180 S.W. 101 | Tex. | 1915
The honorable Court of Civil Appeals has included in its certificate the following statement of the case, upon which the certified question is submitted:
"This suit was instituted by defendants in error, Stebbins, Lawson Spraggins Company, against the Bray Company in the County Court of Dallas County at Law on July 19, 1910, on a sworn account for $730.86, with interest thereon at the rate of six per cent per annum from May 24, 1910. On the same day a writ of attachment was issued by the county clerk of Dallas County against the Bray Company and on July 19, 1910, levied on some personal property of said Bray Company. On August 5, 1910, said Bray Company replevied the property attached by giving replevy bond to the sheriff with the plaintiff in error, The American Surety Company of New York, as surety on said replevin bond. On August 9, 1911, citation in the original suit of Stebbins, Lawson Spraggins Company v. Bray Company was issued against Bray Brothers and on said citation the sheriff of Dallas County made the following return:
"`Sheriff's Return. Came to hand on the 10th day of August, A.D. 1910. After search I found that Bray Brothers had all gone to Kansas City to reside. There was one of them here the day of issuance, but he had moved stock of goods and I was unable to find them. A.L. Ledbetter, Sheriff of Dallas County. By Joe Brown, Deputy.'
The defendant, Bray Company, a corporation, alleged to have its domicile in Dallas County, Texas, made no appearance in the trial court, the County Court of Dallas County at Law, and filed no answer, and did nothing that could be considered an appearance, unless the filing of the replevy bond is entering an appearance. The judgment recites the jurisdiction of the court over the defendant in the following terms:
"On November 1, 1910, the court rendered judgment against the defendant, Bray Company, under the name of `Bray Brothers,' said names being used in the record interchangeably, and being one and the same corporation, for the amount sued for and rendered judgment against the American Surety Company of New York, plaintiff in error, herein, as sureties on the replevy bond theretofore filed by said Bray Company. From this judgment the American Surety Company of New York sued out its writ of error to this court on June 8, 1911. Supersedeas bond was by plaintiff in error presented to and approved by the court and filed June 8, 1911."
It is added by the court that it is in some doubt as to the authority of the trial court to render judgment by default against the Bray Company and the sureties upon the replevy bond; and therefore the following question is submitted:
"Was the execution and filing of the replevy bond referred to by the Bray Company with the plaintiff in error, the American Surety Company of New York, as surety, such an appearance in the suit on the part of the Bray Company as authorized judgment by default against said company and its surety on said replevy bond?"
We think the question should be answered in the negative. There has never been an authoritative holding in this State that the mere filing of a replevy bond constitutes an appearance on the part of the defendant. There are two decisions holding that it does not amount to an appearance, one by the Court of Appeals, Wells v. Ames Iron Works, 3 Ct. App. C.C. (Willson), sec. 297, and the other by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District, Yett v. Green, 39 Texas Civ. App. 184[
Our statutes at one time provided two methods for a defendant's obtaining the release of attached property, — one by the filing of a replevy bond conditioned for the return of the property to satisfy the judgment (Paschal Digest, art. 150); and the other by giving a bail bond, denominated special bail, conditioned for the payment of the debt and interest (Id., art. 152). It was expressly provided in the latter article that the giving of special bail should be deemed an appearance. The distinction between the two classes of bonds was emphasized in Kennedy v. Morrison. There special bail had been given, and it was accordingly held that an appearance had been entered, it being stated in the same connection: *418 "Had he (the defendant) simply replevied the property, he would not necessarily have, ipso facto, acknowledged service of the petition."
The judicial attachment, as distinguished from the ordinary original attachment, was also at one time a feature of our law; whereby, if a defendant could not be found in the county, the plaintiff might sue out a writ of attachment to be levied on his property. Paschal's Digest, art. 139. That article provided that if a levy should be made under the writ and the defendant should fail to appear and plead within the time permitted by law, the plaintiff should be entitled to judgment as in ordinary suits. In a number of cases, Briggs v. Smith,
Neither special bail as a means of releasing property held under judicial seizure, nor the judicial attachment as a method of service upon a defendant, are now known to our law. But it is argued by counsel for the defendants in error that in the adoption of the present statutes and the repeal of those former articles, the Legislature intended that an original attachment sued out on the ground of non-residence of the defendant should still operate as a judicial attachment, with the same force as a substitute for service as formerly; and that the filing of a replevy bond should have the same effect as an appearance by the defendant as the giving of special bail, because of the similarity of the condition required to that of the bail bond.
Our present statutes in nowise provide for any such consequence, and an intention on the part of the Legislature just the contrary to that asserted is in our opinion to be presumed.
