77 Tex. 199 | Tex. | 1890
—Maggie S. Perrill brought this suit against W. M. Perrill and P. F. Fox, partners doing business under the-firm name of Perrill & Fox, to recover the amount due upon a promissory note executed by them to W. M. Perrill as her trustee. W. M. Perrill is-her husband. She also caused a writ of attachment to issue and to be levied upon a stock of goods belonging to the defendants. The goods were sold as perishable property, and the proceeds paid into court to await the determination of the suit., The appellants, the Martin Brown Company and Mandeville, Boling & Traylor, being creditors of the firm, also brought-suits on their debts, and caused attachments to issue and to be levied upon the stock of goods attached by Mrs. Perrill. Having obtained judgments-on their respective claims, they intervened in this suit, alleging that the attachment of Mrs. Perrill was in fraud of their rights, and praying that-the fund paid into court as the proceeds of the sale of the goods attached be appropriated to the payment of their demands. There was a verdict- and judgment against them, and they have appealed to this court.
The grandfather of Mrs. Perrill died in North Carolina, having bequeathed to her a share of his estate. That bequest was contained in the following provision of the will: “ The residue of my estate to be distributed according to law, The share of Maggie Bullock to be secured to her
We think the court did not err in refusing to compel the defendant Fox while on the stand to produce the books of the firm which showed the partnership indebtedness in December, 1884. • The controversy in the case was between Mrs. Perrill (the plaintiff) and the inter venors. .The books of Perrill & Fox, though they may have been used as evidence against them upon any issue to which the entries thereon would have been relevant, were not evidence against her. They could not have used the books to defeat her action; nor do their creditors in a suit of this character occupy any better position. It seems to be complained that there was a conspiracy between the plaintiff and the defendants to defraud the creditors of the latter, and that therefore the acts and declarations of each of these parties were evidence against the other. The effort of the interveners was to establish such conspiracy; but there was no evidence adduced sufficient to authorize the court to determine even prima facie the existence of any such conspiracy in January, 1884. Such proof was a necessary predicate to the introduction of evidence of the acts or declarations of the defendants against the plaintiff.
The court having properly refused to require defendant Fox to produce the books of his firm, it was not error to restrain counsel for inter venors from commenting upon the failure to introduce them in evidence in his argument to the jury.
We do not consider it necessary to determine the legal effect of the clause in her grandfather’s will under which the plaintiff claimed the fund which was lent to defendants. Her husband received the bonds and sold them as her trustee, and of him as her trustee they were borrowed by the partnership of which he was a member. The defendants are clearly estopped to deny the trust. Portis v. Cummings, 21 Texas, 265. It is true that if the money had been lent by her husband as her trustee to third parties he would have been the proper party to bring a suit for its recovery in the event of a default in the payment of the debt. But in this case, he being the payee of the note, and the firm of which he was a member being the makers, we think that when suit became necessary to secure the debt the wife had the right to bring it in her own name. She was the sole existing"
Appellants insist that the judgment is erroneous in so far as it allows plaintiff a recovery for the interest on the money derived from the sale of the bonds. It is settled law in this State that interest derived from a loan of money the separate property of the wife belongs to the community estate. Braden v. Gose, 57 Texas, 37. It is contended that the rule applies in this case and that the interest was community property of Perrill and his wife and subject to the payment of his debts, and that therefore there should have been no recovery for the interest as against his creditors. The court concurs in the opinion that appellants’ contention can not be maintained, and we agree substantially in the result that the judgment is in this particular correct. As to the grounds of that conclusion we are not in accord. One opinion is that it is the income and not the corpus of the fund that was bequeathed to the plaintiff by her grandfather, and that therefore the interest on the money comes literally within the definition of separate property as given in the statute— that is to say, that the income of the fund is acquired directly “by devise.” Bev. Stats., art. 2851. The other opinion is that when the husband borrows the money of the wife and agrees to pay her interest the effect of the contract is to make the interest her separate property. Hall v. Hall, 52 Texas, 294. When the note was given upon which this suit was brought, the debts due to interveners did not exist, so that the immediate rights of creditors are not involved in the question.
