Webb v. Allen

40 S.W. 842, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 842 (Webb v. Allen) 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
Webb v. Allen, 40 S.W. 842, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 122 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

Statement of the Case—On the 2d day of October, 1896, Percy Allen and Sam Allen, plaintiffs below and appellees here, presented to the Judge of the 27th Judicial District in chambers their petition in this cause, praying for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of, manage and control the property and business of the firm of J. W. Webb & Company, and praying for injunction restraining J. W. Webb, the appellant, from controlling, managing or in any way interfering further with the business, property or assets of Said firm or disposing of the same in any way,—alleging in said petition that up to the 9th day of September, 1896, the plaintiffs and defendant had been partners in the lumber business at Temple, Texas, but that upon said date the partnership had been dissolved,— then setting out the grounds for receiver and injunction. In this petition the plaintiffs also prayed that the property of the firm of J. W. Webb & Company be applied to the payment of its liabilities and that the affairs of said firm be properly settled up in accordance with law and equity. This petition was sworn to by Percy Allen, one of the plaintiffs below, on the 31st day of September, 1896, and to it was attached an additional affidavit of Geo.. W. Tyler, attorney for the plaintiffs, made October 1, 1896.

On the 2d day of October, 1896, the judge to whom the petition was presented, in vacation, and without notice to the defendant, endorsed upon the petition an order to the clerk of the District Court of Bell County to issue the injunction as prayed for, upon plaintiffs entering into bond in the sum of §2500, conditioned as required by law, and also endorsed upon said petition an order appointing L. B. Menefee, of Tarrant County, Texas, receiver of the estate, choses in action and property of every description belonging to said J. W. Webb & Company, enumerated in the petition, upon said receiver entering into bond as prescribed by the statutes in the sum of §5000.

The petition was filed in the office of the district clerk on October 6th, 1896. Injunction was issued on the 6th day of October, 1896, and served on the 7th day of October, 1896. The citation issued on the 6th of October, 1896, and was served on the 8th of October, 1896. The receiver’s bond was filed on the 9th day of October, 1896, and he qualified and took possession of the property on that day.

*609 October 12th, 1896, the defendant, J. W. Webb, filed an answer in the suit, consisting of general and special demurrers to the plaintiff’s petition, and on the same day filed a motion to vacate the receivership, discharge the receiver, and dissolve the injunction.

On the 31st day of December, 1896, the judge of the 27th Judicial District at chambers heard and overruled the motion to vacate the receivership, discharge the receiver and dissolve the injunction, to which the defendant excepted and gave notice of appeal to this court.

On the 7th day of January, 1897, and in term time, the plaintiffs below filed a motion to have entered of record in the minutes of the court the order appointing the receiver and ordering the injunction, dated October 2d, 1896, and the order overruling the motion to vacate the receivership, discharge the receiver and dissolve the injunction; to which the defendant below, J. W. Webb, answered, objecting to the making of said entries for the reasons given in his answer and motion to dissolve. The court, on the same day, granted the motion and directed the order to be entered on the minutes of the court, and the clerk entered them in the minutes of the District Court on the 7th day of January, 1897; to which action of the court ordering the entries to be made the defendant, J. W. Webb, excepted and gave notice of appeal to this court.

Opinion.—The jurisdiction of this court is invoked by virtue of the act of the called session of the Legislature of 1892, page 43, which authorizes an appeal from an interlocutory judgment or order appointing a receiver.

One of the grounds urged in the court below for vacating the order appointing the receiver, and which was overruled, was to the effect that the appointment was made before the suit was filed. The record clearly shows that the petition for injunction and receiver was presented to the judge and the orders made before it was filed in the court below.

Art. 1466 is to the effect that any judge of a court of competent jurisdiction may appoint receivers in an “action * * * between partners.” Art. 1177, Revised Statutes, states that all civil suits in the district and county courts shall be commenced by petition filed in the office of the clerks of such courts.

The words “actions” and “suits,” employed in these statutes and in others where they are used, are synonymous and interchangeable terms. Black, in his Law Dictionary, page 27, states that the terms “action” and “suit” are now nearly if not entirely synonymous; and on page 1135 states that “suit is a generic term of comprehensive signification and applies to any proceeding in a court of justice at the pursuit of the plaintiff for the redress of an injury or recovery of a right.”

If the term “action,” as used in the statutes authorizing the court to appoint a receiver in partnership matters, mean a suit—which is evidently the case—then, in applying the rule announced in art. 1177, a suit or action can be only commenced by filing the petition with the clerk of the court. The statute, in stating that a receiver may be ap *610 pointed in actions between partners, evidently means that this may be done in suits between partners; and in order to dstermine when a controversy becomes a suit we look to art. 1177, which informs us that it is commenced by filing the petition with the clerk of the court, which is by art. 1178 required to be endorsed and filed with the number and style of the case entered upon a docket.

Mr. Beach, in his work on Receivers, sec. 117, says that it has long been the rule that, except in cases of infants and lunatics, a receiver will not be appointed, unless a suit or action is pending. The text is supported by the cases of Hardy v. McClellan, 53 Miss., 510; Pressly v. Harrison, 102 Ind., 15; Baker v. Administrator of Backus, 82 Ill., 95; Merchants National Bank v. Kent, Judge, 43 Mich., 296; Gold Hunter Mining & Smelting Co. v. Holleman, Judge, 27 Pac. Rep., 413; Jones v. Bank of Leadville, 10 Col., 464.

Another objection urged to the appointment of the receiver was because it was upon the ex parte application of the appellees, without notice to the appellant.

Mr. Beach, in'section 134 in his work treating of this subject, says: “In whatever manner the relief is sought from the court it is the well-settled practice that the defendant, whose possession of property is liaable to be wrested from him and taken by the court through its receiver, shall have due notice of the application, so that he may be heard, if he desires," in his own defense. This is also in deference to the long-established principles of courts of equity not to encourage ex parte proceedings, except in cases of emergency, and where such proceedings are indispensable to the proper adjudication of the rights of the parties before the court or in cases of irreparable impending injury.”

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 842, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-allen-texapp-1897.