In the attachment of property of non-residents, notice of the suit in the mode prescribed by statute is, in the absence of an appearance, as indispensable an element of jurisdiction as seizure of the property. Under the laws of this State the levy upon property under a writ of attachment is not deemed notice of the cause of action on which judgment is sought; personal service, or notice by publication, is required. Stewart v. Anderson,
The fact that former article 156, Paschal's Digest, declaring that no judgment should be rendered in attachment suits unless the citation or summons had been served in the ordinary mode, or by publication in the manner provided by law, no longer is a distinct provision of the attachment laws, is of no influence. Such is equally the declaration of present article 1885, a part of the Act of 1846, which reads:
"No judgment shall, in any case, be rendered against any defendant unless upon service, or acceptance, or waiver of process, or upon an *419
appearance by the defendant, as prescribed in this chapter, except where otherwise expressly provided by law." Milburn v. Smith, 11 Texas Civ. App. 678[
The condition of the bail bond provided for in article 150, Paschal's Digest, as already noted, was for the payment of the debt and interest, and the giving of such a bond was, by express terms, made an appearance. A replevy bond under present article 258 is not required to be so conditioned. The obligation which it carries is alternative, that is, either to satisfy the judgment, or pay the value of the property seized with legal interest from the date of the bond. It would not be contended that more than the value of the property with legal interest could be recovered upon the bond if the judgment for the debt exceeded such value in amount. The bond is security for the debt only as and to the extent that the attached property was security for it under its seizure, with interest added. It simply takes the place of the property. Kildare Lumber Company v. Bank,
In some other jurisdictions it is held that the filing of a replevy bond is an appearance by the defendant in the suit, just as it has also been elsewhere held that in the attachment of property of non-residents, no notice other than its mere seizure is essential to the jurisdiction of the court, — a view apparently endorsed in Drake on Attachments, sec. 437, but repudiated in Stewart v. Anderson. But it is essentially a subject of statutory regulation. We have no such statutory provision; and in its absence, such effect, in our opinion, should not be given to the mere filing of such a bond.
The purpose of a replevy bond, its nature under our statute, and the relation of the property seized to the suit, for which the bond merely becomes the substitute, reasonably demonstrate that it is not to be treated, in itself, as an appearance in the suit. In cases of ordinary attachment the suit is upon a debt. The property is seized to satisfy the debt, and not because of the existence of any claim against the property itself. The issue in the suit is solely with respect to the debt. The property seized is in no way related to such issue. It is subjected to the attachment only because it is the defendant's property, and the judgment is paid out of it because of its having been brought within the custody of the law as security for such payment. The purpose of the replevy bond is to provide a remedy for the defendant, whereby he may procure the release of his property by placing the bond in the court in its stead. In giving the bond he does nothing in anywise related to the issue in the suit, or which has in any respect to do with the jurisdiction of the court over the cause of action, or the exercise of its jurisdiction. He invokes no action of the court. He makes no move in relation the cause of action. He does nothing which can in any way affect the cause of action. He merely places in the court that which the law says to him he may place there in lieu of his property. If the seizure of his property does not subject him to the court's jurisdiction, it is difficult to attach that consequence to an *420 act, in no way involving any issue in the case or its trial, which the law extends to him as a remedy for the release of his property. The right given by the statute to have his property restored by giving the bond is for the benefit of the defendant; and its exercise, wholly unrelated as it is to the cause of action or its determination, should in reason entail no result to his disadvantage which the law does not expressly declare.
The liability of the defendant on the bond is not to be confused with the liability sought to be adjudged against him on the cause of action. The right to subject the property to the payment of the debt under the attachment seizure being no part of the cause of action, the undertaking of the bond, the substitute for the property, becomes no part of it. The giving of the bond is an acknowledgment of liability under the bond, but it is a liability distinct from that of the cause of action. It is acknowledged only upon the condition of the liability under the latter being established, and is enforcible only in that event. It can hardly be said that an agreement of an obligor in a bond of this nature to be answerable upon it in the event he is cast upon a cause of action of which the bond is in no sense a part, necessarily indicates his acquiescence in the right of the court to subject him to the trial of such cause of action, or an intention to submit himself to its trial. The office of the bond under the statute is foreign to that of a waiver of any right which the defendant may have in relation to the cause of action asserted against him, and there should not be imposed upon the right to file it the consequence of such a waiver.
The fact that the sureties upon a replevy bond are subject to a judgment upon the bond without service of citation, as is generally held, furnishes no analogy in the determination of the question. The liability which is adjudged against them where the defendant is condemned in the suit, is upon the bond, and not upon the plaintiff's cause of action. They acknowledge such liability conditioned upon the defendant being so condemned when they execute the bond. There could be no reason for citation to them in respect to a liability which, in the execution of the bond, they agree the court may adjudge. They are answerable, without the necessity of any service, because the statute declares that judgment shall be rendered against them on the bond if the defendant is adjudged liable on the cause of action.
There would equally be no necessity for citation to the defendant if his liability upon the bond were the issue he is called upon to meet. But that is not the issue or any part of the issue which the court determines in the suit. The liability upon the bond does not become an issue. It exists as a matter of law once the defendant's liability on the cause of action is determined.
It is frequently stated in the cases that where property is attached and the defendant replevies it, the suit loses its character as an action in rem and proceeds as one in personam. This is true as affects the recovery on the bond. It is urged that unless the filing of a replevy *421 bond be given the force of an appearance by the defendant, a nonresident debtor, simply by replevying his attached property, may defeat the power of the court to subject it to the judgment, since no personal judgment may be validly rendered against a non-resident. If this were true, it would not for that reason warrant a holding that the filing of such bond is an appearance; for, if the law were lame in this particular, it would be a matter for correction at the hands of the Legislature rather than the courts. The question is not to be determined by the effect of its decision upon any particular class of cases. It is larger in its bearing than simply its relation to non-resident debtors. Our view is that in a case of the attachment of the property of a nonresident, the right of the court to subject the property to the judgment in virtue of its seizure, renders equally clear its authority to proceed against the bond as the equivalent of the property, to the extent of its value. If the result is the rendition of a personal judgment on the bond against a non-resident, it is in our opinion lawfully rendered, because of the undoubted right of the court under the statute, unaffected by any question concerning the residence of the defendant, to deal with the bond as it would with the property, and enforce it as the substitute for the property. It is unnecessary to determine this question. If there is any doubt as to the authority of the court to render judgment on the bond against a non-resident defendant, there can be none as to its right in such a case to render judgment against the sureties and thus enforce the bond. Revised Statutes, art. 1843.