Braddock v. Gambill

HICKMAN, J.

This appeal is from a judgment in a garnishment suit in which the ap-pellee R. H. Gambill was plaintiff, the city of Corsicana, in Navarro’ county, Tex., a municipal corporation, garnishee, and the appellant, J. G. Braddock, intervener. The proceedings necessary to an understanding of the questions raised by the appeal were as follows:

R. M. Mitchell and D. S. Kirk were partners, doing business under the name of Mitchell Contracting Company. The particular enterprise in which this partnership was en*308gaged was the construction of the Ealce Halbert spillway in or near the city of Corsi-cana, the construction being carried on by virtue of a contract with the city of Corsi-cana.

Prior to the execution of the contract by the partnership and the city, Mitchell was indebted to Gambill upon a note which was then due. In consideration of an extension of time for the payment of such indebtedness, Mitchell and Kirk executed to Gambill certain notes. 'Suit was instituted upon these notes when they fell due, but Mitchell could not be located for the purpose of serving citation upon him, and he was dismissed from this suit and judgment rendered against D. S. Kirk individually.

Simultaneously with the filing of this suit, Gambill caused a writ of garnishment to be issued against the city of Corsicana, calling upon the garnishee to answer what, if anything, it was indebted to D. S. Kirk. The writ of garnishment did not call upon the garnishee to answer as to its indebtedness to Mitchell or to Mitchell Contracting Company, a partnership.

By leave of the court, the appellant, J. G. Braddock, filed his plea of intervention in the garnishment case, claiming that he was the owner of the impounded fund by virtue of being the assignee of both Mitchell and Kirk. By an amended plea of intervention the appellant pleaded that he was a partner with Kirk and owped the interest in the Mitchell Contracting Company and in its contract with the city of Corsicana which Mitchell had formerly owned, and that the fund impounded by the writ of garnishment was not subject to garnishment, because at the time it was impounded it was the partnership property of appellant and Kirk and therefore not subject to the individual indebtedness D. S. Kirk or .to the joint and several indebtedness of Kirk and Mitchell. There were other pleas not necessary to be stated here for an understanding of the issues decided in this opinion.

The plaintiff in the garnishment suit, who is the appellee, replied to the amended petition in intervention by various denials and by a plea in estoppel, which will be considered later in this opinion. Plaintiff also filed a cross-action in the garnishment suit against the appellant for debt based upon the same facts as pleaded in estoppel, but this cross-action was by the plaintiff dismissed and will not be further noticed.

Upon a trial of the cause before the court without the aid of a jury, intervener’s motion to quash and all of his general and special demurrers were overruled and judgment was rendered that the intervener take nothing by his plea of intervention and that plaintiff recover of garnishee the amount of his judgment against the defendant Kirk, with interest and costs.

Erom this judgment the intervener appealed.

"Various assignments of error are made by the appellant, a discussion of each of which is rendered unnecessary by the view which we adopt of the main issue presented by the appeal.

The appellee seeks to sustain the judgment of the trial court upon two grounds: First: That the appellant is estopped to assert any ownership in the impounded fund, by reason of his acknowledgment that he had assumed the payment of Kirk’s indebtedness to ap-pellee. Second: That the appellant was a dormant partner with Kirk and that a judgement against Kirk would be binding upon the joint property of Kirk and his dormant partner, appellant.

In support of his plea of estoppel the ap-pellee pleaded and offered evidence in support of the fact that after appellee had obtained judgment against Kirk upon the notes executed by Kirk and Mitchell to him, and after the rights of the respective parties had become fixed with reference to the garnished fund, the appellant admitted to appellee and to appellee’s attorney that as a part of the consideration for the purchase by him of his interest in the contract which the Mitchell Contracting Company had with the city of Corsicana, he assumed to pay the notes of Mitchell and Kirk to appellee.

By appropriate assignments appellant complains of the action of the trial court in admitting the testimony offered by appellee in support of his plea of estoppel on the ground that the admission testified to by appellant and his attorney varied the terms of a written contract, and that such admission was made during the course of negotiations to effect a compromise between appellant and appellee. Our views of appeilee’s plea of estoppel render it unnecessary for us to pass upon these assignments.

