Seinsheimer v. Flanagan

44 S.W. 30, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 427, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 391
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 44 S.W. 30 (Seinsheimer v. Flanagan) 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
Seinsheimer v. Flanagan, 44 S.W. 30, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 427, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 391 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

The defendant in error, S. J. Flanagan, recovered a judgment in the District Court of Galveston County against the firm of Freiberg, Klein & Co., composed of Moses Freiberg, Samuel Klein, and Joseph Seinsheimer,. and against Seinsheimer and Klein, individually, for the sum of $250, besides interest and costs. Thereafter, on July 27, 1896, Flanagan sued out a writ of garnishment on said judgment for service on J. King Wallis. On September 8, 1896, Seinsheimer filed a replevy bond, in accordance with article 225, Revised Statutes, which was signed as sureties by I. H. Kempner and Max Stiefel, who are coplaintiffs in error with Seinsheimer.

On October 3, 1896, the garnishee Wallis filed his answer to the writ, as follows:" “How comes the garnishee, J. K. Wallis, and in answer to *429 the writ of garnishment served upon him herein, says that, except as hereinafter stated, he is not now nor was indebted to the said Joseph Seinsheimer when said writ was served on him; that during the month of July last (1896) he, the said garnishee, was boarding at the Grand Hotel, kept by Milton Powell; that for the said month of July he had agreed to pay the said Powell $50, hut on or about the 20th of July he was notified by Joseph Seinsheimer that he had advanced some money to Powell on several accounts, and that his, the garnishee’s, account had been transferred to him, Seinsheimer, and that when that hill was due, on July 31st, the said garnishee was to pay it to the said Seinsheimer, and that at that time he, the garnishee, supposed that he owed the said Seinsheimer $50,” and also asked that he be allowed a fee for answering the writ, and that Milton Powell be made a party in order that he might he exonerated from double liability.

On the 21st of November, 1896, judgment was rendered in the garnishment proceeding against the garnishee Wallis, that the plaintiff Flanagan recover from Wallis the sum of $50, out of which amount plaintiff was to pay the costs of the garnishment proceeding and an attorney’s fee of $25 for the garnishee, and that plaintiff should have his execution for $50 against Wallis. It was further ordered that the plaintiff recover from Seinsheimer, ICempner, and Steifel the sum of $50, and that he have execution against them, but that the plaintiff should not in any event recover more than $50, and that if either Seinsheimer, Kempner, or Steifel should pay that amount, it would satisfy the judgment against Wallis. This judgment recited that the garnishee appeared in person and by answer duly filed, and that evidence was introduced; and that the said Wallis answered that he supposed he was indebted to Seinsheimer to the amount of $50. There was no appearance entered for Seinsheimer or his sureties, and no other written pleading was filed by Wallis besides the answer above referred to. Seinsheimer and his sureties on the replevy bond prosecute this writ of error.

The first, second, and third assignments of error seek to reverse the judgment because of defects in the affidavit for garnishment. Some of the objections might have been held well taken, if they had been properly urged in the trial court, hut the garnishee voluntarily appeared, and, without objection to the proceedings, submitted the matter to the court. He could not now be heard to urge these exceptions for the first time in this court. By article 225, above referred to, the defendant, after he had made replevy bond as therein provided, was authorized to make any defense which the garnishee could make in such. suit. Whether this would entitle him to object to such defects in the proceedings as those pointed out in these assignments of error, we need not now determine. If he was authorized to make them, he did not make them at the proper .time and in the proper manner. He necessarily has no greater rights in this particular than the garnishee would have.

The same remarks reply to the objection urged in the fourth assignment, to the return of the sheriff upon the writ of garnishment. Neither *430 the garnishee nor the plaintiffs in error urged any such objection in the court below, but the garnishee voluntarily appeared and answered the writ.

The fifth assignment of error complains of the judgment on the ground that it was based solely upon the written answer of the garnishee, and that §uch answer did not make it appear affirmatively that the garnishee was indebted to Seinsheimer, but did make it appear that he was not indebted to Seinsheimer, but that he was indebted to Milton Powell. The recitals of the judgment authorize the presumption that the question as to Wallis’ indebtedness was submitted to the court orally, arid that the evidence which was heard justified the court in finding that the indebtedness was to Seinsheimer. Such a finding would be at least consistent with the answer of the garnishee. It has been held that issues upon the answer of a garnishee can be made orally, by consent, and the recitals in the judgment authorize the conclusion that this was done.

But another reason for holding this contention of the plaintiffs in error to be unsound is, that Seinsheimer replevied the claim against Wallis, and the money was paid over to him. We do not think he can be heard, ir. this state of the case, to say that the indebtedness was not to him. While the statute authorizes him to make any defense which the garnishee could have made, this does not, in our opinion, entitle him to take such inconsistent positions before the court. His replevy bond, in effect, asserts that he is entitled to the money due from the garnishee, and his present contention is in direct contradiction of that position. He is, in our opinion, estopped from asserting that the money was owing to Powell.

The sixth assignment attempts -to raise a question which also, we think, the plaintiffs in error are not entitled to make. It is, that a personal judgment was rendered and execution awarded against Wallis, although the debt had been replevied and the money taken from his hands. This judgment does not affect plaintiffs in error further than to determine that the debt owed by Wallis was subject to the writ. If that judgment was proper, the fact that personal liability was fixed upon Wallis does not injure plaintiffs in error, and Wallis has not complained of it. The same may be said of the point made in the seventh assignment of error, namely, that the judgment fails to provide that the payment of the judgment by Wallis should operate as a satisfaction of the claim of Seinsheimer against him; and of the further point, in the eighth assignment, that Powell was not made a party, and the respective rights of himself and Seinsheimer to the debt adjudicated, "so as to protect Wallis against Powell. Wallis has not complained of the judgment, nor did he make any effort, after he answered, to have Powell brought in, but voluntarily submitted the case to the judgment of the court without having done so. He can not now complain of the judgment, and it follows that plaintiffs in error can not.

The tenth assignment raises a more serious point. It is, that judgment on the replevy bond, against the principal and sureties therein, was *431 not authorized without further pleadings and notice to them.

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W. 30, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 427, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seinsheimer-v-flanagan-texapp-1897.