S. Jacobs, Bernheim & Co. v. Totty

13 S.W. 372, 76 Tex. 343, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1263
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1890
DocketNo. 2793
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 S.W. 372 (S. Jacobs, Bernheim & Co. v. Totty) 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. Totty, 13 S.W. 372, 76 Tex. 343, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1263 (Tex. 1890).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

Appellant firm, being creditors of W.

H. Campbell, caused writ of attachment to be levied on a stock of goods claimed by appellee, which was sold to satisfy the debt due by Campbell. The goods belonged to Campbell prior to July, 1887, at which time appellee claims to have bought them.

This action was brought by appellee to recover damages for the seizure and conversion of the goods; and the issues were:

1. Did Campbell sell the goods to Totty, as claimed?

2. Was that sale fraudulent as to creditors of Campbell?

There was much and it may be said conflicting evidence on the -last ■question, but on the first the evidence all tended to show that a sale was made, though fraudulent it may have been.

The first assignment of error is: “In the second paragraph of the ■charge the court improperly limits the defense to the issue of a fraudulent sale, when it was denied that any sale had ever been made, and there was strong circumstantial evidence tending to support such defense, and [346]*346this error is repeated and perpetuated in succeeding parts of the charge without mitigation or correction.”

The ninth assignment is: The court erred in refusing defendants* special charge placing the burden of proof to show a sale as contended for on the plaintiff; and especially has the court erred in assuming as proved beyond dispute that there was an actual sale because Campbell and Totty say so, when all the independent facts and circumstances attending upon the parties and subject matter, upon which defendants relied, contradicted them.”

So much of the charge of the court as has bearing on these assignments is as follows:

“1. The plaintiff, William Totty, alleges that he was the owner of the goods described in his petition, and that defendants seized and converted them to their own use, and these allegations he is required to prove by the preponderance of evidence—that is, by the greater weight and degree of credible evidence.
“2. The defendants, S. Jacobs, Bernheim & Co., who were creditor® of Campbell, allege that the goods were not Totty’s property, because the sale made by Campbell to him was fraudulent in law, being, as they aver, made with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud Campbell’s creditors, and that therefore it conveyed no title, but was void. This allegation of fraudulent sale the defendants are required to establish to your satisfaction by a preponderance of evidence in like manner as plaintiff is required to show ownership by him and conversion by defendants as instructed in the preceding paragraph.
“3. It is admitted that for some time prior to July, 1887, Totty was conducting for Campbell a cash store in Grapeland in the name of him (Totty), and he claims to have bought the stock of goods in said store from Campbell by purchase for a valuable consideration; while the de^fendants deny that there was any such purchase, and aver that if there was anything in the nature of a sale it was invalid, and in law fraudulent, and void.
“4. Whether there was any sale by Campbell to Totty, and if so,, whether the same was legal and valid, or was fraudulent and void, is a question of fact for you to decide under the rules of law laid down in this, charge.
“5. The law yon will receive in the charge and be governed thereby;: of the facts proved, the weight of the evidence, and the credibility of the, witnesses you are the sole and exclusive judges.
6. If you believe Campbell agreed to sell and Totty to buy the goods,, and that they agreed upon a price and terms, and that thereupon Campbell placed Totty in possession of said goods as owner, under and in pursuance of said agreement of sale so entered into between them, and so executed by said delivery of possession, the title to said goods vested in [347]*347Totty, and in the absence of what you are hereinafter instructed would constitute fraud in law, said sale was valid.”

The first and second paragraphs of the charge, it will be seen, were intended to inform the jury as to the general nature of the claim asserted by each party, and as to the burden of proof resting on each.

There was no pretense that Totty owned the goods otherwise than through a purchase from Campbell, and in view of that fact the first paragraph must be understood to inform the jury that the burden of proving a sale from Campbell to himself rested upon him.

The second, in effect, repeats this, for unless such a sale was shown the jury could not have come to the conclusion that Totty was owner, a fact which they were more than once told it was necessary for him to establish to entitle him to recover.

The third, fourth, fifth, and sixth paragraphs certainly gave the jury to understand that sale or no by Campbell to Totty was a vital issue in the case, on which they were required to pass.

The jury in another paragraph were told to look to the entire charge, and in addition to the paragraphs set out there were many from which the jury could not have understood that it was not their duty to determine whether a sale had in fact been made by Campbell to Totty, as well as to inquire whether, under other paragraphs, such a sale was fraudulent as to Campbell’s creditors.

The court having instructed the jury correctly as to the burden of proof, did not err in refusing to repeat this at request of counsel for appellants.

The court in one paragraph gave the following:

“17. Concerning the evidence admitted of Campbell’s acts or declarations made after the sale to Totty, if you find such sale was made, you are instructed that no such acts or declarations of Campbell made after such sale will be considered by you as evidence to show fraud on the part of the plaintiff, but you may consider the same in determining the question of the intent and purpose of Campbell in making such sale; and if you find it was made with such purpose and intent and under such circumstances as you are told would render it fraudulent in law on Campbell’s part, you will then inquire whether Totty had such actual knowledge of the facts as were sufficient to put him upon inquiry which would have enabled him by reasonable diligence to have ascertained Campbell’s intention, and thereby have rendered the sale also fraudulent in law as to him, Totty.”

Which it is insisted was erroneous, in. that it was a comment on the weight of evidence, and in that it limited the effect of Campbell’s acts and declarations.

We do not see wherein it was a comment on the weight of evidence, and it certainly authorized the jury to consider acts or declarations of Campbell made after the sale to Totty for any purpose for which they [348]*348could possibly be considered, and it may be true that such acts or declarations, not done or made in the presence of Totty, ought not to have been considered for any purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 S.W. 372, 76 Tex. 343, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-jacobs-bernheim-co-v-totty-tex-1890.