Whitley v. Jackson
Whitley v. Jackson
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
§ 574. Attachment bond; condition as to costs. The attachment bond in this case was quashed in the court below. It was conditioned that the “plaintiff will prosecute his suit with effect, and that he will pay such damages as shall be adj udged against him for wrongfully suing out said attachment.” Held, the bond is not conditioned as the law requires. The word “costs;” used in the statute, is omitted. [R. S. 156-158.] This is a substantial and fatal omission, and the bond was properly quashed.
§ 575. New attachment bond cannot be allowed. The plaintiff undertook to obviate the defect in his attachment bond by filing, befoi-e the motion to quash was acted upon, a bond for costs. This was not permissible. Attachment laws and the proceedings under them are to be strictly and rigidly construed as against the plaintiff in attachment, and it has been the uniform practice in this state to exact of a plaintiff in attachment a strict and literal compliance with the requirements of the statute. [Sloo v. Powell, Dallam, 469; Sydnor v. Chambers, id. 604; Wooster v. McGee, 1 Tex. 17; Caldwell v. Haley, 3 Tex. 317; Givens v. Taylor, 6 Tex. 320; Chevallier v. Williams, 2 Tex. 243.]
§ 576. Pleadings in justice's court are oral, except, etc.; same rule governs on appeal, etc.; p)lea of payment, etc. In cases originating in justices’ courts the pleadings of the parties, except certain defenses which are specified, are not required to be in writing. The plea of payment or settlement is not required to be made in writing, but may be oral. [R. S. 1573, 3574.] The same rule governs when the case is taken to the county court. [Henry v. Blasco, ante, p. 420.] This was a suit in jus
Reversed and remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.