166 S.W. 50 | Tex. App. | 1914
The ninth assignment contends that the judgment is void because the judge who tried the case was legally disqualified. There is no bill of exception in the record showing any facts of disqualification, and we find nothing in the record that shows legal disqualifications.
The third assignment contends that the facts show that the fund was the separate property of the wife of the intervener. The court made a contrary finding, and the finding is not, as a matter of law, unwarranted.
Complaint is made by the fifth and sixth assignments of the extent of recovery allowed plaintiffs by the terms of the judgment. The judgment of the county court of Rusk county in transferring the suit expressly taxed the costs against plaintiffs, and they cannot recover such costs under the present judgment. The judgment here reads, as material to the point: "It is therefore adjudged and decreed by the court that J. H. Waggoner and I. B. Meyers do have and recover of Ed. Briggs and L. A. Wilkie, garnishees, judgment for the sum of two hundred and twenty and 70/100 dollars, with 6% from this date on their debt, and the further sum of eighty and no/100 dollars, their costs and all costs of suit in this behalf expended, and for all of which let execution issue." Plaintiffs did not sue for $80 besides their debt of $220.70. This item of $80 is, according to the evidence, attorney's fees and other expenses incurred by the garnishees. But the plaintiffs themselves are not entitled to recover against the garnishees such attorney's fees. Attorney's fees are a matter of compensation under the statute only to the garnishee, and not a liability of the garnishee to the plaintiff. The recovery of $80 by the plaintiffs constitutes fundamental error, and must be eliminated from the judgment.
The remaining assignments lead to the same point for error. The contention is that the money pledged to the sureties to induce them to becomes sureties on appellant Waggoner's bail bond is exempt from garnishment at the hands of a creditor of the pledgor. The pledge of funds is purely a voluntary contract. The pledgee has a qualified property in the thing pledged, and is entitled to the possession. There remains in the pledgor a legal interest such as the law will recognize. Therefore any obstacle to seizure and sale under execution or garnishment is not upon the ground that the property is in the custody of the law. The objection to the *52 seizure must rest, if at all, upon being in violation of the rights of the pledgee under the contract with the pledgor. Under the common law pledged property could not be taken under execution against the pledgor without first divesting the pledgee's right of possession by paying him the amount of the debt. But the statute of this state now subjects pledged property to seizure under execution. Article 3744, R.S. And article 294, R.S., authorizes judgment against a garnishee for "any effects of the defendant" which are "liable to execution." This statute would seem to affirmatively answer the question of whether pledged funds are subject to garnishment. But this statute controlling garnishment of pledged property does not relieve the plaintiff from showing at the time the judgment is rendered that his right to have the property subjected to his debt is perfected, and that the pledgee is not entitled to retain it as security for the performance of the obligation on the part of the pledgor. Here the proceedings were actually tried after the rendition of the judgment of acuqittal of the accused. On the acquittal of the accused the agreement as to the pledged property was ended, and the pledgees had no contingent or further interest in the fund as security for the performance of the bail bond. The garnishees answered by setting up the facts, and asking the court to decide the rights between all parties. The statute authorizes the court to render judgment against the garnishee, at the time the court does render the judgment, when it is made to appear "from the garnishee's answer or otherwise" that the garnishee "is indebted to the defendant in any amount," or "has in his possession, or had when the writ was served, any effects of the defendant liable to execution." Articles 293 and 294, R.S. If the court, at the time he is called upon to make final judgment, can look to facts disclosed by the "garnishee's answer," or as shown "otherwise," as authorized by the statute, to determine the right of the plaintiff to a judgment, then at the time the judgment was entered in the instant suit there was no obstacle whatever against subjecting the funds to garnishment.
The case cited by appellants of Medley v. Radiator Co.,
The case of Loftus v. Williams,
In Welch v. Renfro,
The case of Cope v. Shoemate,
The judgment is reformed so as to eliminate the recovery in favor of the plaintiff against the garnishees of the $80 and as so reformed will be affirmed. The plaintiffs Waggoner and Meyers will, for the error, be taxed with the costs of appeal.