Tiefel Bros. Winn v. Maxwell

154 S.W. 319, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 252
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 11, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 154 S.W. 319 (Tiefel Bros. Winn v. Maxwell) 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
Tiefel Bros. Winn v. Maxwell, 154 S.W. 319, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 252 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

The appellants, Tiefel Bros. & Winn, instituted two suits in the district court of Parmer county, against the appellee, Maxwell, numbered, respectively, 111 and 112, upon the docket of that court In cause No. Ill, appellants alleged the ownership in them of certain cattle, and that they were entitled to the possession of same, and that the property was in the possession of the defendant, Maxwell, praying for the title and possession of same; In cause No. 112, against the same defendant, the action of plaintiffs was based upon a promissory note, and a chattel mortgage, securing said note, and executed by defendant to a Hereford bank and purchased by the plaintiffs, the mortgage covering certain other live stock distinct from that sued for in cause No. Ill, and in both cases writs of sequestration were levied upon the live stock, and, after the expiration of the time in which defendant could replevy, the plaintiffs replev-ined the stock in both causes, the‘plaintiffs’ sureties upon the sequestration and replev-in bonds in each cause being the same. In each of the causes, the defendant, Maxwell, answered substantially that the plaintiffs agreed to furnish, and did furnish, the money to purchase the cattle described in cause No. Ill and agreed to furnish him the money to pay off the above note and mortgage executed and delivered by him to the bank, and declared upon in cause No. 112, and as a consideration to plaintiffs he was to execute to them another note for a larger amount and to be secured by a new chattel mortgage upon all the stock described in both petitions, alleging a tender of the new, note and mortgage and .a breach by plaintiffs of the contract, and claiming actual and exemplary damages on account of the levy of the sequestration writs. The trial judge, upon the motion of defendant, consolidated the two causes, and, after the joinder, thé parties pleaded substantially the same issues as in the separate causes, and the trial resulted, in a verdict and judgment in favor of defendants’ cross-action, comprehending actual and exemplary damages.

[1, 2] First. The propriety of the action of the trial judge, in consolidating the two cases, is assailed in this court by appellants (plaintiffs below) on the principal contention that “one is an action of tort and the other is an action upon contract,” and the tort does not grow out of, nor is related to, the contract.

The common-law rule invoked by appellants that an action upon tort may not be joined with one upon contract, unless the tort grows out of or is related to the contract, has no application to this record. The appellants, in cause No. Ill, sued for the recovery of specific personal property, and the action would be construed, at common law, strictly as an action of detinue. They allege ownership and title in them of certain cattle and that they are entitled to the possession of same, merely alleging possession in defendants and a prayer for judgment for title and possession. In attempting to apply the technical common-law rule prohibiting the joinder of tort and contract, they are also met with the common-law distinction between the action of “trover” and the action *321 of “detinue.” “The design of the action of trover is not to recover a thing in specie but to recover damages for the conversion thereof, and in this respect trover differs from detinue and replevin.” Encyc. Pleading & Practice, vol. 21, p. 1013. “Detinue is a common-law action which lies for the recovery of personal chattels in specie where the same are unlawfully detained or for damages for their detention.” Encyc. Pleading & Practice, vol. 0, p. 644. If cause No. Ill were an action of trover and conversion, at common law, where it is not connected with the contract, an action upon contract cóuld not be joined with it. But'Mr. Ohitty, in his great work on Pleading (volume 1, marginal page 200), under the title “Joinder of Actions,” declares the rule to be at common law that “debt and detinue may be joined together, though in all these cases the pleas are different, and in detinue the judgment also varies from the form of the judgment in debt.” And Mr. Gould, in his standard work on Pleading (page 198), recognizes the rule that “debt and detinue may be joined in one action, although they require different general issues; for not only is the judgment at common law the same in both, but the actions of debt and det-inue are essentially the same in character, the only material difference being that one is brought for a sum of money, and the other for the recovery of specific chattels.” Judge Lipscomb, in the case of O’Shea v. Twohig, 9 Tex. 341, 342, in commenting upon the plaintiff’s cause of action, and the nature of it, set up in that case, remarks that “the suit was brought for the wood, and the doctrine of the action of detinue must govern it,” and further announces that, “although we do not acknowledge the common-law forms of action, yet, when property is sued for, the principles of law defining and., governing that action must be resorted to, we having adopted the common law, without its forms of action,” and, while the action in that case was detinue, the recovery was for the value of the personal property.

It is unnecessary to discuss the common-law authorities as to the nature of the action of detinue, some asserting and some denying that it sounds in tort, or to differentiate and discuss the numerous authorities cited by appellants, none of which we deem applicable. Appellants’ premise, upon which the assignment is based upon the real issue of joinder,, is wrong, as there is an unanimity of legal opinion that detinue and debt may be joined, and the Supreme Court of this state, following the common law, without controversy, construes the action for the recovery of the cattle in this case as one solely of detinue; hence it was not error to join it with an action of debt.

[3] Again, the appellants have appealed this case without a statement of facts, and hence all the material allegations of defendant’s cross-action are impliedly true; and he avers, and the verdict of the jury resolves it, that he made a contract with the plaintiffs for the latter to furnish him the money to purchase the bunch of cattle described in the petition ip the first suit, and to pay off the note and mortgage held by a certain bank, and declared upon by them in the second suit, and in substitution he was to execute and deliver a larger note for the whole amount advanced by plaintiffs, and another mortgage upon-all the stock described in the petitions in both cases; and further alleges a failure of plaintiffs to comply with the contract. The contract being true, the causes of action of plaintiff were necessarily connected with it, and no injury whatever having been shown in this record, and all the parties being the same, even to the extent of all the sureties on the- different bonds, the trial judge, we think, properly exercised that discretion permitted by statute in consolidating the two causes.

[4] Second. Appellants complain that an erroneous measure of damages was submitted by the trial judge; that is, that the value of the stock at the time of the levy of the writs of sequestration, and not the value of same at the time of trial, should have been the criterion for the jury. The Supreme Court, in the case of Luedde v. Hopper, 95 Tex. 172, 66 S. W. 55, has settled this question adversely to appellants.

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.W. 319, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tiefel-bros-winn-v-maxwell-texapp-1913.