272 S.W. 564 | Tex. App. | 1925
The result of the appeal depends, we conclude, upon the one point of whether or not the plea of privilege of the Traction Company to be sued in the county of its principal office should have been sustained. And the decision of the question entirely depends upon whether or not it appears from the face of the petition that there is an improper joinder of defendants in the action. For subdivision 4 of article 1830, Rev. Stat., expressly provides that where there are two or more defendants residing in different counties, the suit may be brought in any county where any one of the defendants resides. In case, therefore, that the Williamses, residents of Hunt county, were necessary or proper parties to the cause of action as it appears from the face of the petition, the plea was properly overruled; otherwise, the plea should have been sustained.
It is a primary law, in determining the joinder of defendants, that the contractual obligation sued on, as defined by law, is in its nature joint or several, or joint and several. If the obligation, as defined by law, is several, in all such cases the plaintiff's claim, if any, against each defendant is in the nature of a separate claim, and no joinder of defendants is permitted; for there is no entirety of obligation as against the several defendants. "It is not sufficient," quoting from Danciger v. Smith (Tex.Civ.App.)
As these fundamental rules must be applied in each case according to the action pleaded, it becomes necessary to consider the particular petition in this case and give it proper legal effect. While the prayer of the petition was for "judgment against the defendants jointly and severally," the language of the prayer would not be conclusive that the obligation sued on was joint and several, if the facts alleged do not have that legal effect attaching to them. The petition first sets out facts showing personal injuries suffered by Mrs. Williams through the negligence of the traction company, and the contract of employment of the attorneys by which they were to have one-third of any sum of money realized or received as a compromise of the claim without trial, or 40 per cent. of the amount of the judgment rendered in the trial of the case. The suit was filed in court, prepared and set for trial on May 10, 1923. The petition then sets up "that the defendant, Northern Texas Traction Company, on or about May 1, 1923, fraudulently settled with the defendants F. M. Williams and wife, Lula L. Williams, said suit without notice of any character to, or without conferring with, said Clark Sweeton; that said traction company, acting by and through its agents, and with full knowledge of the assignment and transfer by the defendants F. M. Williams and Lula L. Williams to plaintiffs of a portion of said cause of action, paid to said defendants F. M. Williams and Lula L. Williams the sum of $1,500 in settlement of said claim, and obtained their release therefor."
Standing, as the allegations show, upon the compromise settlement in the amount of $1,500 being reasonable and correct, the plaintiffs in the suit then assert the right to have one-third of the sum of money in virtue of an assignment to them by Williams of that designated portion thereof. The entire action is predicated upon the assignment as well as the compromise being valid and effective as to all parties, and being an enforcible obligation existing in favor of the assignees as to a one-third portion of the money. The default in respect thereto, as alleged, was that "the Traction Company" *567 "fraudulently" or wrongfully "settled with" and "paid" to "F. M. Williams and Lula L. Williams the sum of $1,500." In other words, by intendment, the averments are to the effect that the Traction Company, "with full knowledge of the assignment," and "without notice to" or consent of the attorneys, at a date after the compromise, wrongfully paid the attorneys' portion to Mr. and Mrs. Williams, who were persons not entitled or authorized to collect and receive it. It would appear to be a cause of action only against the Traction Company, unless the petition should be construed, in view of the prayer, as by intendment, as meaning to make claim also against Mr. and Mrs. Williams for having, "without notice" or consent, wrongfully collected and received the one-third portion in defeat of the right of the plaintiffs to their portion of the sum of money. But either construction placed upon the petition would present the question of proper joinder of parties defendant. Hence, in the special facts alleged (1) were the attorneys, being the only assignees of a portion of the particular sum of money, legally required or not to join both the assignors and the Traction Company in the action on the assignment; and (2) was there or was there not a tort pleaded legally classed as a joint tort?
The legal effect of the assignment, which is the basis of the suit, is material to consider; for no ground of action would remain if the allegations as to the contract of assignment were stricken out or not considered. As between the attorneys and their client, one-third of the particular sum of money belonged, without doubt, in good conscience and equity, to the attorneys. It is within the fixed rule that an agreement between client and attorney, by which the attorney is to have for his services a fixed portion of whatever amount of money shall be realized or received, whether on settlement or without settlement, on account of such claim as shall be put in suit, whether of tort or contract, constitutes an equitable assignment pro tanto. The doctrine is fully laid down in Story Eq. Jur. § 1040, and in 3 Pomeroy Eq. Jur. § 1280. The rule is followed in this state. Harris Co. v. Campbell,
"Equity recognizes an interest in the fund, in the nature of an equitable property, obtained through the assignment, or the order which operates as an assignment, and permits such interest to be enforced by an action, even though the debtor or depository has not assented to the transfer. It is an established doctrine that an equitable assignment of a specific fund in the hands of a third person creates an equitable property in such fund. If, therefore, A has a specific fund in the hands of B, or in other words B, as a depository or otherwise, holds a specific sum of money which he is bound to pay to A, and if A agrees with C that the money shall be paid to C, or assigns it to C, or gives to C an order upon B for the money, the agreement, assignment or order creates an equitable interest or property in the fund in favor of the assignee C, and it is not necessary that B should consent or promise to hold it for or pay it to such assignee."
And quoting further:
"The agreement, direction or order being treated in equity as an assignment, it is not necessary that the entire debt or fund should be assigned; the same doctrine applies to an equitable assignment of any definite part of a particular fund."
As assignees having dominion over the assigned portion, the attorneys required no authority or consent to authorize them to collect and receive their fixed portion of the particular debt, and the debtor traction company had no authority or right to refuse payment or to settle and pay that fixed portion to any one but the assignee attorneys. And, after notice of the assignment was given to the debtor, in this case the traction company, such assignment became so far complete as to vest title absolutely in the attorneys as assignees, as against attaching creditors of the assignors, and collusive agreements of the assignors and the debtor. Seiter v. Marshall,
Although the clients received in payment more than their portion, yet, as to the attorneys, such voluntary and unauthorized overpayment would not legally constitute a joint liability, for the act of neither party, jointly or severally, would operate to deprive the attorneys of their right to enforce the payment against the Traction Company. The Traction Company could not legally defend against a mere voluntary and unauthorized payment of the attorneys' portion of the money to the original debtor, after notice of it, any more so than it could against some third person. 5 C.J. § 95, p. 934; Rollison v. Hope,
Would it be a tort for which an action would jointly lie for the clients to wrongfully take and receive from the traction company more than their portion of the money due them, to the extent of the attorneys' portion of the sum? The act of the clients, as to the attorneys, would not occasion the latter a legal injury or damage. It would not release the attorneys' rights, and would not legally revoke or discharge their assignment of their portion of the fund. The traction company would nevertheless remain liable to the attorneys on the assignment, and would not be relieved of the liability by the act of voluntary and wrongful, overpayment. It is the fundamental rule, as applied to torts, that unless the tort as pleaded is legally classed as a joint tort, in the sense of community of wrongdoing, defeating some right of the plaintiff, there cannot be a joinder in one action of the several distinct tort-feasors. 30 Cyc. p. 122. And also, to be an actionable tort, there must be a legal injury inflicted otherwise than by a mere breach of contract. We therefore conclude that whatever liability the attorneys can urge against each defendant, a joint liability, as defined by law, cannot be predicated upon the special facts pleaded, and, as a consequence, the Traction Company's plea of privilege was improperly overruled.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to transfer the suit as to the Traction Company to the proper court of appellant's domicile.