125 S.W. 620 | Tex. App. | 1910
By his suit Dorroh, the plaintiff below, sought to recover sums aggregating $540.38, alleged to be due to him from Bailey on promissory notes made by the latter. After he had instituted his suit Dorroh procured the issuance of a writ of attachment, which, it appears from the officer's return made thereupon, was levied upon two bales of lint cotton weighing respectively 500 and 520 pounds, cotton "in the field" estimated to be a quantity sufficient to make one light bale, a bay mare valued at $50, a wagon valued at $50, found in Bailey's possession, and two bales of lint cotton marked "No. 511" and "No. 512" found in the possession of one Mings. In his answer Bailey alleged that the "cotton in the field," levied upon by virtue of the writ, was ungathered at the time it was levied upon, and was exempt to him because it had been grown upon and was then upon land constituting a part of his homestead; and he further alleged that the wagon levied upon was exempt to him because he was the head of a family and owned no other wagon. Appellee W. H. Hamlett sought to intervene in the suit, and in his petition *283 alleged, as grounds entitling him to intervene, that Bailey was indebted to him in sums aggregating $258.70, to secure which he had, prior to the time the writ of attachment was levied, executed and delivered to him (Hamlett) a chattel mortgage on "five acres of cotton grown and cultivated by defendant on his farm during the year 1908; that the said cotton was planted, grown and matured, and was thereafter baled, and that intervener's said mortgage lien fully attached, and was, at and before the time of the levy of the attachment herein by plaintiff, a valid and subsisting and unsatisfied mortgage lien on the said cotton as described in the return of the officer levying said attachment, and was also a valid and subsisting lien, unsatisfied, on the horse described in said officer's return, which is and was the same horse described in intervener's said mortgage lien." In his petition said Hamlett further alleged that Bailey had, before the issuance and levy of the writ of attachment, sold and delivered to him (Hamlett) the two bales of cotton described in the officer's return as marked "No. 511" and "No. 512." He attached as an exhibit to his petition in intervention the mortgage referred to therein, and prayed for a judgment against Dorroh for the two bales of cotton marked "No. 511" and "No. 512," and for the value of the other property levied upon by virtue of the writ of attachment and covered by the mortgage; and for a judgment against Bailey for the unpaid part of the debt secured by the mortgage, and foreclosing same as against all the property covered by it. In a supplemental petition Dorroh excepted to Hamlett's petition in intervention on the ground that it showed no interest in Hamlett in the subject matter of the suit. The exception was overruled. In a trial amendment Dorroh alleged that, to secure one of the notes he sued upon, Bailey had executed and delivered to him a mortgage on "one 2 3/4-inch Espenchied wagon, brake, seat and bed." The judgment of the court on the verdict of a jury was in favor of Dorroh against Bailey for the sum sued for by the former, and foreclosing in favor of Dorroh the mortgage lien claimed by him on the wagon; in favor of Hamlett against Bailey for the sum claimed by the former to be due to him by the latter, and foreclosing in favor of Hamlett the mortgage lien claimed by him against a horse, two mules, two bales of the cotton and five-sixths interest in the "cotton in the field," levied on by virtue of the writ of attachment; in favor of Hamlett against Dorroh and the sureties on a replevy bond executed by them to obtain the possession of a portion of the property levied upon by virtue of the writ of attachment; and in favor of Bailey for one-sixth interest in the "cotton in the field." The two bales of cotton marked "No. 511" and "No. 512" were decreed to be property belonging to said Hamlett. The appeal is by Dorroh.
After stating the case as above. — We think the court erred in overruling appellant's demurrer to the petition in intervention of appellee Hamlett, on the ground that it did not appear from the allegations in said petition that said Hamlett had an interest in the subject matter of appellant's suit against appellee Bailey, to wit, the alleged indebtedness of the latter to the former. Fisher Weis v. Bogarth, 2 *284
App. C. C., secs. 120 and 121; Jaffray v. Meyer, 1 Ohio App. C. C., secs. 1350 and 1351; Stansell v. Fleming,
The conclusion reached renders it unnecessary to consider other assignments. The judgment will be reversed and the cause will be remanded with instructions to the court below to dismiss appellee Hamlett's petition in intervention, and to try the case anew on the issues between appellant and appellee Bailey.
Reversed and remanded.