186 S.W. 359 | Tex. App. | 1916
This is an appeal by the Queen Insurance Company and the National Fire Insurance Company from an interlocutory order of the district court refusing a temporary injunction.
On November 26, 1915, appellants filed their original petition, and, among other facts, averred substantially that: On June 2, 1914, Louis Oge, J. N. Brown, H. E. Hildebrand, J. V. Spring, T. M. Dechman, A. B. Stephens, and C. A. Keller, trustees of the Travis Park Methodist Episcopal Church South, had filed suit No. B-8133 against Mrs. M. P. Field for debt represented by four promissory notes aggregating $1,200 principal. On the same day the said trustees filed the following application for writs of garnishment against the appellant insurance companies:
"(1) That on the 2d day of June, A.D. 1914, plaintiffs Louis Oge, J. N. Brown, H. E. Hildebrand, J. V. Spring, T. M. Dechman, A. B. Stephens, and C. A. Keller trustees of Travis Park Methodist Episcopal Church South, sued Mrs. M. P. Field, defendant in the above-styled and numbered cause, upon four promissory notes for the sum of $1,200 principal, $15.96 interest, and $121.59 attorneys' fees, and all costs of suit, that such debt is just, due, and unpaid, and that defendant Mrs. M. P. Field, has not, within his knowledge, property in her possession within this state subject to execution, sufficient to satisfy such debt.
"(2) Plaintiffs say they have reason to believe and do believe that the garnishees, Queen Insurance Company of New York and the National Fire Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn., both of which are private foreign corporations, and doing business in the city of San Antonio, in Bexar county, Tex., and of which Fred J. Johnston and Arthur C. Burnett, both residents of Bexar county, Tex., are local agents of said garnishees above named, are indebted to said Mrs. M. P. Field, defendant, or that they have in their hands effects belonging to said defendant.
"(3) Plaintiffs say that the writ of garnishment applied for herein is not sued out to injure either the defendant or the garnishees.
"[Signed] A. B. Stephens.
"Subscribed and sworn to before me this 2d day of June, A.D. 1914.
"[Seal.] _________________________ Ira B. Hill,
"Notary Public, Bexar County, Texas."
Writs of garnishment were legally served upon the agents of appellant companies resident in Bexar county, Tex. The garnishment suit was docketed as No. B-8134. Appellant companies filed no answer in the garnishment suit. On February 10, 1915, the court rendered a decree in the garnishment suit No. B-8134 in favor of the trustees against both the garnishees, the appellants herein, for the sum of $1,406.79, being the amount of the judgment previously awarded the trustees against Mrs. M. P. Field in suit No. B-8133, and ordered that execution might issue for same. It was for a temporary injunction against the issuance of this execution that appellants prayed in their petition filed November 26, 1915, and it is the court's order refusing this temporary injunction of which appellants now complain in this appeal.
Appellants complain that the trial court should have granted the temporary injunction because the judgment in the garnishment suit No. B-8134 was null and void, and assign three propositions as reasons why the garnishment judgment was void. The first proposition is:
"That the writ of garnishment directed to the plaintiffs herein in the garnishment suit was void because no proper or valid application or affidavit was made therefor previous to the issuance thereof; that, such void writ being the only process by which it was attempted to clothe the court with jurisdiction over the garnishees, the court did not have the power to enter a valid judgment by default."
The second proposition is:
"That, assuming that A. B. Stephens actually possessed the requisite authority to make the affidavit for the writ of garnishment in behalf of his cotrustees, the affidavit, and hence the writ, were void, and did not confer jurisdiction upon the court to enter the default judgment, because it did not appear therein, either by affirmative statement or by way of recitation, that the said A. B. Stephens had such authority."
It will be observed that A. B. Stephens, one of the trustees and one of the plaintiffs, made application for the writ of garnishment on behalf of all the trustees, naming them; that A. B. Stephens alone made the affidavit. Appellants contend that the affidavit can be made only by the plaintiff in the main suit to which the garnishment suit is auxiliary, or by an agent or attorney, and, if by an agent or attorney, the capacity of affiant and his authority must appear in the application or affidavit itself, and that the application and affidavit here considered are *361 wholly wanting in these particulars. Appellants further contend that the trustees could only exercise the power vested in them as a body by a unanimous joint action.
There is no merit in the propositions and reasons of appellants. It must be presumed that A. B. Stephens, one of the trustees and one of the plaintiffs, had full authority to make the application on behalf of all the plaintiffs for the writs of garnishment, and that he had authority to perform the ministerial act of making the statutory affidavit.
If all the plaintiffs be regarded as several, then article 1829b, Vernon's Sayles' Tex.Civ.Statutes, authorizes one of several plaintiffs to make affidavit to pleadings for use of all the plaintiffs.
A plea of privilege made in behalf of two defendants, but verified by only one was sufficient to make plea available for both defendants. Jones v. Austin,
If, as contended by appellants, the trustees are joint, then it will be presumed that Stephens was authorized by all of them jointly to make this application for garnishment in behalf of all of them and to perform the ministerial act of making the affidavit; for, if the plaintiffs were trustees of a corporation they had the power of managing the corporation, and if they were trustees of an unincorporated church, they will be presumed by the courts to have the same powers as directors of private corporations. Clark v. Brown, 108 S.W. 421; Id.,
Since the application shows on its face that Stephens was a trustee, his act will be considered as the act of the Methodist Episcopal Church itself.
For a clear and learned exposition of the law here pronounced see the case of American Soda Fountain Company v. Stolzenbach,
Appellants' third proposition is as follows:
"That the court did not have the power to render such default judgment, because plaintiffs were both foreign corporations, and at the time of the rendition of such judgment were not `residents' of Bexar county, Tex., as was necessary, under article 282, Vernon's Sayles' Civil Statutes, to support such default judgment."
This proposition has been decided adversely to appellants in the case of Lash v. Morris County Bank, 54 S.W. 806, and again in the case of Harris v. Cozart Grain Company,
We conclude that the trial court did not err in its order refusing a temporary writ of injunction.
The Judgment is affirmed.