The substance of the plea of estoppel is that the intervener owes the plaintiff and is therefore estopped to claim a better right than plaintiff to the garnished fund. In disposing of this plea it is proper to consider the general nature of the garnishment proceeding.

The ultimate issue to be determined between plaintiff and intervener is the ownership of the impounded property or fund in the hands of the garnishee.

The plaintiff is subrogated to the rights of the defendant against the garnishee, and his claim to the impounded property or fund as against the adverse claimant rests upon the. title of the defendant to the property, Mensing v. Engelke, 67 Tex. 532, 4 S. W. 202; Medley v. American Radiator Co., 27 Tex. Civ. App. 384, 66 S. W. 86; Fannin County National Bank v. Gross (Tex. Civ. App.) 200 S. W. 187; Hubbell et al. v. Farmers’ Union Cotton Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 196 S. W. 681. There are many decisions to the same effect, but the above decisions indicate the general rule.

In 12 R. C. L. p. 777, the nature of garnishment proceedings is clearly expressed in this language:

*309“Though in the nature of a proceeding in rem, garnishment is in effect an action by the defendant in the plaintiff’s name against the garnishee, the purpose and result of which are to subrogate the plaintiff to the right of the defendant against the garnishee.”

By his plea of estoppel the appellee seeks to have determined in this case an issue entirely foreign to any issue raised by the garnishment proceeding. He would have the court determine that the intervener is indebted, not to the defendant, but to the plaintiff. This, in our opinion, he cannot do. If appellant was in fact indebted to appellee, the appellee was not without his remedy. He could have filed suit against appellant, and, by writ of garnishment, impounded the fund in dispute; but he cannot accomplish the same purpose of a writ of garnishment by his plea in estoppel

Furthermore, the facts pleaded and the evidence offered by appellee in support of his plea of estoppel are not sufficient to constitute an estoppel in pais. At the time the alleged admission was made, judgment had already been rendered in’ favor of appellee against Kirk, the writ of garnishment served upon the garnishee, and the time when garnishee was directed to answer had passed. No damage resulted to appellee on account of such admission, no change of status took place; and nothing was done on account of such admissions that would not have been done but for such admissions.

The admission by appellant that he had assumed a debt due appellee might estop him to deny the fact that he assumed the debt to appellee, if that were the question in issue, because one may be estopped by contract; but the admission that he owed the debt to appellee would not estop him to deny that he dedicated the garnished fund to the payment of that debt. The admission of one fact does not estop one from denying another fact not inconsistent with that admission.

We do not think that the judgment of the trial court can be sustained on appellee’s plea of estoppel.

The second ground relied upon by appellee to sustain the judgment of the trial court is contained' in his seventh counterproposition, as follows:

“The evidence being sufficient to show that the garnished debt was owing to Kirk, the defendant in the judgment, and that the interest of appellant, Braddoek, was only the interest of a dormant partner or of a man who was a joint owner and who permitted the business to be carried on by Kirk in his own name, and the city to become indebted thereby to Kirk individually, the appellant is bound by the judgment in the garnishment case.”

The appellant, in his brief, strongly urges that the evidence is wholly insufficient to establish the fact that the appellant was a dormant partner with Kirk.

We shall not lengthen this opinion by a discussion of the dvidence, because, in our view of the case, the question is disposed of from other considerations. The case was not tried upon this theory, and the evidence with reference thereto is very meager, but we do not feel called upon to decide whether or not it was sufficient, taken in the light most favorable to appellee, to sustain the judgment of the trial court.

Appellee invokes the general rule against a dormant partner, which forbids him to.claim that the assets of the partnership cannot be subjected to the payment of a judgment against the partnership. The doctrine rests upon an estoppel against the dormant partner. If the appellant had concealed his interest in this partnership, and, by so doing, had suffered a judgment to be rendered against the partnership without disclosing to the plaintiff his interest therein, equity would not permit him to prevent the subjection of the partnership property to the payment of the judgment against it. It is the generally accepted rule that the funds of a partnership are not subject to garnishment for the debts of one of the individual members of the partnership, but such funds would be subject to garnishment to satisfy a judgment against the partnership, and if, by concealing his identity, a dormant partner suffers a judgment to be entered which is binding against the partnership, he cannot claim that the funds of the partnership are not subject to garnishment in satisfaction of this judgment.

