W. D. Gamble & Co. v. Talbot
W. D. Gamble & Co. v. Talbot
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
§ 729. Amendment of pleading; not error to permit, after announcement of ready for trial, when; case stated. F. L. Talbot owned a stock of 'goods worth not exceeding $350. He was insolvent. He was indebted to A. Talbot, his brother, over $600, and to Caperon & Bond, intervenors in this suit, in a considerable amount, and was also indebted to various other parties. He sold and delivered to A. Talbot, in part payment of said indebtedness due said A. Talbot, the stock of goods mentioned. These goods were soon afterwards sold and delivered by A. Talbot to W. D. Gamble & Co., for the sum of $210. Before Gamble & Co. paid over the money, they were garnished in a suit brought by Caperon & Bond against
§ 730. Discontinuance of suit as to a joint defendant served; must be objected to, when. No objection was made to the discontinuance of the suit as to the joint defendant Oamp, at the time of the trial. Such objection is presented for the first time in this court. The objection comes too late. Where a suit is discontinued as to one of two joint defendants served, the other defendant, if he would object or claim benefit from such dismissal, must do so in the trial court by motion, exception or plea, and, failing to do so, cannot be heard to make such objection in the appellate court. [Horton v. Wheeler, 17 Tex. 52; White v. Leavitt, 20 Tex. 704.]
§731. Fraudulent conveyance; transfer of property by insolvent debtor to creditor, valid when. The court refused to instruct the jury at the request of appellants that “a purchase of goods from a debtor in failing circumstances must not only be for a valuable consideration, but must also be bona fide.” Abstractly considered, this proposition is correct, but is too broadly stated for the facts of this case. In this state it is well settled that a creditor has the right to receive property from an insolvent debtor in payment of a debt due to him, if the transaction be open, and more property is not taken than is reasonably sufficient to pay the debt, and this right exists, although the creditor may know at the time he so receives the property that he will thereby prevent other creditors from enforcing their claims, and although the creditor may know that the debtor is prompted to give him the preference through motives of friendship. [Greenleve, Block & Co. v. Blum, 59 Tex. 124; Schneider & Davis v. Sansum, 62 Tex. 201; also see W. & W. Con. Rep. § 458.] The charge given by the court was
§ 732. Judgment; is a protection to a garnishee, when. Gamble complains that the court erred in rendering judgment against him for the money, without relieving him from the garnishment judgment which had previously been rendered against him for the same money. 'While the judgment in this suit does not expressly vacate and annul the judgment in the garnishment proceeding, such is its legal effect. Caperon & Bond, the plaintiffs in the garnishment, were parties in this suit, and put in issue and litigated their right to the judgment in the garnishment suit, and this issue was adjudged against them. All the parties being before the court in this suit, it would perhaps have been the proper practice to formally declare in the judgment that the judgment in the garnishment s.uit was set aside and annulled. But as it is, we think Gamble & Co. are in no danger of being injured, and shall not disturb the judgment
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.