241 S.W. 765 | Tex. App. | 1922
This suit was instituted in the district court of Eastland county by W. J. McFarland against J. W. Clyde and T. S. Tilley alleging, in substance, that Clyde and Tilley were indebted to various concerns, naming them, on certain accounts for goods, wares, and merchandise, the several accounts, itemized, and by exhibits made parts of the petition, and amounting in the aggregate to $1,120.06, with interest and costs. At the time of filing suit plaintiff filed his affidavit for a writ of garnishment to be issued to the Texas Company, a corporation, gave the garnishment bond, and obtained the writ of garnishment directed to the Texas Company. The garnishee appeared, urged no objection to any of the garnishment proceedings, and filed answer denying indebtedness to Clyde, but admitting indebtedness to Tilley in the sum of $1,439.10 at the time the writ of garnishment was served, and had become indebted to Tilley, since the service of the writ, in the further sum of $872.30. Clyde and Tilley filed a replevy bond in garnishment with appellant, the National Surety Company, as surety.
Clyde and Tilley filed an answer consisting of a general demurrer and general denial. The case was tried before the court without a jury. The court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against Clyde and Tilley in the main case, for the total amount of $1,189, with interest at 6 per cent. from the date of the judgment.
In the garnishment proceeding the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff against Clyde and Tilley, as principals, and the National Surety Company, as surety, on the replevy bond, for the total amount of the judgment in the main suit, with interest and costs incurred in the main suit and in the garnishment proceeding, and an attorney fee of $50 to the garnishee. McFarland, the Texas Company, and Clyde waived issuance and service of citation in error, and accepted notice of the filing of the petition for writ of error. The National Surety Company alone prosecutes this appeal, and duly filed its assignments of error.
The several assignments and the propositions thereunder claim error in rendering judgment against the National Surety Company as surety on the replevy bond filed in the garnishment proceeding, because of certain defects in the garnishment proceedings, securing the issuance of the writ of garnishment.
First. The affidavit for the garnishment states that "he (McFarland) has reason to believe and does believe that the garnishee, the Texas Company, a corporation, is indebted to the defendants or either of them, or that it has in its hands effects belonging to said defendants or either of them," thus stating the facts disjunctively and uncertainly, and for that reason is fatally defective and insufficient to support the garnishment proceedings.
Second. The affidavit in garnishment reads:
"This writ of garnishment applied for is not sued out to injure either of the defendants or the garnishment, thus rendering the affidavit indefinite and uncertain in failing to show that there was no intent to injure either one of the two defendants."
Third. Because of insufficiency of the affidavit in stating the residence of the garnishee.
Fourth. The petition is subject to a general demurrer, and insufficient to support the judgment awarded the plaintiff, in that the accounts, made parts of the petition, show that the sales in question were made to Clyde, and not to Tilley.
It is evident from the record that the *766
affidavit made the basis for the issuance of the garnishment writ is subject to several of the objections pointed out in the assignments and the propositions thereunder. Clark v. Elmendorf (Tex. Civ. App.)
"Some of the objections might have been held well taken, if they had been properly urged in the trial court, but the garnishee voluntarily appeared, and, without objection to the proceedings, and submitted the matter to the court. He could not now be heard to urge these exceptions for the first time in this court."
To the same effect is the holding in the following cases: Burge v. Beaumont Carriage Co.,
"A writ of attachment issued without authority of law is not `valid and binding' as against a defendant who moves to vacate it. Nor is a replevy bond any more binding than the attachment itself."
None of the parties filed a motion to quash the garnishment, or otherwise made objection to the rendition of the judgment in the court below. While the parties in the main suit might have availed themselves of some of the matters presented here by plaintiff in error, we think the judgment would conclude them, as it appears to be final and unappealed. We think appellant will not be permitted to defeat the cause of action on grounds which the defendants themselves did not assume to make, or chose to waive. Douglass, Brown Co. v. Neil Co.,
Finding no reversible error, the case is affirmed. *767