2 Tex. 212 | Tex. | 1847
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action brought by the appellant, by petition and summons, against the appellee, to try the right to a slave levied on by an execution, in favor of the appellee, against one Tarpley. The verdict was in favor of the defendant, finding the slave subject to his execution.
This suit was not brought in conformity to the statutory provisions for trying the right of property, levied on by an execution, and claimed by a third person. That the statutory mode is the most simple, and least expensive, there can be no doubt. And had the defendant in this suit, who was the plaintiff in the execution, taken exceptions to the suit, th4* exception would have been well taken, and would have been sustained, Bennett v. Gamble, Adm’r, 1 Tex. 124; but no exception was taken by the defendant, and his appearing and answering to the action may be considered as waiver of the benefit of the statute. The appellant, who was the plaintiff, thought proper to bring his suit on his claim, and if not objected to by the other party, lie could not object. The cdurt having jurisdiction of the subject matter, it is believed to have been competent for it to sustain the proceedings adopted by the choice of the parties.
The only point made by the appellant, in seeking to reverse the judgment, conceived to be at all material, is a part of the charge of the judge to the jury. It is in the following words:
“ That if the jury believed from the testimony that Yickery purchased, in good faith, from Tarpley’s agent, before levy made by the sheriff, they must find for him,” which was given with this qualification: “ That if they believed the facts stated by Mr. Jones that there was an agreement in the note that if the negro was not paid for according to the terms of the sale, that he was to be returned by Yickery, or that the vendor retained the right to resume the property, if not paid for according to said terms, that the sale was conditional and not absolute, so as to place it beyond the reach of defendant’s execution.” In this charge given, the judge is supposed to have erred, and been mistaken in the law.
To test the correctness of the charge given we will put this
To put it in the strongest aspect for Tarpley, it was nothing more than a sale with a mortgage, and no right would accrue under the mortgage until the failure to pay the money it was intended to secure. . Until then he could not resume his right of property in the slave, no more than if the payment had been secured by a mortgage on any other slave.
The parties’ rights must be tried as they existed at the time the levy was made, and not at a subsequent period. If the
If the transaction between the agent of Tarpley and Yickery had been perfectly honest and free from the slightest imputation of fraud, in the opinion of the jury, yet under the charge of the judge on the law of the case, on the point charged, they would have been compelled to find a verdict for the plaintiff in the execution, because the sale contained an agreement to return the slave if the purchase money was not paid when it fell due. The judge, in giving the charge, certainly must have supposed that the time of payment had passed at the date of the levy of execution; if that had been the fact, the charge would have been correct. But that not being the case, the property was not subject to the execution when the levy was made, because Tarpley’s contingent lien could not be levied on. It could, however, have been secured by the plaintiff, by an injunction and petition, enjoining Yickery from paying the money to Tarpley or his agent, and praying that Yickery should be decreed to pay the money, or that the slaves should be sold for the benefit cf the plaintiff in the execution. In proceedings of this sort the rights of both parties could have been secured. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.