212 S.W. 483 | Tex. Comm'n App. | 1919
The two causes mentioned in the caption were consolidated by order of the Supreme Court, after writs of error had been granted.
Tbe cause first mentioned was a suit brought by J. E. Brown, in his capacity as administrator of the estate of C. R. Phillips, deceased, in the district court of McLennan county, against the sheriff of that county and Beall Hardware & Implement Company, to restrain a sale of eight acres of land belonging to the estate of C. R. Phillips, deceased, under an order of sale upon a judgment of the district court of Hunt county, in which judgment the hardware company had recovered a personal judgment against three of the heirs of C. R. Phillips, with foreclosure of an attachment lien levied upon the interest of said heirs upon the eight acres of land in question. The district court denied the injunction, and the Court of Civil Appeals of the Third District (178 S. W. 964) reversed the judgment of the district court, and remanded the cause to that court, with the instruction to dismiss the case on the ground that the district court of Hunt county alone had jurisdiction of the cause.
“It has not been customary in this court to-decide questions of importance after their decision has become useless, merely to ascertain who is liable for the cost. The amount of business of practical importance would forbid that tbe time of the court should be so occupied.”
We believe the decision in that case has been uniformly followed. McWhorter v. Northcutt, 94 Tex. 86, 58 S. W. 720; Riggins v. Richards, 97 Tex. 526, 80 S. W. 524.
In the case of Bolton v. City of San Antonio, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 174, 23 S. W. 279, the
“Whether rightfully or wrongfully done, it is useless for us now to undertake to determine, for appellees cannot now be restrained from doing that which they have already done. Should this cause be remanded to the trial court, upon its being made to appear that the bonds have been issued and sold, it could only dismiss it, or render judgment for appellees.'
For other cases upon this question, see Miehie’s Texas Digest, vol. 1, pp. 365, 367, and Corpus Juris, vol. 4, pp. 1135, 1136, and note 28.
We, therefore, conclude that there is now no controversy, so far as the injunction suit is concerned, that can be determined by the Supreme Court.
The second case mentioned in the caption arose in the county court of McLennan county upon a contest filed by the hardware company to an application of the administrator to sell the land in question for the purpose of paying debts of the deceased. The Court of Civil Appeals remanded the case to the district court, with instructions to try the issue as to the present availability of certain personal property as assets in the hands of the administrator, before resorting to a sale of the real estate. 204 S. W. 798.
The record in this case shows the following facts:
C. R. Phillips died intestate on September 10, 1913; and on November 3d following J. E. Brown was appointed administrator of his estate by the county court of McLennan county. On November 23, 1913, the admin-' istrator filed an inventory, appraisement, and list of claims of the estate, listing, among other property, certain personal property, consisting of live stock and farming implements, appraised at $1,895 in the aggregate. As to this personal property, the inventory states:
“In making this inventory it is proper to state to the court that Earnest Phillips, a son of the deceased, claims to own the following items of personal property in the foregoing inventory.”
This is followed by a list of the personal property referred to. This inventory was approved. On December 10, 1913, Earnest Phillips filed in the county court a petition ! seeking to have the administrator deliver this property to him, he claiming to be the owner thereof. Upon hearing of this petition, the court on January 17, 1914, adjudged the property to belong to Earnest Phillips, subject, however, to a mortgage in favor of the First National Bank of McGregor, and ordered it turned over by the administrator to Earnest Phillips. There was no appeal from this order. On April 3, 1914, the administrator Brown filed an application to sell the land in question, which appeared i from the orders of the court and the several i reports of the administrator to be the only ! property of the estate not converted into | cash. It was also shown that the cash on ¡hand was not sufficient to pay the debts of ¡the estate. This application was contested i by the hardware company as owner of the j interest in the land of three of the heirs un- ! der the foreclosure above referred to. The j pleadings upon this contest are rather vo- ! luminous, and we deem it unnecessary to j notice them, further than to state that it j was contended by the hardware company that the order finding that the personal prop-j erty above referred to belonged to Earnest ! Phillips, and requiring the administrator to i turn it over to him, was void; that this '¡property still constituted an asset of the es- ! tate, and that the administrator should be i required to make good the appraised value j thereof, the result of which would be that j there would be no necessity to sell the real i estate. As we.construe the pleadings of both ; parties, it was conceded that the adminis-i trator had complied with the order of the ! court, and that the personal property had j been turned over to Earnest Phillips under i said order, and was no longer in the cus-j tody of the administrator.
On February 14, 1916, upon hearing of the application to sell the real estate, the court held that the contest of the hardware company showed no sufficient grounds for setting aside the previous orders of the court had in the administration, sustained a general demurrer to the contest, granted the application of the administrator, and ordered the property sold. The hardware company appealed from this order to the district court, but before the matter was tried in that court the administrator Brown died, and J. F. C'avitt was appointed administrator de bonis non. Gavitt qualified and filed an inventory, appraisement, and list of claims showing that the only property which came into his hands as administrator was cash amounting to $79.14, of which $54.14 was balance in the hands of Brown at the time of his death. This inventory contains the following:
“All of the balance of the property originally belonging to the estate has been disposed of pursuant to the orders of this court in due course of administration by J. E. Brown, so far as the knowledge of the affiant extends.”
The district court, upon hearing of the application for the sale of the real estate, held that the exceptions of the administrator, which were joined in by the First National Bank of McGregor, one of the chief creditors of the estate, were not well taken, and denied the application for sale of the real estate, and certified his ruling to the county court. From this judgment the administrator Cavitt and the bank appealed.
The Court of Civil Appeals of the Third District reversed the judgment of the district court, and remanded the cause, with instructions to try the issue as to the present availability of the personal property as assets in the hands of the administrator Cavitt, and to enter judgment for or against said administrator, according as such facts should be found in his favor or against him.
