40 S.W. 7 | Tex. | 1897
In this case the following questions have been certified for our decision:
"This is a suit brought by W.W. Oxsheer against his children — Viola M. Smith and her husband, Medora M. Letcher and her husband, and F.G. Oxsheer — for partition of the community property owned by plaintiff and his deceased wife, Martha E. Oxsheer, who died December 14, 1893, and to offset the indebtedness of F.G. Oxsheer to said community estate against his interest therein; and against Abram Nave to restrain him from selling a portion of the land belonging to said community estate, situated in Milam County, Texas, levied on as the interest of F.G. Oxsheer therein under an execution issued out of the District Court of Mitchell County, Texas, on a judgment in favor of said Nave and against said F.G. Oxsheer, on the ground that F.G. Oxsheer was indebted to said community estate in an amount exceeding the value of his share of said estate, and was insolvent.
"The defendants, Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Letcher, filed answers adopting the petition and prayer of plaintiff. F.G. Oxsheer waived service, but filed no answer.
"Abram Nave answered by general demurrer, general denial, and further alleged that at the date of the death of said Mrs. Martha Oxsheer he held a valid unsatisfied judgment for $8881.10. against F.G. Oxsheer and John T. Beal, and that a properly certified abstract of the same was filed and recorded and properly indexed in the proper judgment records of Milam County, Texas, where the lands owned by plaintiff and his deceased wife were situated, on the 7th day of May, 1892; that he held a lien on the one-sixth interest inherited by F.G. Oxsheer from his mother in said community lands by virtue of the record of said judgment; that the one-sixth of all of said lands had been sold under execution issued upon said judgment, except one tract of five hundred acres, and that said Nave became the purchaser and is now the owner of the same by fee simple title, and holds a lien on one-sixth interest in the remaining tract not sold, praying for judgment for same, for partition, etc.
"The case was tried by the court without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff for five hundred acres of the land described in his petition as his separate property and for one-half the other lands and for partition of the same; and in favor of defendant Nave and said Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Letcher each for one-sixth of three of the tracts described in plaintiff's petition as community property, and in favor of said Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Letcher and plaintiff each one-sixth of the other tract of *571 community land not sold by Nave; adjudging the personal property on hand to plaintiff, charged with the community debts, amounting to $4800. The plaintiff appeals to this court, assigning errors for reversal of the case.
"The evidence discloses the following facts bearing upon the questions hereafter certified:
"Mrs. Martha E. Oxsheer died December 14, 1893, and left surviving her W.W. Oxsheer, her husband, and F.G. Oxsheer, Viola M. Smith and Medora M. Letcher, children of the said W.W. and Martha E. Oxsheer.
"Said Martha E. Oxsheer died intestate, and said three children are her only heirs.
"At the time of the death of Mrs. Oxsheer she and her husband owned community property of the value of about $50,000.00, and owed community debts amounting to about $6600.00. And at said time F.G. Oxsheer was indebted to said community estate, principal and accrued interest, about $17,000, which was partially secured by mortgage lien on 160 acres of land — no part of the property involved in this suit — worth about $800.
"It was also shown that F.G. Oxsheer was insolvent.
"F.G. Oxsheer's indebtedness to said estate was evidenced by promissory notes payable to W.W. Oxsheer, and the testimony does not show that the consideration for which said notes were given was intended as an advancement, and we find that his liability to the estate was that of a debtor.
"It was further proved that on the 23rd day of April, 1892, the defendant, Abram Nave, recovered judgment against F.G. Oxsheer and John T. Beal in the District Court of Mitchell County, Texas, for the sum of $8881.10; that on the 7th day of May, 1892, a duly certified abstract of said judgment was properly recorded and indexed in the judgment records of Milam County, Texas, in which the land in controversy is situated; that executions were duly and regularly issued upon said judgment so as to keep the same alive, until February 8, 1895, when an alias execution was issued on said judgment to Milam County, and by virtue thereof the sheriff of said county, on the 16th day of May, 1895, levied on the one-sixth undivided interest owned by F.G. Oxsheer in all the real estate involved in this suit, except the five hundred acres shown to be the separate property of W. W. Oxsheer and adjudged to him by the judgment in this case; that said lands were duly advertised and sold in the manner prescribed by statute for sheriffs' sales, and the defendant, Abram Nave, became the purchaser thereof at said sale for the sum of $500, which sum, less the costs and expenses of said sale, was credited on said execution.
