Appellee sued the Fred Mercer Dry Goods Company and Fred Mercer for actual and exemplary damages alleged to be the result of the wrongful and malicious issuance and levy, without probable cause, of a writ of sequestration upon certain personal property of the appellee exempt from' forced sale and seizure, and for which he; sought actual damages in the sum of $340 and exemplary damages in the sum of $1,000. Appellants, after exceptions and the general demurrer, pleaded that appellee had falsely alleged the amount of his damages for the purpose of fraudulently conferring jurisdiction upon the trial court, and that the matters charged in the petition were res judicata. There was trial to jury, which in special verdict awarded appellee as actual damages $150 for the mules, and $27 for their use from the date appellant re-plevied them until they were converted, or a period of 48 days, and $225 as exemplary damages. Judgment followed verdict.
The substance of the facts adduced at trial and necessary to be related are these: At the instigation of Fred Mercer the Fred Mercer Dry Goods Company, a private corporation, sued appellee in justice court for $70, alleged to be an unpaid balance on a note for $350, secured in payment by chattel mortgage on certain live stock, etc. In aid of the suit Fred Mercer made affidavit and procured the execution of bond by the Fred Mercer Dry Goods Company in sequestration, upon which the justice of the peace issued the writ, and which at the direction of Fred Mercer was by the constable levied upon two mules of appellee. The Fred Mercer Dry Goods Company, acting through Fred Mercer, replevied the mules. Upon trial in the justice court verdict was against appellent on its claim and for appellee for damages for $15 and the return of the mules replevied by appellants. Appellants appealed the ease to the county court. Pending trial there Fred Mercer, without order or other authority from the county court, sold the mules and converted the proceeds. Before trial in the county court appellee amended ‘his pleading and abandoned his plea in reeonvention for damages. Upon trial in that court verdict was against appellant on its claim against ap-pellee, followed by judgment discharging ap-pellee from all liability thereon and awarding him costs. From such judgment appellant appealed to this court (
Upon trial the court admitted in evidence the pleadings of the parties in the justice and county courts and the judgments of those courts in the proceeding instituted by appellants. In that connection the appellants requested the courts to charge the jury that the proceedings so introduced were not conclusive of the issues on trial, but that they must determine from the evidence introduced what, if any, actual or exemplary damages appel-lee suffered without regard to the result in the justice court. We conclude that the change was properly refused. The pleadings in the justice and county courts disclosed no more than, that appellee asserted and appellants denied that the writ was wrongfully procured, and the judgments that the jury in each trial determined that issue favorably to appellee.
By exception and attack upon the court’s charge the contention is made that appellee was not entitled to recover as exemplary damages attorney’s fees, expenses, and loss of time resulting from the original suit. The court charged the jury, that, if they found ap-pellee under the court’s instructions was entitled to exemplary damages, they could consider “the time and expense reasonably incurred” by appellee in “defending the title and possession of the property seized” in the former suit. Appellee testified that he had expended in the former suits approximately $40, and was compelled to employ an attorney for all three trials, and one for the trial in the district court or the present suit.
“That in actions for malicious trespasses on personal property vindicatory or corrective damages may be awarded is a rule as old as it is firmly established. ‘Compensation,’ in the legal and technical signification of the term, is not deemed a sufficient recompense for injuries of this character.” Cole v. Tucker,6 Tex. 266 .
There are several assignments of error which we have not discussed for the reason that they involve questions already disposed of or are, in our opinion, without merit, including the plea to the jurisdiction and the claim that the verdict of the jury is without support in the evidence.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
<§35>For other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
<S=»For other oases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
