35 S.W. 427 | Tex. App. | 1896
On the 3d day of June, 1886, C.A. Keating, claiming to own shares in the J. Stone Sons Live Stock Company, sued it and others and alleged that said company was the owner of a ranch in Van Zandt County, Texas, as well as certain horses, mules, cattle, hogs and goats, of the aggregate value of $34,950, and that the said company and the other defendants had confederated together for the purpose of fraudulently disposing of the property and assets of said corporation. An injunction was prayed for and granted to restrain the disposal of the property, and Frank Hamm, the appellant, was appointed receiver to take charge of the property and assets of said corporation. Hamm accepted the receivership and entered upon the duties of the position. Upon the trial in the District Court a verdict was returned by instruction against Keating, and on appeal it was affirmed by the Supreme Court. Keating v. Stone Sons Live Stock Co.,
Afterwards, on March 15, 1894, Lathrop reported, showing that the personal property of the corporation was of the value of $3251.50, and that the receiver had taken possession of the land and all the personal property, except ten head of horses and thirty head of cattle, of the value of $500, which the report adds it was the duty of the receiver to take into his possession. It was further reported that Hamm did not file an inventory of the property taken by him, and never asked as to what disposition he should make of the property, although he had sold a large portion of it; that some of the property was destroyed by fire after the receiver had possessed it, and no insurance had been placed on it. The master found that Hamm should pay into court $3251.50, with legal interest from January 1, 1887, less such sum as the court should *417 allow for expenses and compensation. On the same day voluminous exceptions were filed to the report.
Appellant Hamm demanded a jury to try the issues made by his exceptions, and fully complied with the law in regard thereto, but his demand was refused on the ground that in law he was not entitled to a trial by jury. To this action of the court a bill of exceptions was reserved by appellant. Upon a hearing of the cause by the district judge, the report of the master was confirmed, with the addition that the receiver be allowed the sum of $701.65 for his expenses and services. After allowing this credit, the judgment, with interest, amounted to $4200, which the receiver was ordered to pay into court within sixty days, under the penalty, if the money was not paid within the time mentioned, that he should be confined in jail until the payment was made. Execution was also, in event of failure of payment, ordered against the receiver, as well as his bondsmen, who were not before the court. A fee for the master of $100 was taxed up as costs against the receiver.
The decision of the Supreme Court being in favor of the defendants in the case of Keating v. J. Stone Sons Live Stock Company, the District Court had the authority, either upon its own motion or that of the defendants, to require an accounting on the part of the receiver, and a return of the property to the owners thereof. High, Receivers, sec. 162; O'Mahoney v. Belmont,
When the motion was made by appellants to require an accounting on the part of the receiver, the court undoubtedly had the authority to require the accounting, and upon a failure or refusal upon the part of the receiver, he could have been adjudged in contempt and compelled to account. When however he filed his account, and objections were raised to it by the appellees, there arose, to all intents and purposes, a suit between the receiver and the appellees. He was undoubtedly a party to the suit, and was clothed with all the constitutional rights guaranteed to any other party litigant. Hinckley v. Railway,
The objections made to the report of the master in chancery raised questions of fact upon which the right of trial by jury, guaranteed by the Constitution, attached and belonged to appellant, and the fact that he was a receiver did not deprive him of this privilege. It does not matter what the practice may have been in chancery courts, the Constitution and laws of Texas guarantee that the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, the Constitution confining the power of the legislature in connection with this right to the passage of laws regulating it and maintaining its purity and efficiency. The receiver is a servant of the court from which he derives his power, and is subject to its orders and decrees. He stands much in the same relation to a court of chancery that a sheriff does to a court of law. While he is under the control and subject to the orders of the court, he can sue and be sued in his official capacity in any court of the State, and when he has thus sued or been sued, he has exactly the same rights as any other *418
litigant. Had the appellees seen fit, they could, instead of filing a motion in the original suit, have brought an entirely independent suit to have compelled an accounting, and an auditor could have been appointed, whose powers are analogous to those of a master in chancery (Whitehead v. Petrie,
In order to fix liability for the loss of the horses and cattle that were running upon the range and were never in possession of appellant, and for the property burned, the loss must be traced directly to the negligence of the receiver. The fact of allowing the animals to remain upon the range, or a failure to insure the burned property, would not of themselves render appellant liable for the value of the property. Ordinary care is the test of the responsibility of the receiver.
It is not necessary to notice the other assignments.
The whole of the testimony taken before the master has been embodied in the transcript, and covers eighty two pages of a record of two hundred and seventy-two pages. There is other matter besides that should not have found a place in the record. This state of the record is chargeable to appellant.
The judgment of the District Court will be reversed and the cause remanded, and one-third of the costs of the transcript will be assessed against appellant, the other costs against appellees.
Reversed and remanded.