"Among others the following material questions are presented for decision — and which questions the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third Supreme Judicial District of Texas desires to and hereby does certify to the Supreme Court of the State for decision: *572
"Whether or not, under the circumstances disclosed by the facts above stated, as against the defendant, Abram Nave, the indebtedness of F.G. Oxsheer to the community estate of W.W. and Martha E. Oxsheer should be off-set against the claim of said defendant to the land in controversy through his judgment lien and purchase thereunder, so as to defeat or diminish his claim to said land. Or, stating the question in general terms, in the partition of an estate, when a creditor of one of the heirs shown to be insolvent has obtained a judgment lien on said heir's interest in the real property belonging to said estate, and said insolvent heir is indebted to the estate — not for property received as an advancement, but in like manner as other debtors — will the right of the other distributees, as between them and said insolvent distributee, to off-set said indebtedness against his interest in the community, be extended to and apply as against the judgment lien creditor, who has bought the interest of said insolvent distributee under a sale made by virtue of an execution issued on his judgment?
"And, second, will the fact that the indebtedness of such insolvent distributee is partially secured by a lien on other property in any wise affect the rights of the parties?"
Upon the questions growing out of the claim of the distributees of an estate of a deceased person to have one of them who is indebted to the estate to account for his debt in the distribution, the decisions are various and conflicting. At an early day it was held in England that a legatee who was indebted to the estate of the testator could only demand the balance of the legacy remaining after the subtraction of his debt. (Jeffs v. Wood, 2 P. Wms., 128.) The rule appears to have been uniformly followed in the English courts, but with the exception of Re Cordwell's Estate (L. R., 20 Eq. Cas., 644) we have found no case in those courts in which it has been applied to a distributee. But that it does so apply is the doctrine generally recognized in this country. In some of our States, however, it is held, that the right to set off the debt against the distributive share continues only so long as the share remains the property of the distributee and that if it be aliened by voluntary or involuntary conveyance, the right is lost. The administrator in those States is deemed merely the creditor of the distributee, as to the real estate at least, standing upon the same plane as other creditors, and in such jurisdictions it comes to a race of diligence between them. (Thompson v. Myers, 26 S.W. Rep., (Ky.) 1014; Scobee v. Bridges,
Whether, when the heir is insolvent and owes the estate of the ancestor, as in this case, the administrator has any prior right to demand payment out of lands descended, or whether it becomes a mere race of diligence between him and other creditors of the heir, is a question not raised by this record."
The right to have the debt of the legatee or distributee charged to him in the adjustment of the legacy or the distributive share is called a right of "set-off" or of "retainer." But the inaccuracy of the former expression is pointed out in Cherry v. Boultbee, 4 Mylne Craig, 442, and has frequently been recognized in other cases. So the improper use of the word "retainer" in the same connection has been commented upon. In re Akerman, 3 L. R. (1891), Ch. Div., 212. The right, in our opinion, rests, not so much upon any rule of set-off or of retainer as upon the broad principles of equity. In Powers v. Morrison,
"The principle is to be found laid down in Cherry v. Boultbee in the passage to which I have just referred, and also in Courtenay v. Williams, and no doubt, if search were made, it would be found to have been laid down in many other cases. It is this. A person who owes an estate money, that is to say, who is bound to increase the general mass of the estate by a contribution of his own, cannot claim an aliquot share given to him out of that mass without first making the contribution which completes it. Nothing is, in truth, retained by the representative of the estate; nothing is, in strict language, set off; but the contributor is paid by holding in his own hand a part of the mass, which, if the mass were completed, he would receive back. That is expanding what the Lord Chancellor calls in Cherry v. Boultbee "a right to pay out of the fund in hand," rather than a set-off, and is in conformity with what the Lord Chancellor, Lord Lyndhurst, in Courtney v. Williams, says: 'The defendant's, the legatee's, demand (the court says) is in respect of the testator's assets, without which the executor is not liable; and it is very just and equitable for the executor to say that the defendant, the legatee, has so much of the assets already in his own hands, and consequently is satisfied pro tanto.' Why should not that be applied to a case like this, where the property is put together, and the whole is given to the same persons upon the same trusts, both for payment of debts and other deductions and for division among the same persons? The principle is the same. The contributor to the mass is in precisely the same position whether the mass is held by trustees or by an executor, and it would, to my mind, be introducing mere technicality into the principle, and preventing its proper and reasonable application to say that because there is no legal personal representative of the testator, — because the representative is a trustee and not an executor, — therefore the contributor is to get off, and have his aliquot share of the mass minus his contribution to it, instead of having his aliquot share of the mass, including his contribution.
