66 Tex. 621 | Tex. | 1886
Leon & H. Blum, appellants, and three other mercantile firms, having separate claims against appellees, Goldman & Son, for goods sold, joined in this suit in the court below against Goldman & Son, and also against Forgotsen and Weinstein, both of whom are also appellees in this court. The petition fully set out the several causes of action of plaintiffs against the defendants, Goldman & Son, and then proceeded to allege, that defendants, Forgot-sen and Weinstein, had conspired with their co-defendants to defraud the creditors of the latter, and in pursuance of such conspiracy had caused a large amount of goods belonging to said co-defendants to be sold under fraudulent attachments, and were in possession of the proceeds. Exceptions were interposed on the ground of a misjoinder of parties, and also on the ground that no cause of action was shown against Weinstein and Forgotsen. The exceptions having been sustained, plaintiffs filed a trial amendment, which it is not necessary to notice further. The exceptions were again sustained, and plaintiffs declining further to answer, judgment was rendered for defendants. The action of the court in sustaining the exceptions to the petition as amended is assigned as error.
That plaintiffs could not join in a suit upon their several causes of action against Goldman & Son only, is quite too clear for argument, and it follows that if the petition shows no ground of action against Forgotsen and Weinstein, the exception to it for misjoinder of plaintiffs was well taken, and there was no error in sustaining it. Is there any cause of action shown against Forgotsen and Weinstein? Plaintiffs sued as simple contract creditors of the Goldmans, and obtained
This relieves us of the necessity of discussing this question. The exceptions to the entire petition as amended were properly sustained. But it is also assigned as error, that, after the action of the court upon the exceptions, all the plaintiffs except Leon & H. Blum dismissed their suits in open court, leaving appellants the sole plaintiffs in the cause, and that the court erred in sustaining the exceptions after such dismissal by the other plaintiffs, and in not allowing appellants to prosecute their suits to judgment, at least against Goldman & Son. To the judgment of the court appellants excepted in open court, and their exception was entered of record upon the minutes. They also procured and filed a bill of exceptions to the same, stating the grounds of their complaint. It is to be noted that the judgment recites, that, after the exceptions were sustained to the petition as amended by the trial amendment, plaintiffs declined further to amend. Predicated upon this recital, immediately follows the judgment that the exceptions be sustained and that plaintiffs take nothing, etc., and that defendants recover their costs.
Then follows the declaration that plaintiffs (except Leon & H. Blum) dismiss their suit, and that the latter except to the judgment, etc. The bill of exceptions recites substantially the same facts, but states, as the grounds of exception, that there were no proper parties before the court, and that there was a proper cause of action set up by plaintiffs, and that they were not improperly joined.
It may be conceded that, if after the exceptions to the amended petition were sustained, and after their co-plaintiffs had dismissed their suit, appellants had asked a ruling upon the exceptions, and that they alone be permitted to proceed to judgment, the court should have overruled the exceptions to the petition in so far as it asked judgment in favor of appellants against Goldman & Son. But it appears affirmatively that plaintiffs declined to amend, and it no where appears that plaintiffs, in any manner, indicated to the court that they desired a judgment against the Goldmans only. On the contrary, it is shown by the record that they excepted to the judgment of the court upon other grounds.
It is also assigned as error, in substance, that the court erred in proceeding to judgment, when the record disclosed that one of the partners of the firm of J. Goldman & Son was dead. There is no formal suggestion of death upon the record, but the answer of William Goldman, who purports to answer for the firm, speaks of his partner, J. Goldman, as “now deceased,” from which it maybe inferred that at the time of filing the answer the latter was dead. If so, in the absence of some action to make his legal representatives parties, the cause could properly proceed against his surviving partner and a judgment would have been good as against the partnership assets and the individual property of the survivor. It was the privilege of appellants to suggest the death of the deceased partner and to have the cause continued for service on his legal representative. This was not done, and no objection taken to the action of the court in that regard, until the point was raised in the assignment of error. It is now too late to complain.
There being no error in the judgdment, it is affirmed.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered November 5, 1886.]