The following conclusions reached by the Court of Civil Appeals, in our opinion, are correct:
We are of opinion, however, that the Court of Civil Appeals committed error in remanding the cause to the district court to determine whether or not the 'personal property was an available asset in the hands of the administrator, Cavitt. We think the record clearly shows that the administrator, Brown, prior to his death, had parted with the possession of the personal property by delivering it to Earnest Phillips under the order of the county court; and it certainly clearly appears from the inventory of the administrator Cavitt that this personal property never came into his hands. The question, therefore, presents itself whether creditors can be delayed in the payment of their debts to await the determination of the ownership of the personal property, which has been turned over to Earnest Phillips, or the determination of the liability of the sureties of the former administrator for wrongfully delivering said property to Earnest Phillips. As we understand the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, the sale of the real estate cannot be delayed on these accounts.
- A case which has been often cited by text-writers is that of Clanmorris v. Bingham, 1 Molloy’s Reports, 514, where the question here under consideration was directly involved. In that case the Lord Chancellor of Ireland says:
“There is a deficiency of personal assets, when there is a deficiency of immediately available personal assets to pay a «reditor.
“A creditor is not to wait for payment attendant on the ultimate solvency of securities belonging to the testator—I have known that acted on 20 times. No matter how soon assets may be likely to come in, or rents to amount to the sum necessary, a creditor shall not be obliged to wait beyond the shortest reasonable time. It is sometimes said that the care which the court takes of the interest of minors will influence it in this point. But delaying creditors is no part of the court’s duty for the protection of minors’- interest. That is a protection the court has no right to give.
“The court has two points to consider: First, that there is a debt presently due; and, second, not to sell real estate, while there is personalty available. But this does not mean that if debts are due to the estate, the creditor is not to be satisfied until they are collected. The court will order immediate application of such funds as are immediately available', and then resort to the real estate, without waiting for the coming in of other personal effects, which may become capable of being applied within a shorter or longer period of time.”
The same rule was announced in Bridge v. Swain, 3 Redf. Sur. (N. Y.) 487. In that case certain claims were listed as assets of the estate, and it was contended that these as
“It seems to me that the assets had in view by the statute are not what shall be deemed assets for the purpose of the inventory, but the amount of personal property converted into money or immediately available which has actually come into the hands of the executor or administrator. The doubtful and worthless debts are to be inventoried, and are assets to be accounted for, but if not collected at the time of making such an application as this, clearly the possibility of their ultimate recovery cannot be alleged in bar of this proceeding. The courts have repeatedly held, as shown by the authorities cited by the counsel for the petitioner, that debts due to the testator, only recoverable by suits, are not assets to be charged as in his hands until the actual receipt of them by him. * * * Ido not think I can compel creditors to await the doubtful issue of that litigation. They have rights to be protected, as well as heirs at law and devisees.”
In the case of Blickensderffer v. Hanna, decided by the Supreme Court of Missouri (1910) 231 Mo. 93. 132 S. W. 678, the executor had delivered to a representative of one of the heirs certain funds of the estate which were sufficient to discharge the debts. The court say:
“The question is: Were the creditors compelled to sue Hanna, or the bondsmen of Jones, the executor, who had died, for this $800 before they could resort to the real estate? We think not. We think the principle was properly ruled in Van Bibber v. Julian, 81 Mo. loc. cit. 625, wherein on a like contention this court said it would not require a creditor ‘to resort to a suit on the bond of the administrator, with the trouble, expense, and delay incident thereto,’ before proceeding for an order for the sale of real estate. While the statute wisely requires the personal estate to be applied first to the payment of debts of the deceased, a creditor should not be relegated to an action on the bond for waste or a misappropriation for which he is in no way responsible.”
In the case of the Estate of Adam Fritz, 83 N. J. Eq. 610, 91 Atl. 1017, it was held that a creditor could not be delayed in an application to sell real property belonging to the estate of the decedent merely by showing that an estate of which the creditor was executrix was a debtor of the former estate in an amount sufficient to satisfy her claim.
In American & English Ency. of Law (2d Ed.) vol. 11, pp. 1086, 1087, it is said:
“The preponderance of authority, however, seems to establish the rule that creditors are not to be defeated by the neglect or mistake of the personal representatives of the deceased debtor, but that a sale of the real estate, in ease the personalty, originally sufficient for the payment of debts, has become insufficient by reason of a devastavit, will not be ordered until the creditors have exhausted their remedy against the executor or administrator and the sureties on his bond.”
In Clifflet v. Willis, 74 Tex. 245, 11 S. W. 1105, it was held that no land can be sold until after it has been inventoried, and appraised; and it was further held that proceedings to compel an additional inventory cannot be properly included in a proceeding to compel an exhibit of the true condition of the estate, but that this should be done by requiring an additional inventory.
In Altgeld v. Bank, 98 Tex. 265, 83 S. W. 11, Judge Brown in rendering the opinion said:
“The court can regularly order the sale of property only after it has been inventoried and appraised as required by law; hence the administrator could not get an order of the court to sell property which could not be placed upon the inventory of the estate.”
In Johnson v. Morris, 45 Tex. 463, it was held that the inventory is prima facie evidence of the property of the estate coming into the hands of the administrator.
We conclude that the judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and district court should be reversed, and both causes remanded to the district court, with instructions to dismiss the injunction suit and to make such order on the application to sell the land as should have been made by the county court, sitting in probate, treating the contest as averring no sufficient grounds for refusing the application.
The judgment recommended by the Commission of Appeals is adopted and will be entered as the judgment of the Supreme Court.
<£=>For otter eases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER In all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
<S=aFor other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes