69 Tex. 580 | Tex. | 1888
This was a statutory proceeding to try the right of property in a soda fount and fixtures levied on under attachment sued out by the appellant against Frank ■Chase, and. which were claimed by the appellee, who made affidavit and gave bond as required by law. In the bond, as well as in the indorsement made by the sheriff thereon, the property was valued at four hundred dollars, and the bond, together with the affidavit, was returned by the sheriff into the county court of Washington county for a trial of the cause. The judge of that court was disqualified to sit in the case, and it was transferred to the district court of Washington county. A trial in that court resulted in a judgment in favor of the appellant that the property was subject to the attachment, and its value was fixed at six hundred and twenty-eight dollars. Appellant also recovered sixty-two dollars and eighty cents damages and all costs of suit. The judgment directed that it might be satisfied by a return within ten days of the property and the payment of damages and costs and the sum of sixty
It was objected below and is urged here that the district court had no jurisdiction of the cause, for the reason that the value of the property in controversy was over five hundred dollars,, and the county court, from which the case was removed,- could not take cognizance of it. The statute provides that if the assessed value of the property claimed shall be over two hundred; dollars and less than five hundred dollars, the case shall be-tried in the county court (Revised Statutes, article 4831); audit further provides that the assessment shall be made by the-officer levying the writ. (Id., 4823.) There is in the statement, of fact what purports to be a valuation made by the sheriff on the writ of attachment, which is greater than five hundred dollars; but this does not seem to be signed by that officer, and the-date when it was made does not clearly appear. If it did, we think the valuation indorsed on the bond, and upon which the sheriff acted in receiving it, is the best evidence of the amount at which he assessed the property. His assessment, too, and not the subsequently proven value of the goods should determine-the jurisdiction, at least where no fraud has been attempted—
It is further objected that the appellee could not so amend his pleadings as to claim in this action the damages he recovered below. That such an amendment is not proper in an action for the trial of the right of property. The right to amend in our practice is not confined to any particular character of actions. The settlement in one suit of all controversies growing out of the subject matter in dispute is always encouraged. The claimant had a right to damages growing out of the illegal seizure of his property. This cause of action was germain to the subject matter of the controversy, and there was no necessity for subjecting the parties to the costs and trouble of another action to remedy a wrong inflicted by the institution of the suit then before the court. It was said in Peticolas v. Carpenter, 53 Texas, 29, that whatever relief a party is entitled to on reversal of judgment may be granted in the same case without resorting to a new suit; which is decisive of the point under discussion. The objection is not well taken.
The important question in the case is as to the amount of damages the appellee was entitled to recover. It is settled that money paid upon a judgment afterward reversed may be recovered by the party making the payment. (Clark v. Pinney, 6 Cowen, 297; Williams v. Simmons, 22 Ala., 425; 13 S. & R., 292; 24 Wendell, 32.)
The payment being made to prevent the sale of the defendant’s property under execution is not considered voluntary, though the judgment was erroneous, and upon reversal, is treated as if it had never existed. (Bank of United States v.
It is pretty well settled that when the plaintiff has purchased at the sale, upon reversal the defendant may recover from him the property itself, or its value • if it has been alienated (Freeman on Judgments, sec. 482; McJilton v. Son, 13 Ill., 495); and it is equally well settled that a purchase by third parties will not be disturbed, but the defendant must look to the plaintiff, who caused the seizure and sale of his property, for redress. As to the measure of this redress there is some conflict of authority. Quite a number of courts hold that the recovery is limited to the amount the property brought at execution sale. (38 N. H., 171; 51 Me., 154.) It is held by others that the defendant may recover the full value of the property sold. (Thompson v. Mahan, 1 N. J., Law, 159; Grayson v. Lilly, 77 B. Monroe, 6.) This is the law as announced by an eminent text writer, and seems to be supported by sound principles. (1 Suth. on Dam., p. 831.) Nothing less than this will restore the defendant to his condition before the seizure occurred. He was then in possession of the property, or enjoying the benefits of its ownership. It was worth to him, not what it would bring at forced sale under the sheriff’s hammer, for then it might, and ordinarily would, sell for much less than its value, but it was worth to him at least what it would bring at private sale, as he could convert it into money for that amount. The judgment does not protect the plaintiff in converting the defendant’s property to his own use.' He must account to the full extent of the injury he has inflicted, not for the amount merely that he or his agents have reaped as the fruits of their illegal act, or the sum at which this act has caused the property to be sacrificed.
The principle upon which the cases holding a different view proceed, seems to be that the plaintiff should have paid off the judgment and prevented a sacrifice of his property. (Gay v. Smith, 38 New Hampshire, 178.)
It would certainly be wrong to require a defendant to satisfy an entire judgment to prevent the seizure and sale of property not worth more than a small portion of the recovery; or to force
The doctrine announced is peculiarly applicable to the present case. Here the property of Tufts was seized by the appellant to satisfy the debt of a third party. He was driven to the alternative of yielding up possession immediately and having it sold for this debt, or to giving a bond with security, thus to surrender it after judgment against him, in order to retain possession. He chose the latter course. An improper judgment was rendered, subjecting his property to another’s debt. The property, under the conditions of the bond and the provisions of the judgment, had to be surrendered to the sheriff in ten days, or its value would be collected by an execution to be issued immediately thereafter. The claimant surrendered the property, under the rigid requirements of the law, based upon a judgment which was illegally rendered against him, as was afterwards determined by this court. He was not bound to prosecute an appeal on a writ of error until after the time expired for the enforcement of the judgment,* and the plaintiff enforced it at the peril of having to respond in damages if the judgment should be set aside by the Supreme Court. It was not necessary for the appellee to protest or give notice of his intention to appeal it, at or before the delivery of the property. The appellant was -charged with notice that he might do so, and, so far as the latter was concerned, an obligation to refund was created at the very time of the surrender. The appellant, in our view, was entitled to at least as much protection as an execution debtor, whose property is about to be seized to pay a debt claimed to be due from himself. (Bank of United States v. Bank of Arlington, 6 Peters, 19.) He was therefore entitled, upon the reversal of the judgment to be restored to the position he occupied before he complied with the requirements of the bad judgment, and that, in order to make him whole, he should have recovered, as he did in the court below, the value of the soda fount and fixtures, in the state they were when returned to the sheriff, as 'veil as the damages and costs paid by him together, with interest. We are not prepared to say that the court was cor
Affirmed.
Opinion delivered January 31, 1888.