Noyes & Fish v. Brown

75 Tex. 458 | Tex. App. | 1889

HOBBY, Judge.

Whether the assignments are well taken depends, we think, upon the appellants’ right to intervene in the suit of W. H. Brown v. The E. & W. T. Lumber Company.

Brown, the appellee here, had in June, 1888, sued the E. & W. T. Lumber Company upon a note for $5000, and caused an attachment to be levied upon the property of that company, which it appears was placed in the hands of a receiver, who sold the property, retaining the proceeds thereof. In October, 1888, Noyes & Fish intervened in this suit, averring in their petition that Brown was indebted to them in the sum of $3388.50, by reason of the execution of certain promissory notes described; that he had failed in business; that they had attached his property, subject to prior attachments; that Brown was insolvent, and his property insufficient to pay the prior attachments, etc.; that they had exhausted every effort to find other property, and had found none save the debt of $5000 due Brown by the lumber company; that they had caused a writ of garnishment to be served upon said company to secure their debt against Brown; alleging further the indebtedness of the company to Brown, the suit brought by him against the company, the levy of the attachment therein on its property now in the hands of a receiver; that the company is insolvent, and unless the claim sued on by Brown is prosecuted to a judgment and collected in this suit it will be lost to both Brown and appellants, etc. Such were the material averments contained in appellants’ petition for intervention filed in the suit of Browrn against the lumber company.

In November, 1888, the court house of Upshur County was destroyed by fire.

On January 11, 1889, appellants moved to substitute the papers lost by this fire. This motion was granted by the court on the 12th of January, and at the same time an order was made allowing appellants to intervene, *461subject to exceptions, etc. The papers substituted on this motion consisted of Brown’s petition against the lumber company, and the affidavit and bond for attachment made by him therein, and appellants’ petition for intervention. On January 1G, 1889, appellee Brown also moved to substitute the papers in his suit so lost by fire. The motion was accompanied by certified copies of his petition, affidavit, and bond for attachment. This motion was concurred in by the lumber company and the receiver, but it was not verified by affidavit,' and no notice was given appellants of the motion, nor was their petition for intervention substituted as one of the papers so lost. But the substituted papers were admitted by the lumber company and receiver to be correct.

There was a material difference between the papers substituted by appellants and those by appellee. The details of this difference it is not essential to state further than to say that those substituted by the latter afforded grounds for a motion to quash the attachment proceedings, which the former did not. On the day the motion to substitute, as well as the substitution of appellee, was made, the lumber company and the receiver moved to quash the attachment proceedings, which motion was sustained. On the day following the appellants filed two motions; one to set aside the order of substitution made on appellee’s application, because they had no notice thereof; and one to vacate the order quashing the attachment, on the ground that the papers were not properly substituted, and because appellee had no interest in the suit, he having transferred the same on October, 1888, and that subsequent to the time interveners’ rights attached Brown conveyed all of his right and interest in the suit to one Mings and Williams & Co., with the intent to defraud appellants and to defeat the attachment, etc.

Brown moved to strike out the intervention of appellants, on the ground that they had no interest in the subject matter of the suit which gave them the right to intervene. Appellee also moved to dismiss the suit brought by him against the lumber company. These two motions were sustained, and appellants appealed.

The motions of appellants referred to were not heard.

It is claimed by appellee that appellants were simple creditors of Brown without lien, and that they had no interest in the subject matter of the suit between appellee and the lumber company which entitled them to intervene. Appellants, on the other hand, contend that the service of the garnishment on the lumber company to secure the debt due them from Brown constituted a specific lien on the debt, which was the subject matter of the suit between appellee and the lumber company.

As the proceeding by garnishment is purely statutory and is not known to the common law, it can not be pushed in its operation beyond the statutory authority under ivhich it is resorted to. And if a lien exists, as claimed by appellants, it must be derived from the statute. Drake on *462Att., see. 451; Bigelow v. Andress, 31 Ill., 330. Our statute creates no such lien. This writ, it is said, “ can not be extended- beyond the mere point of reaching the defendant’s effects in the garnishee’s hands.” Drake on Att., sec. 435b. Neither will it be aided by a court of equity.

It will not be supplemented by injunction or other proceeding in equity; nor can a distinct proceeding not authorized by statute be based upon this writ, sued out to obtain security for the payment of the judgment, which may be recovered against the garnishee. Drake on Att., sec. 454; Arthur v. Batte, 42 Texas, 159.

Appellants having no such interest in the subject matter of the suit between appellee Brown and the lumber company as entitled them to intervene upon the grounds alleged in their petition, there was no error in dismissing their petition for intervention. It follows from this that they could not have been prejudiced by the substitution of the papers by appellee Brown without notice, nor by the judgment quashing the attachment and dismissing the suit originally brought by appellee against the lumber company.

There being no error in the record, we think the judgment should be affirmed.

Affirmed.

Adopted December 17, 1889.