Sonnentheil v. Texas Guaranty & Trust Co.

30 S.W. 945, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 274, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 67
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 1895
DocketNo. 707.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 30 S.W. 945 (Sonnentheil v. Texas Guaranty & Trust Co.) 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
Sonnentheil v. Texas Guaranty & Trust Co., 30 S.W. 945, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 274, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 67 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Appellant sued the Texas Guaranty and Trust Company, J. P. Alvey, and A. J. Walker, for damages, alleging that on the 23rd day of December, 1892, at the instigation of defendants, a United States marshal, in the execution of a writ of attachment issued from the Federal court in favor of the Christian Moerlein Brewing Company against the firm of Freiberg, Klein & Co., had seized and taken from plaintiff’s possession certain goods, of which plaintiff “had good title and was in full possession,” and had, under authority of such writ, converted same to the use of the plaintiff therein.

Defendant pleaded not guilty, and alleged specially that plaintiff had no title to the goods for the value of which suit was brought other than such as was conferred upon him by a deed of trust executed by Freiberg, Klein & Co. to him on the 16th day of December, 1892, purporting to convey the goods to him for the purpose of securing certain recited debts of said firm, other than that claimed by the plaintiffs in the writ of attachment under which the seizure had been made; that such deed was, as to the creditors of Freiberg, Klein & Co., omitted therefrom, and as to all persons and for any purpose, void, and interposed no legal obstruction to the levy of the writ of attachment against the makers thereof. The answer then proceeded to state the reasons why it was claimed the deed was void, which were, in brief, that it had been altered, after its execution and delivery, by interlineation and erasure of material provisions; and that it was executed by Freiberg, Klein & Co. and accepted by plaintiff when the former were insolvent, with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud their creditors, which intent was known to the beneficiaries, the secured creditors.

Upon these issues the cause was tried below, and verdict and judgment were rendered for defendants, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

*278 Appellant seeks to reverse the judgment, upon the admission of evidence and the giving of charges affecting the issue of fraud; and appellees contend that the judgment should be affirmed, without reference to any question as to the correctness of those rulings, for the reason that, aside from the issue of fraud in the deed of trust, plaintiff showed no cause of action. It will be well to first dispose of the contentions on which appellees base this proposition. The first is, that there is no evidence whatever that, prior to the levy of the attachment against Freiberg, Klein & Co., any of the creditors named as the beneficiaries of the deed of trust had accepted or in any way become parties to it.

Plaintiff alleged, and there was evidence that he was, in possession of the goods when the seizure was made. He did not, in his pleadings, set out the character of his claim so as to require him to develop in his evidence the title under which he held. His allegation that he had the title and possession was supported, prima facie at least, by proof of possession, and on such proof he was entitled to recover, unless it was met and rebutted by evidence, on the part of defendant, admissible under the pleadings. If the question as to the admissibility of proof were unaffected by the character of the defensive pleadings, it may be true that, when defendants met such evidence of possession in the plaintiff by the proof that the goods had belonged to Freiberg, Klein & Co. before plaintiff got them, and showed their right as attaching creditors of that firm, the plaintiff, in order to maintain his suit, would have been required to exhibit a title from Freiberg, Klein & Co. superior to the right of the attaching creditor, and hence, when he introduced the deed under which he claimed, would have been required to show not only its execution and delivery to him, but an acceptance of it by some beneficiary prior to the levy of the attachment. But under a general denial, in a case like this, a defendant can not attack the title of a plaintiff in possession, or put him on proof of other title than possession, but the defendant is restricted to disproof of the alleged trespass. Carter & Hunt v. Wallace, 2 Texas, 206. Hence, without special pleading, defendants could not have exacted of plaintiff proof of any fact but the trespass, and could not have attacked plaintiff’s title or proved title in themselves.

The answer, most elaborately and skillfully drawn, did set forth the title under which plaintiff claimed, pointed out its alleged defects, and stated the facts out of which arose defendant’s right .to assail it. The plea admitted that Sonnentheil held under the deed of trust, but asserted that it had been altered after delivery so as to avoid it, and that it was fraudulent as against unpreferred creditors of Freiberg, Klein & Co. Ho intimation is given of a claim that it had not been accepted, or was incomplete as a contract between Freiberg, Klein & Co. and the beneficiaries. We think that this answer should be construed as assailing the plaintiff’s title only on the grounds thus stated, and that it should be held to have put him upon notice to come prepared with proofs to sustain it only at the points at which it was as *279 sailed. Under these issues, proof on the part of plaintiffs of the execution, delivery, and acceptance of the deed was rendered unnecessary in making out his title to the property, and the questions presented were whether or not the deed was to be avoided upon proof of the averments made by defendants. Ho question was made in the court below as to the necessity of an acceptance by beneficiaries in order to make the deed effective, but there was some evidence which came out incidentally, in the investigation of other questions, indicating that there may have been an acceptance by one, at least, of the named beneficiaries before the attachment was levied. The court in its charge submitted no question as to acceptance, but assumed and instructed that the deed was valid and conferred title upon plaintiff unless avoided by proof of fraud. To affirm the judgment upon this contention of appellees, though errors be found in the rulings of the court in the submission of the issues upon which the verdict was made to depend such as would otherwise require a reversal, would be not only to reverse the action of the court below in plaintiff’s favor, treating the deed as valid unless avoided by fraud, but to determine the case against him upon an issue of fact that has not been tried or raised in that court.

The next contention of appellees is, that the evidence adduced in the trial below was legally insufficient to connect them with the levy of the attachment, and to fix upon them liability for its consequences, and hence no recovery could have been had against them, whether such levy was justifiable or not. It was shown that the attachment in favor of the Christian Moerlein Brewing Company was issued upon the affidavit of Werner, the agent of that company, charging that Freiberg, Klein &

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Related

Leach v. Edgerton
211 N.W. 538 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1926)
Sonnentheil v. Christian Moerlein Brewing Co.
172 U.S. 401 (Supreme Court, 1899)
McLaughlin v. Carter, Ritchie & Co.
37 S.W. 668 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1896)
Randolph v. Allen
73 F. 23 (Fifth Circuit, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W. 945, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 274, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sonnentheil-v-texas-guaranty-trust-co-texapp-1895.