68 S.W. 265 | Tex. | 1902
The Court of Civil Appeals of the Second Supreme Judicial District have certified for our decision the following questions:
"On April 25, 1898, L.C. Downtain instituted suit in the District Court of Eastland County against the Texas and Pacific Railway Company for damages in a cattle shipment, securing a judgment in his favor on the 28th day of March, 1899. From this judgment on May 20, 1899, the railway company perfected an appeal to this court upon a sufficient supersedeas bond. January 20, 1900, the said judgment of the District Court was affirmed here, which, so far as appears from the record, concluded this litigation, save that motion for rehearing was filed in this court, which was overruled on February 17, 1900. On January 20, 1900, the date the judgment of the District Court was affirmed, as stated, L.C. Downtain, for a valuable consideration, by parol, transferred the judgment in his favor to James Hughes, proprietors of the Eastland County Bank, in Eastland, Texas.
"In August, 1898, the appellant herein, Waples-Platter Grocer Company, in a certain suit instituted by it against said L.C. Downtain in the District Court of Eastland County, Texas, caused to be duly issued and served upon the Texas Pacific Railway Company a writ of garnishment founded upon a sum certain for the recovery of which the suit against Downtain had been instituted. On the 20th day of March, 1899, the Waples-Platter Grocery Company recovered judgment in its said suit against Downtain, which is still unsatisfied in an amount in excess of the amount for which the Texas Pacific Railway Company is liable upon said judgment in favor of Downtain. Waples-Platter Grocer Company also caused to be duly issued and served upon the railway company other like writs of garnishment on the 7th day of April, 1899, and on the 5th day of February, 1900.
"Subsequent to all the dates mentioned, the railway company answered, substantially setting up the facts as agreed upon and prayed that the court determine to which party it should pay the amount for which it was indebted, James Hughes having in the meantime intervened, and the trial court adjudged, in effect, that the appellant company *488 acquired no right by the service of its said writs of garnishment, and that interveners, James Hughes, were entitled to recover of the Texas Pacific Railway Company the sum of $137.85, with interest at the legal rate from the date of judgment, which was July 24, 1901. From the judgment so rendered this appeal has been duly prosecuted.
"In view of the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District in the case of Kriesle v. Campbell, 32 Southwestern Reporter, 581, and of what is said by your honorable court in the same case as shown in
"1. Whether, pending said appeal therefrom, the said judgment in favor of Downtain was subject to appellant's said writs of garnishment?
"2. If not, whether the claim of the judgment debtor Downtain against the garnishee, the Texas Pacific Railway Company, as stated and shown in the agreed statement of facts, is a demand of such character as to be subject to garnishment even before the judgment which determined his rights thereon?"
The nature of the claim of Downtain against the Texas Pacific Railway Company appears from the following statement of the agreed case upon which the case was tried and which the Court of Civil Appeals have transmitted to us as a part of their certificate: "The judgment in favor of said Downtain against said railway company was obtained in a suit for damages to cattle in transit owned by the said plaintiff and transported by the said defendant, and was recovered on allegations of diminished market value in the said cattle by reason of neglect of the said defendant company in the handling and transporting same."
From this statement, it is evident that Downtain's cause of action was for unliquidated damages for the breach of a contract. It is well settled that a demand growing out of a tort is not subject to garnishment. But upon the question whether a cause of action for unliquidated damages resulting from a breach of contract is so subject there is a conflict of authority. Since the writ of garnishment is a creature of statutory law, it may be that the diversity of opinion upon the question grows out of the difference in language in the statutes which have been severally construed by the courts. However that may be, we are of the opinion that the weight of authority and the better reason support the rule that when the damages are unliquidated and in their nature uncertain, the demand is not subject to garnishment. Capes v. Burgess,
In Hochstadler v. Sam,
For these reasons, we answer the second question in the negative.
We are also of the opinion that it results from the foregoing conclusion that a like answer must be given to the first question. The demand being uncertain, is not made certain until the amount is fixed by a final judgment of the court, — that is to say, a judgment not merely final in the sense that an appeal lies therefrom, but a judgment final in the sense that it has reached that stage in judicial procedure when it can neither be set aside nor reversed upon appeal. In the case of the Texas Trunk Railway Company v. Jackson,
We answer both questions in the negative. *490