Ricketson v. Best

134 S.W. 353, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 577
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 21, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 134 S.W. 353 (Ricketson v. Best) 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
Ricketson v. Best, 134 S.W. 353, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 577 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

REESE, J.

This is a suit by J. A. Best against I. C. Ricketson in the county court to recover three mules, one horse, and one Trag-ón and set of harness of the alleged value of $405, or the value thereof'. With the original petition a writ of sequestration was sued out, under which this property was seized on December 5, 1908. On motion the sequestration was quashed. On December 17th an amended petition was filed and another writ issued under which the property was seized. By agreement of the parties the property was turned over to defendant upon his depositing with the clerk $405 as the value of the property and $25 to meet the costs of the suit, upon an agreement that if the plaintiff had judgment he should recover the *354 $405 and the $25 should be applied to the cost. If the defendant had judgment, the $430 was to be returned to him. Plaintiff claimed the mules under an alleged purchase from the firm of Rieketson & McCollum, a firm composed of A. Rieketson, father of defendant, and others; the consideration being the payment of a debt of the firm to him, upon the plea that the property belonged to them, which was denied by defendant, who claimed that the property belonged to him by purchase from A. Ricket-son, in payment of a debt which he owed defendant, and had never belonged to the firm. Plaintiff pleaded estoppel against defendant, retying also on title in the firm aforesaid which is alleged to have passed to him by the sale. Defendant answered by general denial and general and special exceptions, which need not be here set out, all of which were overruled. Trial with a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, from which, motion for new trial being overruled, defendant appeals.

There was no error in overruling appellant’s exception to that part of the petition setting up estoppel. The facts alleged, if true, would have operated an estoppel upon appellant to deny the ownership of Rieketson & McCollum.

The statute exempting certain property from forced sale for debt offered no defense to the action. The issue was whether the property. belonged to appellant or appellee. This disposes of the first and second assignments of error.

In support of appellee’s plea of estoppel, evidence was admitted over the objection of appellant as to whether appellee believed the property belonged to Rieketson & McCollum, and as to whether appellant had ever told appellee’s agent Mooney that the property belonged to him. The issue presented by the plea was whether appellee had been induced to “change his relation to the property” by the acts and conduct of appellant and had been induced thereby to believe that it belonged to the firm of Rieketson & McCollum. In the trial of such an issue the evidence must necessarily take rather wide range. Such evidence, however, should have been restricted to what preceded the alleged sale of the property to appellee. What occurred afterwards could not have induced the act of appellee in buying the mules.

If appellant had claimed anything more than actual damages for suing out the writ of attachment, such evidence, as tending to rebut a claim for exemplary damages, and showing that appellee acted under an honest belief, when he sued out the writ of sequestration, that the property belonged to him, would have been admissible, b'ut as against a claim for actual damages only it could not have mattered what the belief of appellee or his agent Mooney was as to the ownership of the property, if in fact it belonged to appellant. If it did, the seizure of the property under the writ of sequestration was wrongful and entitled appellant to actual damages therefor. The court upon the trial, however, found that there was no evidence to support the claim for damages for wrongful suing out of the attachment, which finding is supported by the evidence, and the specific objection that the evidence referred to was not limited to what occurred before the alleged purchase of the property by appellee, is not presented by the assignment. With this explanation, assignments of error 4, 5, 9, 10, 11, 12, and 16 are overruled.

The question propounded to appellee, referred to in the eleventh assignment, “Did you have reason to believe that the property was the firm’s property?” and the affirmative answer thereto, standing alone, was subject to the objection made to its admission; but it was immediately followed by a question to the witness and his reply thereto, giving' his reasons for such belief. Such belief, with the reasons therefor as an inducement to the purchase and prior thereto, was admissible.

The eighth assignment of error must be sustained. It was improper to allow the witness Dean to testify as to the contents of a letter from Mooney to him, over the objection of appellant that the letter was the best evidence. No attempt was made to account for the nonproduetion of the letter. This testimony is, however, not important, and would not alone require a reversal.

It was immaterial what was appellee’s belief as to the ownership of the property at the time he instituted this suit. Such belief would not support his plea of estoppel nor tend to do so. Nor would it protect him from appellant’s claim for actual damages. The fifteenth assignment of error, presenting the question, must be sustained. For the same reason, it was improper to admit the evidence referred to in the fourteenth assignment as to appellee’s ignorance of appellant’s claim at the time the suit was brought.

There is no merit in the seventeenth assignment. The substantial.effect of the testimony which was excluded would have been to get before the jury the contents of the bill of sale from Walls to McCollum. No-proper predicate was laid for the introduction of parol evidence of the contents of this instrument, and upon objection of appellee that the writing was the best evidence the testimony was properly excluded. This objection, however, does not apply to the testimony as to what property was delivered by Walls to McCollum, if there was an actual delivery of the property, independent of the execution of the bill of sale. The testimony would indicate that the witness was testifying as to such actual delivery, and there is-nothing in the objection to indícale otherwise. The eighteenth assignment is well taken. The nineteenth assignment of error is-overruled without discussion.

*355 By the twelfth and twenty-first assignments of error, appellant complains of the charge of the court on the issue of estoppel, and by the thirty-first assignment of the refusal of a special eiiarge that the evidence did not present that issue. The charge given is theoretically correct, if the evidence had presented the issue of estoppel as pleaded; but we are of the opinion that it does not raise this issue. Appellee pleaded that he was induced to sell the goods on the faith of the' ownership of the property in question by Ricketson & McCollum; but this is not supported by any evidence. The evidence for appellee tended to show that the property was brought to Tyler county from Burnett county by A. Ricketson, father of appellant, and was used in the turpentine business, in which they were' engaged, by Walls & Ricketson, just as other property owned by them, with appellant’s consent. Appellant himself was engaged with his father and Walls in the operation of the business, as an employé for wages.

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

Related

Thomas v. Atlanta Lumber Co.
360 S.W.2d 445 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1962)
Cleveland State Bank v. Turner
278 S.W. 1107 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 S.W. 353, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ricketson-v-best-texapp-1911.