The court charged the jury, in effect, that if the consideration of the note sued on by plaintiff was the community property of herself and husband, or if the debt was fictitious, they should find for interveners. The jury were further instructed, in substance, that if the debt upon which the suit was brought was real and belonged to the plaintiff as her separate property, and that if the attachment was sued out not only for the purpose of collecting the debt but also with the intent to hinder, delay, or defraud the creditors of Perrill & Fox, they should also find .for intervenors. In these instructions there is nothing of which appellants
In Blum v. Schram, 58 Texas, 524, it was held that a debtor may confess a judgment in favor of his creditor, provided the purpose was merely to secure the debt and not to defraud other creditors. The charges which were approved in that case gave the jury distinctly to understand that the mere fact that the confession of judgment tended to delay other creditors would not avoid the judgment, provided the intent was merely to secure the debt. A charge in any such case which does not clearly present this distinction is misleading and should not be given.
The fifth special charge asked by interveners was also properly refused. It is as follows: “The jury are instructed that it is not enough that plaintiff should have a valid demand against Perrill & Fox, and a right to sue and attach thereon as against them, but she must in the collection of her said demand so act as not to unjustly or wrongfully injure the rights of other creditors, or to wrongfully hinder, delay, or defraud them in the collection of their demands. If then you believe from the evidence that plaintiff in person or through her said husband employed counsel in this case to institute suit against Perrill & Fox and to sue out a writ of attachment with intent to levy same upon partnership property of Perrill & Fox, and that she did sue out and levy said writ upon the said property at the request, instigation, or for the benefit of said Perrill & Fox, or either of them, and that plaintiff or the person acting for her at the tim.e knew that she would thereby obtain an unjust preference over the other creditors of Perrill & Fox, and enable her to carve out of the partnership property of said Perrill & Fox more than sufficient to pay her debt, or to enable them to hinder, delay, or defraud the other creditors of Perrill & Fox, or any one of them, the preference lien they acquire will be void as to such creditors, and you will find for interveners. ”
Much of this instruction, we think, was calculated to mislead the jury. The proposition that plaintiff in suing out her attachment must “ so act as not to unjustly and wrongfully injure the rights of other creditors,” etc., is objectionable, because the jury were left to conjecture what she might
It is further complained that the court erred in instructing the jury, in the event they found for plaintiff, to find for her not only the principal of the note,-but also interest and attorney fees. The evidence showed that the money was originally loaned at a usurious rate of interest, and there is no question but that if the defendants had filed a plea of usury verified by affidavit that plea should have prevailed. Waiving the question whether intervenors could have availed themselves of this defense, it is .sufficient to say that they did not plead it. The defense of usury must .be interposed by special plea under oath. Rev. Stats., art. 2981.
. The note stipulated that the makers should pay attorney fees in the ■event suit should be brought for the recovery of the debt. Upon the institution of the suit they became a part of the indebtedness. They were" set up in the petition and included in the amount for which the writ of attachment issued. Why the plaintiff was not entitled to recover them, if she recovered at all, we do not see.
The verdict of the jury was as follows: “ We the jury render a verdict in favor of plaintiff. [Signed] J. D. Kennedy, foreman.” It is insisted that this verdict was not responsive to all the issues presented by the pleadings, and therefore did not warrant the judgment. The defendants interposed no defense to the action. The court in its charge, after stating the issues between the plaintiff and intervenors, instructed the jury, in effect, that if they found that the note sued on represented a real debt, and that it was the separate property of the plaintiff, and that the attachment was sued out for the purpose of collecting the debt, and not of delaying and defrauding creditors, they should find for the plaintiff. ■On the other hand, they were charged to find for intervenors if the debt
There is no error in the judgment, and it is'affirmed.
Affirmed.
Delivered May 6, 1890.