270 S.W.2d 252 | Tex. App. | 1954
The appellee brought this suit in garnishment after judgment against appellant, a Texas corporation. Appellee in its affidavit for garnishment after judgment alleged substantially that it had previously recovered judgment against Freddie Atteberry, doing business as Atteberry Electric Company'; that such judgment was obtained in April, 1953, in the Justice Court of Harris County, Precinct No. 1, in Cause No. 10541, in the amount of $122.22, with legal interest from date of judgment, and costs; ■ that said judgment is finál and unsatisfied and that defendant has not, within affiant’s knowledge, property in its possession within this state subject to execution sufficient to satisfy the judgment. Said application for garnishment further set out that affiant has reason to believe that said Atteberry, Inc., whose principal place of business is in Velasco, Brazoria County, Texas, has in its possession effects belonging to the defendant. Writ of garnishment duly issued and was served on garnishee and it seasonably filed its plea of privilege in conformity with Rule 86, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, and prayed that its plea of privilege be sustained and that the cause be transferred to its domicile, which was in Precinct No. 2, Brazoria County, Texas, which plea of privilege was filed on May 23, 1953. The garnishee, subject to the action of the court on its plea of privilege, filed its answer on May 23, 1953. Thereafter, on the 1st day of June, 1953, the appellee filed what it designated as its controverting affidavit. This affidavit does in no wise controvert the plea of privilege filed by appellant, in that it wholly fails to set out specifically the grounds relied upon to confer venue of the cause in the Justice Court of Harris County where the cause is pending. See Rule 86, TRCP. It does state in effect that it is not satisfied with the answer made by the garnishee and has good reason to believe that such answer is incorrect and insufficient. The answer is challenged in three respects: (1) that appellee believes that the debtor, Freddie Atteberry, was the owner of certain capital stock of Atteberry, Inc.; (2) that the statement in the answer that certain persons owe F. L. Atteberry, individually, on accounts is insufficient in that it does not name such persons, and that plaintiff asked the court that the garnishee be required to name the persons indebted to F. L. Atte-berry and the amount of such indebtedness; and (3) that the answer limits such accounts as those owing to F. L. Atteberry individually and fails to answer as to those persons within its knowledge who are indebted to Atteberry Electric Company, and asked that the garnishee be required to name the persons so indebted to Atteberry Electric Company and the amount of such indebtedness. The transcript shows that the hearing on the plea of privilege was set for the 23rd of June, 1953 at 10:00. On the 18th of June, 1953 the garnishee filed its plea to the jurisdiction of the Justice Court, and on the same date garnishee filed its motion to quash the writ of garnishment; On June 23, 1953 the appellee filed its motion for judgment and the notation on the motion shows that it was granted and that the garnishee gave notice of appeal to the County Court at Law of Harris County. The transcript shows that a judgment was. entered in the Justice Court in this cause on the 23rd of June, 1953, but it does not show any disposition made of the plea of privilege. This judgment, among other things, recites: “On this the 23rd day of June, 1953, in the above entitled and numbered cause came the parties by their attorneys and presented to the Court garnishee’s. Plea to the Jurisdiction and Plaintiff’s Motion for Judgment; and it appearing to the Court that the garnishee was duly cited and served in the manner and form and for the time prescribed by law but had failed and refused to make answer as required by law to said writ heretofore issued herein.” The judgment then recites that appellee, as plaintiff, recovered judgment in the amount of $122.22, with legal interest from 27th of April 1953 until paid against F. L. Atte-berry, doing business as Atteberry Electric Company, and awards judgment in favor of appellee against the garnishee in the
Appellant’s Point 1 is to the effect that the court erred in not sustaining garnishee’s plea of privilege filed in due order when it was shown that garnishee was a resident of Brazoria County, Texas, and that the action was brought in Harris County, there being no exception to exclusive venue of the resident county of the defendant garnishee. Appellee’s Counter Point to Point 1 is: “The trial court did not err in overruling garnishee’s plea of privilege as to the issuance of the writ of garnishment because the writ of garnishment to satisfy a judgment can issue from no other court than that in which the judgment was rendered.” The trial of this case does not fit into any particular pattern that has come to our knowledge in the reported cases. Appellee wholly failed to follow the rules ■ relating to pleas of privilege as well as those relating to garnishment proceedings, and particularly
Assuming without deciding that the affidavit filed by appellee traversing the answer of the garnishee created a question of fact, the fact question therein raised would be controlled by Rule 675, TRCP, and would thereafter be tried under the provisions of Rule 676, TRCP, in the Justice Court of Brazoria County, Texas. See Pinkston v. Victoria State Bank & Trust Co., supra, and Snyder National Bank v. Pinkston, supra.
Accordingly, this cause is reversed and remanded to the County Court at Law of Harris County, Texas, with instructions to transfer this cause to the Justice Court, Precinct No. 2, of Brazoria County at Free-port, Texas; and the Justice Court there is instructed to permit the garnishee to file such amended answer as it deems pertinent, and that appellee be permitted to file such controverting answer and pleadings as it deems pertinent. Because of the views heretofore expressed, it is unnecessary to discuss the other points raised in appellant’s brief.
Reversed and remanded with instructions.