless of this question, which we do not find necessary to determine, we think the plaintiff’s petition is wholly insufficient to sustain his action.

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Bluebook (online)
271 S.W. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-a-toombs-sash-door-co-v-jamison-texapp-1925.