"Mr. Warmington says that he takes only real estate, and that he does *575 not claim any personal estate, and therefore the rule in Courtney v. Williams does not apply. I am not deciding a case where there is a mere gift of real estate, whether it be a gift directly to the legatee or devisee, or through the intervention of a trustee, or by way of trust for sale. But here I am dealing with a case such as I have mentioned — with a general fund made up of proceeds of sale of real estate, and proceeds of conversion of personal estate, — and there seems to me to be a principle of general application, and no reason occurs to me, — none has been suggested, — why I should not apply that principle. Therefore, I think that if there is a debt payable by a residuary legatee under such circumstances as exist here, that debt must, for the purposes of computation, be included in the residue, and — again for the purposes of computation — treated as part of the share going to the legatee debtor."
This clear and able exposition, in our opinion, announces the true doctrine and leaves little to be said. We think it decisive of the question certified.
In that case the will of the testator, after providing certain specific devises and legacies, directed that his executors should sell all his real and personal estate, and after paying his debts and primary legacies, "to hold the net residue thereof in trust as to three seventh parts thereof, to invest the same for the benefit of his son, Edward, and his (the testator's) two daughters upon certain specified trusts, and to pay the remaining four seventh parts thereof to his sons Henry, William, James, and George, in equal shares, as tenants in common." Here the will of the testator as to the four-sevenths of the net residue makes substantially a similar provision as is made by our statute in cases of intestacy, except that it provided for the conversion of the estate into money. We apprehend that this makes no difference in principle, for the reason that the equity of requiring the debtor distributee is the same whether the mass to be distributed consists of property or money; and it is within the power of courts of equity to enforce the equity as well in the one case as in the other. Under our statutes in relation to the estates of deceased persons, a conversion of the property, both real and personal, may become necessary upon either of two contingencies: 1. For the payment of debts; and 2, in order to bring about equality in the final distribution. In principle we perceive no sound distinction between the two cases, unless the right to have the debtor distributee to account is placed upon the ground of retainer or of set-off — a doctrine distinctly repudiated in the case under review.
In the able argument of counsel for the appellee, it is ingeniously insisted that according to the weight of authority in this country the rule which requires the debtor distributee to account for his debt does not apply to real estate, because that descends directly to the heirs; and that since our statute devolves the title both of real and personal property directly upon the heirs, in this State, it does not apply at all. But we apprehend the declaration of our statute as to the descent of property makes no difference, since without it the title of the distributees to the *576 personal property after the payment of debts would be none the less substantial. This is recognized even at common law. In Cooper v. Cooper (L. R. 7, H. L. 53; s. c., 30 L. T. N. S., 409), the Lord Chancellor says: "The rule of the Statute of Distributions which requires the conversion of an intestate's estate into money is introduced simply for the benefit of creditors, and the facility of division among the next of kin; but as regards the substantial title to property the right of the next of kin (subject only to the claims of creditors) is complete." The question cannot be properly resolved upon such a technical principle.
Our statutes provide, that "where any person, having title to any estate of inheritance, real, personal or mixed, shall die intestate, as to such estate, and shall leave no surviving husband or wife, it shall descend and pass in parcenary to his kindred, male and female, in the following course," etc. Rev. Stats., art. 1688. The common law recognizes the equitable principle of equality among parceners, by requiring them to bring into hotchpot advancements made in the lifetime of the ancestor. (2 Blackstone's Com., 191.) By another article of our statutes (Rev. Stats., 1694,) the heirs are expressly required to account for advancements, but this provision, it would seem, was inserted out of abundance of caution. Advancements are no part of an estate, though the heirs may bring them into hotchpot and claim their full share of all the property. The debt due by an heir to the estate is a part of the estate and like other assets is subject to partition and distribution. The heir owing the debt must either pay it or take his share in the debt or the debt as a part of his share, as the case may be. All the courts, except those which adhere to the theory that it is a race of diligence between the administrator and other creditors of the heir who is indebted to the estate, hold that a creditor of such heir can acquire no better right in the estate than that held by the heir himself. Since when the heir owes the estate more than the value of his share and does not pay his debt he has no interest in the other property of the estate, it necessarily follows, as we think, that a creditor, by a sale and purchase under judicial process of his nominal interest, can acquire no right in the property.
Counsel for appellants have presented an able argument based upon our community laws and the quasi-partnership character of the relation of the husband and wife in respect to the community property, but we have not found it necessary to examine that question.
We are of the opinion that the first question certified should be answered in the affirmative and that the second should be answered in the negative. *577