283 S.W. 189 | Tex. App. | 1926
Lead Opinion
Appellee in his fiduciary capacity, on May 24, 1922, was awarded a judgment against the Farmers’ & Merchants’ State Bank of Gustine, for $23,118.40 with decree against the banking commissioner for payment of such judgment out of the guaranty fund. The said bank prosecuted an appeal from the judgment against it, and a' supersedeas bond in statutory form was made with the American Surety Company as surety.
By virtue of the appeal, the judgment was removed to the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso, where the judgment of the trial court was reformed and affirmed. The banking commissioner joined in the appeal, but' did not purport to join in the bond as a principal obligor, but signed for the bank only.
The parts of the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals bearing directly on the questions material here are:
“ * * * And under the facts it appearing to the court that W. B. Conaway, guardian, should recover of the Farmers’ & Merchants’ State Bank of Gustine, Tex., his damages by reason of the conversion of bonds in the sum of $23,118.40, and it further appearing to the court that the said claim of Conaway as guardian should be classified as an unsecured claim and paid as such by the commissioner of banking and insurance of the state of Texas, in the process of liquidation of the assets and liabilities of the Farmers’ & Merchants’ State Bank of Gustine as prescribed by law:
“It is therefore considered, ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiff, W. B. Conaway, guardian of the estate of John Glenn Edmonson and Leona Edmonson, and for their use and benefit, do have and recover of and from the defendant the Farmers’ & Merchants’ State Bank of Gustine, Tex., the said sum of $23,118.40, with interest thereon from this date at the rate of 6 per cent., per annum until paid.
“It is further considered, adjudged, and decreed that the said Ed Hall, commissioner of banking and insurance, classify the said claim of the guardian as unsecured, and he is directed and ordered to pay the same in the process of the liquidation of the affairs of the said Farmers’ & Merchants’ State Bank of Gustine, Tex.y as provided by law.
“It is further considered, ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiff, W. B. Conaway, guardian, take nothing by his suit against the said Ed Hall, commissioner of banking and insurance of the state of Texas, wherein the said plaintiff seeks to establish his claim as a deposit secured by and entitled to payment out of the depositors’ guaranty fund of the state of Texas, and tliat as to the same the said Ed Hall, commissioner of banking and insurance, may go hence without day.”
“And because it is the opinion of this court that there was no other error in the judgment, it is therefore considered, adjudged, and ordered that the judgment of the court below, as hereinbefore reformed, be in all other respects affirmed; that the appellee W. B. Conaway, guardian of the estate of John Edmonson and Leona Edmonson, do have and recover of and from the appellant, Farmers’ & Merchants’ State Bank of Gustine, Tex., by and through Ed. Hall, commissioner of banking and insurance, and its surety, American Surety Company of New York, the amount adjudged by the court below. * * * ”
The opinion stating the reasons requiring the above judgment is reported under the style of Hall v. Conaway, ,252 S. W. 1105. After time for filing motion for rehearing had elapsed, appellee filed in said Court of Civil Appeals a motion for leave to file in said court a motion for rehearing praying that the judgment as to the liability of the surety company be made more explicit. This motion was denied.
The judgment as quoted became final, and, mandate not having issued and filed in the district court in time, became dormant.
This suit was instituted by appellee against the present banking commissioner, American Surety Company and said bank. The petition is in two counts. In both, the proceedings set out above in substance were pleaded in detail and relief for the debt evidenced by the judgment was sought. In the first count it was alleged that no dividends to plaintiff as an unsecured creditor had been declared or paid-by the commissioner, and no authority had been sought by him from the district court of Comanche county to pay any, and prayed that such dividends be ascertained and decree in plaintiff’s favor therefor, with judgment and execution against the surety company for the balance of the judgment. In the second count, both the defunct bank and the surety company were sued on the superse-deas bond and judgment referred to as for debt. It was further alleged that the surety company was denying liability for the amount of the judgment against the bank, except.for such dividends as might be due from the assets of the bank, and was being supported in this contention by the Attorney General, and thus rendering it impossible for appellee to collect the judgment from the surety company, as provided for by statute (article 4935, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. Supp. 1922), and that plaintiff was being impeded in the collection of his judgment by the defendants.
