Court Opinion

ID: 3920171
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:47:23.327871+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:54:14.115909
License: Public Domain

This is an injunction proceeding by appellee O'Brien against appellant, Henry Hicks, and the sheriff of Deaf Smith county, to restrain the collection of a judgment obtained by Hicks against O'Brien, in the sum of $362.22, in the district court of Deaf Smith county, November 10, 1913, After answer filed by Barcus, alleging that he was the owner of the judgment, the injunction was granted. The application for *Page 493 
inJunction states, in substance, that the Judgment had been transferred to appellant Barcus; that Barcus and Hicks had obtained an execution and were threatening to levy upon the property of O'Brien; that O'Brien had been garnished by the First National Bank of Hereford, said garnishment based upon a judgment obtained by said bank in the county court of Deaf Smith county against Henry Hicks; and that a balance remained unpaid thereon of $129.90, with costs and interest. The prayer was for an injunction preventing the collection of said judgment until it could be ascertained in the county court of Deaf Smith county to whom said judgment belonged.
The holding in Dobbin v. Wybrants, 3 Tex. 457, is to the effect that the plaintiffs in a garnishment proceeding, who had recovered a judgment against defendant, should have been made parties to the suit upon the note and the judgment in garnishment enjoined until it is ascertained to whom the debt is due. We find the same holding in Iglehart v. Moore,21 Tex. 501, and Iglehart 546v. Mills, 21 Tex. 545. The doctrine is too well established in this state to require further citation of authorities that a garnishee, in order to protect himself from having to pay the debt twice, is entitled to interplead all claimants of the funds in his hands.
The first proposition submitted by appellant is that the district court has no right or authority to enjoin the collection of a judgment in the district court pending a settlement of an entirely different suit in the county court, and we are cited to the case of Foy v. East Dallas Bank et al., 28 S.W. 137, to sustain the proposition. In that case Lightfoot, Chief Justice, said:
"The sixth assignment complains that the court considered the proceedings in the case of E. A. Alien  Bro. against M. A. and E. F. Archibald and J. E. Lett, garnishee, pending in the county court, and suspended the judgment obtained by appellant until said cause was finally determined. It was shown that said E. A. Alien  Bro. had brought suit in the county court against the Dallas Grocery Company and had garnished the appellee bank, and that it had filed an answer in said cause. The bank could have interpleaded E. A. Allen  Bro. as it did the other litigants, and required them to come in and settle the question of their rights, but did not do so, and they are in no sense parties to this suit. The court erred in suspending the judgment obtained by appellant until the county court case could be disposed of, and in this respect the judgment below should be reformed. The remedy of the bank for its protection is clearly pointed out in the authorities cited under the first assignment above."
The authorities cited under the first assignment and referred to by Judge Lightfoot hold that a stockholder may require claimants to the fund to interplead. As we construe it, the holding of Judge Lightfoot is that, if the bank had interpleaded Allen  Bro. in the county court suit, it would have been entitled to the relief asked. In the instant case O'Brien has answered in the garnishment proceedings in the county court setting up the fact that appellant Barcus is claiming some sort of an interest in the judgment by reason of a transfer from Hicks and praying that Barcus be required to interplead. It is settled law in this state that a defendant in a judgment which is in every sense final is subject to garnishment. Burke v. Hance, 76 Tex. 76, 13 S.W. 163, 18 Am. St. Rep. 28; Kreisle v. Campbell, 89 Tex. 104, 33 S.W. 852; Waples Platter Grocer Co. v. Railway Co., 95 Tex. 486, 68 S.W. 265, 59 L.R.A. 353.
We agree with appellant that the county court could not have enjoined the issuance and levy of the execution based upon the district court judgment; but we think the garnishee, in order to save himself from a double judgment, had the right to ask the district court to stay the collection of its judgment until the question of the right to the fund had been settled in the county court. Henderson v. Garrett, 35 Miss. 554; Preston v. Harris, 24 Miss. (2 Cush.) 247; Morgan v. Peet, 8 Mart. (N. S. La.) 396; Weems v. Jennings, 2 Brev. (S.C.) 92; Paxson v. Sanderson, 8 Leg. Int. (Pa.) 54; Skipper v. Foster, 29 Ala. 330, 65 Am.Dec. 405; Montgomery Gaslight Co. v. Merrick  Sons, 61 Ala. 537; Rieden v. Kothman (Civ. App.) 73 S.W. 425.
We think under the liberal provisions of article 4643, Vernon's Sayles' Civil Statutes, the case generally as presented is one entitling the applicant to equitable relief; but we agree with appellant that the application is in some respects deficient.
Article 4647 provides that no injunction shall be granted to stay any judgment or proceedings at law except so much of the recovery or cause of action as the complainant shall in his petition show himself equitably entitled to be relieved against and so much as will cover the costs. We think this article applicable to this case. The application for injunction shows that the district court judgment sought to be enjoined is in the sum of $362.22, and that the balance of the judgment in the county court against Hicks is only $129.90, with 10 per cent. interest from June 12, 1912, and costs in the sum of $27.40. There is no tender of the amount over and above the total sum due as principal, interest, and costs of the county court. This should be done. Smith v. Smith,75 Tex. 410, 12 S.W. 678; Twichell v. Askew, 141 S.W. 1072; Shannon v. Hay, 153 S.W. 360.
Appellant contends that, because 12 months has not expired since the date of the district court judgment against O'Brien, it is not such a final judgment as will permit a garnishment against the defendant therein. The application shows that, although notice of appeal was given, no appeal bond was ever filed, and it is alleged that the applicant, O'Brien, had no intention of prosecuting this appeal, but had abandoned it. Appellant has *Page 494 
himself furnished us the best evidence of its finality by the issuance of an execution thereon. The other propositions presented are overruled.
Because of the insufficiency of the petition, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the judge of the district court of Deaf Smith county to dissolve the injunction and make such orders as the nature of the case and the rights of the parties demand.
Reversed and remanded.