S. Jacobs, Bernheim & Co. v. Crum

62 Tex. 401, 3 Tex. L. R. 408, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 257
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1884
DocketCase No. 1680
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 62 Tex. 401 (S. Jacobs, Bernheim & Co. v. Crum) 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
S. Jacobs, Bernheim & Co. v. Crum, 62 Tex. 401, 3 Tex. L. R. 408, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 257 (Tex. 1884).

Opinion

Walker, P. J. Com. App.

It is assigned as ground of error that the court erred in overruling plaintiffs’ motion (made after the defendant had closed his case on his plea in reconvention) to exclude from the jury the subject of exemplary damages, because there was no evidence tending to support the allegations of the defendant’s plea with respect thereto.

A. motion of this character is assimilated to a demurrer to evidence, but it is not, we conceive, equivalent to it. A demurrer to evidence admits every fact and conclusion which the evidence conduces to prove. Hughes v. Christy, 26 Tex., 230. The demurrant submits the result of his case to the court’s judgment on the evidence, as a question of law as to its legal effect, and if the demurrer is sustained, the judgment of the court upon the case made by the evidence follows. This motion simply invokes the court to determine whether there is any evidence as to certain specified facts constituting the defendant’s grounds for exemplary damages, but the [405]*405plaintiffs do not in their motion tender any issue, as by demurrer to evidence, on which the court might render judgment on the effect of the evidence thus submitted for consideration.

Under this view, the court might properly have declined to consider the motion as being an irregular and irrelevant proceeding, and it was not error to overrule it. Besides, the bill of exceptions shows only that the motion was overruled; but it does not elsewhere appear than in the motion itself, at what stage of the trial, or under what circumstances, the motion was made to withdraw the subject of exemplary damages from the further consideration of the court and jury.

It is assigned as error that “ the court erred in not giving the fourth special instruction asked by the plaintiffs, and in not excluding by its charge the question of exemplary damages from the jury, because there was no evidence to support a finding therefor, and because there was no evidence that, at the time of suing out the attachment, plaintiffs or their agents knew the grounds on which the same was sued out to be untrue in fact, or that plaintiffs, knowing the grounds to be false, ratified and adopted the malicious suing out of the writ by their agent.”

The fourth special charge asked by plaintiffs, and refused, is as follows:

“ The defendant claims $15,000 as exemplary or punitory damages for the alleged wrongful and malicious suing out of the attachment, and charges that plaintiffs, knowing the grounds on which the attachment was sued out as set forth in the affidavit to be untrue, instructed and directed said proceeding; and that S. B. Mayer, acting as their agent in suing out the attachment, sued out the same knowing said grounds to be untrue, and that plaintiffs ratified and confirmed the malicious suing out of the attachment by their agent. There is no evidence to sustain any of these grounds, and you are instructed not to consider any evidence of exemplary or punitory damages at all.”

"Where tliere is evidence tending to establish an issue in the case it is the province of the court to submit the law applicable to it under the pleadings; but where there is a want and absence of such evidence, it is often misleading and erroneous to do so. See Austin v. Talk, 20 Tex., 167; Andrews v. Smithwick, id., 118; McGreal v. Wilson, 9 Tex., 429.

In this case there was evidence which tended to establish such of the facts relied on for exemplary damages as the jury might have construed to support the defendant’s claim therefor. If S. B. Mayer, [406]*406acting as plaintiffs’ agent in suing out the attachment, did so knowing the grounds to be untrue, and that plaintiffs ratified and confirmed the malicious suing out of the attachment by their agent, the plaintiffs would be liable in exemplary damages.

The evidence in behalf of defendant tended to prove the want of probable cause to sue out the attachment on the ground relied on in the affidavit. Malice in suing out the writ may be implied from a want of probable cause. Drake on Attach, sec. 732 (a), and note 4 to sec. 732.

There was evidence also from which the jury might have deduced the conclusion that the plaintiffs adopted the act of their agents after obtaining a knowledge of the facts. The evidence showed that the plaintiffs were advised at once by their agent, Mayer, that he had attached defendant’s goods and land; that they telegraphed Mayer to attend the sale of the goods, which were sold the 6th of March, under the attachment proceedings, and to buy in the goods. After acquiring such knowledge of the existence of his attachment suit and the proceedings had and to be had upon it, and as parties plaintiff to it, being chargeable with knowledge of the grounds on which the attachment rested, it was a circumstance tending to show that they may have learned the facts on which their agent had procured the attachment, and ascertained whether it had been rightfully or wrongfully sued out. Such negative circumstantial evidence, though it is slight and inconclusive standing by itself, is entitled to be considered and weighed by the jury in determining, from all the facts and circumstances, whether the plaintiffs knew of the malicious suing out of the writ when they acquiesced in his action by subsequently prosecuting the attachment proceedings, and adopting the acts of the agent, by causing, under the levy of the writ, the goods to be sold, and their participation in purchasing at the sale of them. The plaintiffs, under such circumstances, must be held to have been put on inquiry concerning the facts under which their agent had acted in thus seizing the defendant’s property, and of ascertaining whether or not there was probable cause) and, if the facts were such as he might be supposed to have readily ascertained by inquiry, the jury would have been at liberty to have drawn the conclusion that he did obtain a knowledge of the supposed want of probable cause and the malice that would be implied which existed when the agent sued out the writ. Such evidence would, it is true, have been circumstantial, and such as would be subject to be rebutted by evidence to show that they did not, in fact, learn these facts as to the malicious character of the proceeding; but it would never[407]*407theless have been legitimate evidence, tending to establish the defendant’s case, which the court was not at liberty to disregard and treat as being no evidence whatever, or evidence that was wholly insufficient. In Blum v. Gaines, 57 Tex., 142, it was said; “There Avas evidence which called for a charge upon exemplary damages, and whether it was sufficient to support the claim therefor was for the jury, looking to all the facts of the case, unless so clearly insufficient that the court could so declare it.”

The plaintiffs adopted the act of their agent, Mayer, by retaining the benefits which the attachment procured for them and. by continuing to prosecute the suit without dismissing the attachment, and there is evidence of a circumstantial character Avhich tended to establish the fact that they did so with knowledge of the facts and circumstances under which Mayer had procured the issuance of the writ. See G., H. & S. A. R’y Co. v. Donahoe, 56 Tex., 166, where it was held that notwithstanding the general rule that the principal is not liable in exemplary damages for the unauthorized malicious acts of the agent, still, if the principal should ratify or accept such acts of the agent, it thereby becomes liable for the damages, as well exemplary as actual, resulting from the act.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Tex. 401, 3 Tex. L. R. 408, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-jacobs-bernheim-co-v-crum-tex-1884.