delivered the opinion of the Court.
The trial court sustained the motion of respondent Bertha Otterstetter, defendant in the principal suit, to quash a writ of garnishment issued on the application of petitioner Exie M. Cleveland, plaintiff in that suit, against respondent San Antonio Building and Loan Association as garnishee. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment.
As stated in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, only two questions are presented for decision: The first, whether the cause of action as set out in petitioner’s pleadings is one that
The trial court in quashing the writ of garnishment sustained the contention made by respondent that the pleadings of Exie M. Cleveland as plaintiff in the principal suit alleged an action in tort for fraud and deceit and not a liquidated demand for debt, and that the issuance of the writ of garnishment was unauthorized. To determine the nature of the clause of action alleged in the principal suit we may look both to the original petition, which was on file when the writ of garnishment was issued, and to the fourth amended original petition, Which was on file when the motion to quash was heard and acted upon. Kildare Lumber Company v. Atlanta Bank,
According to Subdivision 2 of Article 4076 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, the writ of garnishment may be issued “where the plaintiff sues for a debt” and makes the affidavit required to be made by that subdivision. Does the petitioner in this case sue for a debt within the meaning of the statute ?
The substance of the allegations of the plaintiff’s original petition is as follows: The defendant Bertha Otterstetter, in March, 1946, by fraud and deceit induced the plaintiff to pay her $2,000.00 in cash as consideration for the purchase of the business and contents of a rooming and boarding house in the City of San Antonio rented by the defendant from the owner of the premises. The defendant, although fully informed at the time the purchase was made by the plaintiff that the owner of the premises had applied to the San Antonio office of the “O.P.A. Rent Control” for a certificate of eviction to effect major improvements on the premises, and that because of the application the business could not be operated in the premises after June 4, 1946, concealed those facts from the plaintiff, represented to her that the right to occupy the premises would not be terminated in the foreseeable future, and by misrepresentation induced the plaintiff not to make investigation. The order was made by the rent control authority and the right to occupy the premises was terminated on June 4, 1946. Because of the scarcity of housing facilities in San Antonio, the plaintiff was not able to obtain other property in which to operate a rooming and boarding house business, and the equipment, the contents of the house, was of no value whatever with no opportunity to use it in other premises, whereby she was damaged in the
The plaintiff’s fourth amended petition makes in greater detail substantially the same allegations of fact as those contained in the original petition. It alleges further that the defendant left San Antonio to be gone for an indefinite period of time, and that because the plaintiff did not know where the defendant could be found until about two or three days before this suit was brought, she could not give the defendant notice of rescission except by suit. She asks for rescission and recovery of the $2,000.00 paid, offering to return the property that she received from the defendant. In the alternative she sues for damages.
The statute authorizing the issuance of the writ of garnishment and that relating to the issuance of the writ of attachment, Article 275, have not been construed as authorizing the writs to be issued only when the plaintiff’s suit is technically an action for debt. Neither of the writs may be issued when the suit is for damages for tort, but they may be issued when the plaintiff’s claim arises out of contract either express or implied, and the demand is liquidated, that is, the amount of the claim is not contingent, is capable of being definitely ascertained by the usual means of evidence, and does not rest in the discretion of the jury. Wise & Jackson v. Nott,
The instant suit is not, except incidentally or in the alternative, an action in tort for damages suffered on account of the
The Court of Civil Appeals held that the plaintiff’s demand is not one for money had and received and is not a suit for debt as that term is used in Article 4076, because the plaintiff must prove allegations of fraud and deceit and because no rescission of the contract by agreement or otherwise had been effected before the suit was filed: A California decision above cited (McCall v. Superior Court, 1 Cal. (2d) 527,
We agree with the ruling of the Court of Civil Appeals that respondent Bertha Otterstetter, defendant in the trial court, should have been permitted, as she was, to attack the writ of garnishment by motion to quash, without first replevying the impounded fund. There is conflict in the decisions of the courts of civil appeals on this question. The ruling of the Court of Civil Appeals herein follows the decisions of the Eastland Court in First National Bank of Munday v. Quinn,
We believe, as did the Court of Civil Appeals in this case, that the better reasoning supports the holding of the Eastland and El Paso Courts. Rule 664, formerly Article 4084, authorizes the defendant in the principal suit, at any time before judgment, to “replevy any effects, debts, shares, or claims of any kind, seized or garnisheed, by giving bond * * * payable to the plaintiff in' double the amount of the plaintiff’s debt”, and also provides that “in all proceedings in garnishment where the defendant gives bond, as herein provided for, such defendant may make any defense which the defendant in garnishment could make in such suit.” The provision last quoted seems to be the basis of the decision of the Amarillo Court of Civil Appeals in Wasson v. Harris,
Neither Rule 664 nor any other rule expressly requires that the defendant execute a replevy bond before he is permitted to attack the garnishment proceedings, and in our opinion there is no good reason for the implication of such a requirement. The defendant is directly interested. It in his property that is
It is true that application for writ of error in Margerum v. Sopher,
The judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and the district court áre reversed and the cause is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Opinion delivered October 5, 1949.
No motion for rehearing filed.
