13 Tex. 288 | Tex. | 1855
The questions in this case are,
1st. Can the heirs of a deceased, for the purpose of reviving a judgment, prosecute a suit which was commenced by administrators, the said administrators having been discharged from office.
2nd. Can this be done when they admit that such revivor will be not for their own, but for the benefit of a third party who is the real owner of the original cause of action.
The 38th Section (Art. 697) of the Act to regulate proceedings in the District Courts declares, in effect, that if a plaintiff, in a suit where the cause of action survives, dies before verdict, his legal representative may make himself or be made a party to such suit, and if executors or administrators be parties plaintiff in any suit and shall die or cease to be such executors or administrators, the suit may be continued by the parties succeeding to the administration of the estate.
It will be perceived that the statute makes express provision for the continuation of a suit in a case where one administrator succeeds another in the administration of an estate, but not in a case where all administration has been closed and the estate turned over to the heirs as its rightful owners. But can any principle of law be found to prevent the heirs who are now vested with every right pertaining to the estate, from prosecuting, for their own benefit, a suit which was commenced by the administrators as trustees of the ■estate ? One administrator succeeds another in the prosecution of a suit, not in their personal right or for their individual benefit, but in their official capacity and for the advantage of the estate. Why should the heirs, when an administration is closed, not be permitted to do that for their own benefit, which, when it is open, can be done for them by an administrator ? When administration is closed, the presumption is
The Section above cited employs the phrase legal representative of the deceased. This is a general term, susceptible of different significations, and perhaps it would have been more judicious to have followed the language of the Act of 1838, viz: executor, administrator, guardian, creditor or heir. (Acts of 1838.) There is no room for doubt, under such language, that in proper cases the heir might appear himself and continue a suit begun by the ancestor or by his administrator. We are not to infer, however, that by the change of phraseology, the Legislature intended to deprive heirs of the power to represent the deceased, they being in fact his real and permanent representatives, the others being appointed and representing him for merely temporary purposes and trusts. I apprehend that on examination, it will be found that in repeated instances in our statutes, the terms legal representatives and heirs are of synonimous signification and import. This is not peculiar to our laws, for it will be found that in some of the other States the terms legal representatives have not been considered identical with executors and administrators.
The question, however, as to whether an heir can continue a suit begun by a deceased or by his administrators, was vir
But, in support of the judgment below, it is urged that the administrators and heirs are prosecuting this suit, not for the benefit of the estate they represent, but for the advantage of another.
There is nothing substantial in this objection. What possible benefit the plaintiffs expected to derive from the statement of this fact, it would be in vain to conjecture. The fact that the claim belonged to the deceased, had been adjudicated in the former suit. The defendant was not setting up the objection that it belonged to another, when this information was gratuitously furnished by the plaintiffs themselves. But it is unnecessary to comment on the subject. The fact is of no importance in the cause. It cannot benefit or injure either party. The defendant cannot claim more from it than he might
Beversed and remanded.