This rather prolix statement is required by the assignments challenging the sufficiency of the petition. No brief has been filed for the banking commissioner. The allegations of the petition are established by the evidence without contradiction.
Both appellants Austin and the surety company preserved pleas of privilege based on the proposition that the suit was in effect one for writ of mandamus to the head of a state department, and therefore venue was laid in Travis county. The failure of the banking commissioner to file briefs takes this question out of the case, as this plea was available to him.only.
The surety company had an agent in Comanche county, and was therefore suable there. The venue appears to have been properly laid. Kidder v. Hall, 251 S. W. 497, 113 Tex. 49; State Banking Board v. Pilcher (Tex. Civ. App.) 256 S. W. 996.
The remaining assignments are: (1) That the district court was without jurisdiction, either to entertain a second suit on the same cause of action, or to construe the judgment referred to, that power being lodged only in the court entering the decree. (2) That, if the suit can be maintained, the judgment as to the surety company is erroneous in that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals above quoted limits the amount to be recovered of the surety company to the amount of dividends available from assets of the bank in the hands of the commissioner, and not for the full amount of appellee’s debt against the bank, and that this construction had befen made of its judgment by the Court of Civil Appeals in refusing the motion by appellee to have that court more clearly state the effect of its decree.
It is well established that suit may be brought on a dormant judgment as for the debt represented by it, with judgment for the amount due and execution therefor. Bridge v. Samuelson, 11 S. W. 540, 73 Tex, 522; Bullock v. Ballew, 9 Tex. 500; Seymour v. Hill, 3 S. W. 314, 67 Tex. 385; Stein v. Frieberg, Klein & Co., 64 Tex. 273; Hale v. McComas, 59 Tex. 484; Witt v. Kaufman, 25 Tex. Supp. 384.
It is the further rule that, even, though a judgment is not dormant, suit may be maintained thereon where it is made to appear that a second judgment may be in any respect more available than the first. Stevens v. Stone, 60 S. W. 959, 94 Tex. 415, 86 Am. St. Rep. 861; Coleman v. Zapp, 151 S. W. 1043, 105 Tex. 491. This case appears to be well within the rule announced in the above cases.
But it is insisted that the district court could not construe the judgment of the appellate court. No authority has been cited sustaining this proposition, nor is it considered applicable here. The judgment under the statute must be enforced by the trial court. Burck v. Burroughs, 64 Tex. 445.
Appellants contend application should have been made for an order for an execution. Such a course would necessarily involve the construction of the judgment to the same extent as this action. The authorities cited above impliedly deny the proposition asserted. Jurisdiction to determine a suit on a judgment involves always the power to construe the judgment which is made the basis of the suit.
The assertion that the appellate judgment referred to limited the recovery against the surety company to the liability of the commissioner for dividends available as payments on appellee’s demand is based on that part of the judgment decreeing a recovery to appellee against Farmers’ & Merchants’ State Bank, “by and through Ed Hall.” The usual canons of construction are applied in construing judgments. The rule is stated in Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.) p. 132:
“While it can be neither sustained nor ex- ‘ plained by reference to the understanding of the parties, even though entered pursuant to stipulation, or the prior or subsequent statements of the court as to its intention when the judgment was rendered, nevertheless the effort should be to give effect to it in its entirety and to sustain the judgment as a whole where this can be done. While the opinion of the court is not part of the judgment it may, in case of uncertainty or ambiguity, be referred to for the purpose of construing the judgment, particularly where the law requires the judge to state his reasons for the judgment, as in the case of an opinion by an appellate court, or where the judgment itself refers to the opinion in such a way as to make it part of the record. It is always proper to consider what the judgment should have been since it will be presumed that the court intended to adjudge correctly in law upon the facts of the case, and of two possible interpretations of the language of the judgment, that one will be adopted which makes it correct and valid, in preference to one which would make it erroneous.”
