Toland v. Swearingen & Smith
Toland v. Swearingen & Smith
Opinion of the Court
There are two grounds at least on which the judgment of the District Court must be affirmed.
This court held in Cook v. Love, 33 Texas, 487, that in order to make an attachment lien available, it must be carried into a judgment, and that a judgment in personam, without a foreclosure of the lien, is an abandonment of the attachment. And in Johnson v. Murphy, 17 Texas, 217, it was held, where suit was instituted on a note, and to foreclose a mortgage given to secure it, and a judgment was taken only on the note, and without an order of foreclosure or sale, that it was, as to the mortgage, res adjudicóla, and that another suit to foreclose the mortgage could not be instituted.
2. The other ground is, it is not made to appear that at the date of the institution of this suit against the sureties on the replevy bond, the principal (King) was insolvent.
The testimony was not sufficient, and in the absence of such testimony the suit could not be prosecuted against the sureties without a joinder of the principal with them. There are other grounds presented in the record which, we think, would defeat the appellant in this action, but we deem it unnecessary to notice them.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Emily Toland v. Swearingen & Smith
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- ',1. Securities on replevy bond for property seized under a distress warrant are liable only for return of the property after judgment foreclosing the lien fixed by the levy; hence it is held, that if the plaintiff either consent to take a mere personal judgment, or if he fail to establish his claim to foreclosure, he has lost all remedy against the property levied on, and the sureties on replevy bond are released. :3. In the absence of proof of insolvency of the principal in a replevy bond, suit cannot be maintained against the sureties.