The rule regarding a dormant partner has no application in this case, for the reason that appellee has no judgment against the partnership. The original suit was filed against Mitchell and Kirk, the original partners doing business under the name of Mitchell Contracting Company. The suit was dismissed as to Mitchell and a judgment taken against Kirk individually, without reference to any partnership. The writ of garnishment was issued for the purpose of impounding any funds that might be due Kirk, no effort being made to impound any partnership funds.

It is well settled by the decisions in our state that where one sues the members of a partnership and dismisses as to one or more of them, he cannot procure a judgment binding upon partnership property, but can only procure judgment against the individual partners retained in the suit. Frank v. Tatum, 87 Tex. 204, 25 S. W. 409. This decision has been followed in many cases and is the established rule in our state. The very basis of the rule invoked by appellee against a dormant partner is a judgment against the partnership. Having no such judgment, there is no foundation upon which to rest the rule in this case.

Another question to be taken into consideration in passing upon the issue as to whether or not appellant is estopped as a dormant partner is: Would his interest in *310this partnership have b'een subject to this garnishment had he been an ostensible partner? Suppose Mitchell had retained his interest in this partnership, and appellant was not in this case. It is apparent that he could have prevented the application of this fund to the payment of plaintiff’s judgment against Kirk, and, had appellant’s interest in the partnership been disclosed, he would have had the same right in that regard as Mitchell. The fact that appellee did not know of appellant’s relation to the partnership does pot operate to defeat appellant’s plea in that regard, where appellee is standing upon an individual judgment against Kirk.

A dormant partner’s interest in partnership property is not affected by a judgment against one of the ipdividual members of a partnership where there is no judgment binding against partnership property.

Appellant’s claim for attorney’s fees and damages is denied. The appellee's writ of garnishment sought only to impound the individual fund of D. S. Kirk, and, if the city of Corsicana withheld from appellant any other funds than the impounded funds of Kirk on account of such writ of garnishment, appellant’s claim for-damages, if any he has, is against the city of Corsicana and not against appellee.

The writer became a member of this court after this case had been submitted by oral argument and did not therefore have the benefit thereof, but he acknowledges the valuable assistance of able briefs filed by the attorneys for both parties.

The views herein expressed would lead us to reverse and render this cause in favor of appellant but for one consideration. As the record comes before us, there has been served upon the city of Corsicana a writ of garnishment, commanding it to answer what, if anything, it is indebted to D. S. Kirk. No answer has been filed for the city. Ordinarily this would entitle the appellee to a judgment by default against the garnishee, and the intervener would be dismissed from this cause on the ground that he had no connection therewith. The city of Corsicana has not appealed. The record does not disclose any contract or stipulation between the appellee and the city of Corsicana whereby it was agreed that the city need not answer herein, but that its liability would be determined by the issues made by appellant’s plea of intervention, but the case was tried upon that theory, the evidence disclosing that the officers of the city informed the appellee that it did not desire to go to the expense of an answer unless it was necessary. Proof was made of the amount owing by the city of Corsicana upon the contract to Mitchell Contracting Company, and the issue was tried between appellant and appellee as to which one of them had the better claim to this particular fund. While the views expressed in this opinion would entitle appellant to recover this fund from the city of Corsicana, quite irrespective of whether or not appellee’s judgment by default against it should stand; nevertheless, it being the apparent agreement of all parties that double recovery should not be had against the city of Corsi-cana on account of its failure to answer herein, we feel it our duty to remand the cause for further proceedings.

Nowhere in this brief does the apppllee seek to uphold his judgment against garnishee on the ground that garnishee had made default, and the court will treat the case as the parties thereto have treated it. If there was in-fact an agreement between the garnishee and the appellee with reference to filing an answer herein, such agreement should be embodied in the record upon the next trial of' this cause.

Being of the opinion that the judgment of the trial court cannot be supported upon any grounds urged by appellee, it is ordered that such judgment be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not incon-s sistent with the views herein expressed.