In the light of the rule as stated, no such construction can be given1 the judgment considered as contended for. The opinion stated that the judgment of the trial court against the bank should be affirmed. The judgment did likewise. The fact that the corporation was insolvent and in the hands of a statutory receiver in no wise prevented appellee from obtaining a decree against it for the full amount of his demand. Nor do the words “by and through Ed Hall” limit the amount of the
Lead Opinion
Appellee in his fiduciary capacity, on May 24, 1922, was awarded a judgment against the Farmers' Merchants' State Bank of Gustine, for $23,118.40 with decree against the banking commissioner for payment of such judgment out of the guaranty fund. The said bank prosecuted an appeal from the judgment against it, and a supersedeas bond in statutory form was made with the American Surety Company as surety.
By virtue of the appeal, the judgment was removed to the Court of Civil Appeals at El Paso, where the judgment of the trial court was reformed and affirmed. The banking commissioner joined in the appeal, but did not purport to join in the bond as a principal obligor, but signed for the bank only.
The parts of the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals bearing directly on the questions material here are:
"* * * And under the facts it appearing to the court that W. B. Conaway, guardian, should recover of the Farmers' Merchants' State Bank of Gustine, Tex., his damages by reason of the conversion of bonds in the sum of $23,118.40, and it further appearing to the court that the said claim of Conaway as guardian should be classified as an unsecured claim and paid as such by the commissioner of banking and insurance of the state of Texas, in the process of liquidation of the assets and liabilities of the Farmers' Merchants' State Bank of Gustine as prescribed by law:
"It is therefore considered, ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiff, W. B. Conaway, guardian of the estate of John Glenn Edmonson and Leona Edmonson, and for their use and benefit, do have and recover of and from the defendant the Farmers' Merchants' State Bank of Gustine, Tex., the said sum of $23,118.40, with interest thereon from this date at the rate of 6 per cent., per annum until paid.
"It is further considered, adjudged, and decreed that the said Ed Hall, commissioner of banking and insurance, classify the said claim of the guardian as unsecured, and he is directed and ordered to pay the same in the process of the liquidation of the affairs of the said Farmers' Merchants' State Bank of Gustine, Tex., as provided by law.
"It is further considered, ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiff, W. B. Conaway, guardian, take nothing by his suit against the said Ed Hall, commissioner of banking and insurance of the state of Texas, wherein the said plaintiff seeks to establish his claim as a deposit secured by and entitled to payment out of the depositors' guaranty fund of the state of Texas, and that as to the same the said Ed Hall, commissioner of banking and insurance, may go hence without day."
"And because it is the opinion of this court that there was no other error in the judgment, it is therefore considered, adjudged, and ordered that the judgment of the court below, as hereinbefore reformed, be in all other respects affirmed; that the appellee W. B. Conaway, guardian of the estate of John Edmonson and Leona Edmonson, do have and recover of and from the appellant, Farmers' Merchants' State Bank of Gustine, Tex., by and through Ed. Hall, commissioner of banking and insurance, and its surety, American Surety Company of New York, the amount adjudged by the court below. * * *"
The opinion stating the reasons requiring the above judgment is reported under the style of Hall v. Conaway,
The judgment as quoted became final, and, mandate not having issued and filed in the district court in time, became dormant.
This suit was instituted by appellee against the present banking commissioner, American Surety Company and said bank. The petition is in two counts. In both, the proceedings set out above in substance were pleaded in detail and relief for the debt evidenced by the judgment was sought. In the first count it was alleged that no dividends to plaintiff as an unsecured creditor had been declared or paid by the commissioner, and no authority had been sought by him from the district court of Comanche county to pay any, and prayed that such dividends be ascertained and decree in plaintiff's favor therefor, with judgment and execution against the surety company for the balance of the judgment. In the second count, both the defunct bank and the surety company were sued on the supersedeas bond and judgment referred to as for debt. It was further alleged that the surety company was denying liability for the amount of the judgment against the bank, except for such dividends as might be due from the assets of the bank, and was being supported in this contention by the Attorney General, and thus rendering it impossible for appellee to collect the judgment from the surety company, as provided for by statute (article 4935, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. Supp. 1922), and that plaintiff was being impeded in the collection of his judgment by the defendants. *192
The trial was before the court and judgment was in favor of appellee for the amount of the former judgment, with interest against the bank and surety company, and against appellant Austin in his representative capacity, to the extent of the assets of said bank available for payment of appellee's demand; the judgment against the surety company to be credited with amounts paid by the commissioner and for subrogation in favor of the surety.
