191 S.W. 621 | Tex. App. | 1916
In the instant case the defendant had filed no answer. But it was not necessary, in order to obtain affirmative relief, that he should at any time have filed an answer asking such relief. If the case had been tried without being dismissed by plaintiff, and had been decided against him, the defendant would have been entitled to judgment on the replevy bond without filing any answer asking therefor, or in any wise referring thereto. R.S. art. 7111; Wandelohr v. Bank, 106 S.W. 413; Tyson v. Bank,
It is true, as suggested by appellant, that appellee might have treated the suit against him as abandoned, and have brought suit against the appellant and his sureties on the sequestration bond. But nothing could have been accomplished in such suit that could not as well have been accomplished in the suit already brought. It would at least have involved delay until the next term of court; and, in the meantime, it might have happened in this case, or in any case, that the plaintiff had moved out of the county, and that the bondsmen might be nonresidents, in which case the defendant would have to seek relief in some county other than that of his residence. It is certainly the spirit of the law that all of the issues in a sequestration suit should be settled in the original suit. To permit a party to acquire possession of property by a writ of sequestration, and then to dismiss his suit, thereby confessing that it should not have been brought, and to retain the property and not permit the defendant to recover his damages in such suit, would, we think, be an abuse of process.
We do not think the trial court erred in rendering judgment for appellee (Morris v. Anderson,
Affirmed.