Twichell v. Askew

141 S.W. 1072, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 524
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 141 S.W. 1072 (Twichell v. Askew) 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
Twichell v. Askew, 141 S.W. 1072, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 524 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

On August 25, 1911, appellant filed in the county court of Potter county his original petition to reform a judgment of said court, rendered June 3, 1911, and for a temporary injunction restraining the sheriff of Potter county from collecting said judgment until the same had been reformed. His petition states that he and J. E. Nunn, S. P. Vinyard, R. E. Underwood, W. A. Askew, J. W. Crudgington, C. L. Timmons, C. Martin, and B. E. Timmons were the makers of a certain note, payable to S. H. Lumkin; that all were liable thereon as principal debtors; that suit was filed upon said note in the county court of Potter county April 18, 1911, and in order to save costs all of said makers waived citation and agreed to enter their appearance on the 24th day of April, 1911; that all of the makers were solvent except C. L. Timmons, B. E. Timmons, and C. Martin; that on June 3, 1911, the day upon which the above-named judgment was rendered for the full amount of the note, the said Askew, Underwood, Crudgington, Vinyard, and Nunn filed an answer, alleging that all said defendants had been jointly liable on said note, but that they had paid their proportional part of same and asked the court to render a judgment, requiring that execution issue first against the appellant herein, C. E. Martin, C. L. Timmons, and B. E. Timmons for the amount of judgment to be rendered in said cause; and that in the event they, the said Askew, Crudgington, Nunn, Vinyard, and Underwood be required to pay judgment, then that they have their execution against said other defendants, meaning appellant, C. L. Timmons, B. E. Timmons, and C. Martin. No process of any kind was ever issued upon said answer, and appellant had no notice whatever that the same had been filed, but had been led to believe that judgment would be rendered against all of the defendants in said suit equally, as had been prayed for in the original petition; that he learned for the first time on August 24, 1911, of the nature of the judgment rendered against him and of the filing of said answer and cross-bill by his codefendants in that suit, when the sheriff notified him to come in and settle the judgment and avoid unnecessary expense and trouble; that the answer and cross-action of his codefendants is subject to general demurrer; and that said judgment was obtained by fraud, accident, and mistake.

The court rendered judgment upon the note as follows: "On this day came on regularly to be heard the above entitled and numbered cause, and the plaintiff came by attorney and announced ready for trial, and the defendants since the filing of this suit have each filed a waiver of citation and made an appearance in this case, and the defendants W. A. Askew, R. E. Underwood, S. P. Vinyard, J. E. Nunn, and J. W. Crudgington having filed an answer herein. The court having heard the pleadings read, the evidence adduced, and the argument of counsel, is of the opinion, and so finds, that the plaintiff S. H. Lumkin should have and recover of and from the defendants W. A. Askew, C. Martin, R. E. Underwood, S. P. Vinyard, J. E. Nunn, C. L. Timmons, W. D. Twichell, B. E. Timmons, and J. W. Crudgington the sum of $693.23, which includes principal, interest, and attorney's fees due *Page 1074 upon a certain promissory note dated April 29, 1910, which note bore interest at the rate of 10 per cent. from date. And the court further finds that the defendants V. A. Askew, R. E. Underwood, S. P. Vinyard, J. E. Nunn, and J. W. Crudgington have paid plaintiff on said note their respective joint liability, payment having been made on the 6th day of March, 1911, and that the balance of said defendants have not paid any amount upon said note. It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiff S. H. Lumkin do have and recover of and from the defendants W. A. Askew, C. Martin, R. E. Underwood, S. P. Vinyard, J. E. Nunn, C. L. Timmons, W. D. Twichell, B. E. Timmons, and J. W. Crudgington the said sum of $693.23, with interest thereon from this date at the rate of 10 per cent. per annum. It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiff shall cause to be issued an execution against the defendants C. L. Timmons, W. D. Twichell, C. Martin, and B. E. Timmons first for the amount of this judgment including principal, interest, and attorney's fees and all interest thereon, and, in case said execution is returned without making said sum of money out of said defendants, then and in that event said plaintiff shall have his execution for the amount of the money due him on said judgment against each and all of said defendants W. A. Askew, C. Martin, R. E. Underwood, S. P. Vinyard, J. E. Nunn, C. L. Timmons, W. D. Twichell, B. E. Timmons, and J. W. Crudgington. It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that in case either of the defendants J. W. Crudgington, J. E. Nunn, S. P. Vinyard, W. A. Askew, and R. E. Underwood shall pay or cause to be paid the hereinabove mentioned judgment, or any part thereof, that they or he may have their or his execution issued against the defendants C. Martin, C. L. Timmons, W. D. Twichell, and B. E. Timmons, for the amount they or he, or either of them, pay or cause to be paid."

The said Askew, Crudgington, Underwood, Vinyard, and Nunn waived the issuance of service of citation in writing, and entered their appearance in this proceeding to the August term, 1911. On October 7, 1911, the court entered an order in this proceeding as follows: "W. D. Twichell v. W. A. Askew et al. No. 1,242. Saturday, October 7, 1911. Order Refusing Injunction. In County Court, Potter County, Texas. Came on this the 7th day of October, 1911, to be heard and considered plaintiff W. D. Twichell's petition for injunction in the above styled and numbered cause, and same having been duly heard and considered, counsel for both plaintiff and defendants appearing and making arguments for and against the granting of same, the court is of the opinion that said petition shows no cause of action, and injunction as prayed for should be refused, which is hereby done, and all costs herein are adjudged against said plaintiff."

It seems from the record that appellant made no effort to have the judgment reformed or to have the court take any further action upon his petition during the August term, and the matter is before us on appeal from the order refusing the injunction.

It is evident that the judgment rendered on June 3d is erroneous and unjust to appellant. If five-ninths of the amount due upon the note had been paid, it was error to render judgment in favor of plaintiff for the full amount thereof and to award execution for the full amount against C. L. Timmons, B. E. Timmons, C. Martin, and this appellant. There were nine makers of the note, and, in the event they were all solvent, each as between themselves was liable for only one-ninth thereof.

Notwithstanding the rule that each obligor is, as to the creditor Lumkin, liable for the whole debt, nevertheless, as between himself and his co-obligors, he is liable to contribute to those paying the debt no more than his equal portion ratably distributed between those who are solvent and able to sustain with him the common burden. The petition for injunction, showing that three of the makers were insolvent, each of the remaining six would have been liable for an aliquot part of the debt. Merchants' National Bank v. McAnulty, 89 Tex. 124, 33 S.W. 963.

The judgment nowhere entitles appellant to contribution from his five co-obligors who were solvent in the event the sheriff collected the whole amount of said judgment, or more than his pro rata share thereof, from him. This would entitle him to a correction and a reformation of the judgment. Sayles' Statutes, art. 1335.

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.W. 1072, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twichell-v-askew-texapp-1911.