This rather prolix statement is required by the assignments challenging the sufficiency of the petition. No brief has been filed for the banking commissioner. The allegations of the petition are established by the evidence without contradiction.
Both appellants Austin and the surety company presented pleas of privilege based on the proposition that the suit was in effect one for writ of mandamus to the head of a state department, and therefore venue was laid in Travis county. The failure of the banking commissioner to file briefs takes this question out of the case, as this plea was available to him only.
The surety company had an agent in Comanche county, and was therefore suable there. The venue appears to have been properly laid. Kidder v. Hall,
The remaining assignments are: (1) That the district court was without jurisdiction, either to entertain a second suit on the same cause of action, or to construe the judgment referred to, that power being lodged only in the court entering the decree. (2) That, if the suit can be maintained, the judgment as to the surety company is erroneous in that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals above quoted limits the amount to be recovered of the surety company to the amount of dividends available from assets of the bank in the hands of the commissioner, and not for the full amount of appellee's debt against the bank, and that this construction had been made of its judgment by the Court of Civil Appeals in refusing the motion by appellee to have that court more clearly state the effect of its decree.
It is well established that suit may be brought on a dormant judgment as for the debt represented by it, with judgment for the amount due and execution therefor. Bridge v. Samuelson,
It is the further rule that, even though a judgment is not dormant, suit may be maintained thereon where it is made to appear that a second judgment may be in any respect more available than the first. Stevens v. Stone,
But it is insisted that the district court could not construe the judgment of the appellate court. No authority has been cited sustaining this proposition, nor is it considered applicable here. The judgment under the statute must be enforced by the trial court. Burck v. Burroughs,
Appellants contend application should have been made for an order for an execution. Such a course would necessarily involve the construction of the judgment to the same extent as this action. The authorities cited above impliedly deny the proposition asserted. Jurisdiction to determine a suit on a judgment involves always the power to construe the judgment which is made the basis of the suit.
The assertion that the appellate judgment referred to limited the recovery against the surety company to the liability of the commissioner for dividends available as payments on appellee's demand is based on that part of the judgment decreeing a recovery to appellee against Farmers' Merchants' State Bank, "by and through Ed Hall." The usual canons of construction are applied in construing judgments. The rule is stated in Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.) p. 132:
"While it can be neither sustained nor explained by reference to the understanding of the parties, even though entered pursuant to stipulation, or the prior or subsequent statements of the court as to its intention when the judgment was rendered, nevertheless the effort should be to give effect to it in its entirety and to sustain the judgment as a whole where this can be done. While the opinion of the court is not part of the judgment it may, in case of uncertainty or ambiguity, be referred to for the purpose of construing the judgment, particularly where the law requires the judge to state his reasons for the judgment, as in the case of an opinion by an appellate court, or where the judgment itself refers to the opinion in such a way as to make it part of the record. It is always proper to consider what the judgment should have been since it will be presumed that the court intended to adjudge correctly in law upon the facts of the case, and of two possible interpretations of the language of the judgment, that one will be adopted which makes it correct and valid, in preference to one which would make it erroneous."
In the light of the rule as stated, no such construction can be given the judgment considered as contended for. The opinion stated that the judgment of the trial court against the bank should be affirmed. The judgment did likewise. The fact that the corporation was insolvent and in the hands of a statutory receiver in no wise prevented appellee from obtaining a decree against it for the full amount of his demand. Nor do the words "by and through Ed Hall" limit the amount of the *193
liability of the corporation. Upon affirmance of the judgment against the bank, it became the plain duty of the court to render judgment against the sureties on the appeal bond. Vernon's Sayles', art. 1627; Burton v. Sells (Tex.Civ.App.)
The judgment provides that the dividend declared in favor of the minors of $1,155 shall be paid into the registry of the court. This is the dividend declared by appellant Austin, and there is nothing in the record to show that such dividend includes interest not allowable. The further provision of the judgment as affecting said appellant requires payment in such registry of dividends available in the further liquidation of the insolvent bank. This does not undertake to direct the amount or character of such dividends, but leaves the amount to appellant's discretion.
The further contention that the court erred in allowing the $1,155 tendered as a credit as of the time when paid into the registry of the court instead of when tendered is correct and must be sustained. Obviously the tender was refused because of the surety company's claim that it would satisfy the judgment. Such would not have been the effect of acceptance of such dividend by appellee. The tender should have the effect of stopping interest on the amount tendered from that date.
We adhere to the conclusion announced in the original opinion that Burck v. Burroughs,
Appellants prosecuted a joint appeal. Appellant surety company does not assign error to the action of the court herein declared to be erroneous in allowing credit for the dividends and the judgment should be affirmed as to it. It will be presumed that the parties prosecuting a joint appeal share equally in expense thereof.
Therefore the judgment of the trial court will be reformed so as to allow credit for the $1,155 dividend as of September 2, 1923, and as so reformed the judgment will be affirmed, with one-half the cost of appeal taxed against appellees. In all other respects, the motion of both appellants for rehearing will be overruled.
Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
The statement in the opinion that appellant Austin had not briefed the appeal was made in error. Such briefs were overlooked, although what was considered to be a diligent search was made of the files. Appellant Austin’s briefs have since been eare-fuly considered. The same propositions are advanced by Austin as were made by the surety company, with the exception of two. These are that the judgment was erroneous, in that it allowed appellee interest on.his claim from the date of the original judgment, and that interest to be paid out of assets in the commissioner’s hands is not. allowable after date of insolvency, and that the dividend of $1,155 tendered by the commissioner should be credited on the amount adjudged appellee as of the date of the tender, and not when paid into the registry of the court as provided in the judgment. The first contention should be overruled, because the judgment does not specifically allow interest after the date of the first judgment as against the assets in the hands of appellant Austin.
The judgment provides that the dividend declared in favor of the minors of $1,155 shall be paid into the registry of the court. This is the dividend declared by appellant Austin, and there is nothing in the record to show that such dividend includes interest not allowable. The further provision of the judgment as affecting said appellant requires payment in such registry of dividends available in the further liquidation of the insolvent bank. This does not undertake to direct the amount or character of such dividends, but leaves the amount to appellant’s discretion.
The further contention that the court erred in allowing the $1,155 tendered as a credit as of the time when paid into the registry of the court instead of when tendered is correct and must be sustained. Obviously the tender was refused because of the surety company’s claim that it would satisfy the judgment. Such would not have been the effect of acceptance of such dividend by appellee. The tender should have the effect of stopping interest on the amount tendered froril that date.
We adhere to the conclusion announced in the original opinion that Burck v. Burroughs, 64 Tex. 443, does not support the contention that the tidal court was without jurisdiction to entertain appellee’s petition, and see no reason to argue the question further. The venue was properly laid under State Banking Board v. Pilcher (Tex. Civ. App.) 256 S. W. 996.
Appellants prosecuted a joint appeal. Appellant surety company does not assign error to the action of the court herein declared to be erroneous in allowing credit for the dividends and the judgment should be affirmed as to it. It will be presumed that the parties prosecuting a joint appeal share equally in expense thereof.
Therefore the judgment of the trial court will be reformed so as to allow credit for the $1,155 dividend as of September 2, 1923, and as so reformed the judgment will be affirmed, with one-half the cost of appeal taxed against appellees. In all other respects, the motion of both appellants for rehearing will be overruled.