116 S.W. 156 | Tex. App. | 1909
Mrs. Elise Haseloff Hugo instituted this suit against a large number of persons, which was consolidated with a suit in which James Routledge was the plaintiff and Mrs. Hugo, widow and executrix of Chas. Hugo, deceased, the defendant. *177 The object of the first named suit was to ascertain the parties to whom a certain trust fund belonged, arising out of the sale of property placed by deed in the hands of her deceased husband, Charles Hugo, on August 4, 1896, for the benefit of B. F. Yoakum, H. D. Kampmann, deceased, A. C. Schryver, Hugo Schmeltzer and Elmendorf Company, who were the owners of the equitable title in the property.
It was alleged that on August 4, 1896, Charles Hugo, for the use and benefit of B. F. Yoakum, H. D. Kampmann, deceased, A. C. Schryver, Hugo Schmeltzer, a partnership composed of Charles Hugo, Gustav Schmeltzer and William Heuermann, and Elmendorf Company, a partnership composed of Amalie Elmendorf and other persons unknown to the pleader, purchased at sheriff's sale about seventy-nine acres of land, known as the San Antonio Fair Grounds; that at the date of the purchase the beneficiaries named were indebted to the Alamo National Bank in the sum of $19,000, evidenced by their promissory note on which they paid a sufficient sum to reduce the said sum to $15,000, and to secure that sum made another promissory note, and ordered and instructed Charles Hugo, trustee, to dispose of the property held by him and to pay off the note and expenses, and to account for the balance to the beneficiaries. It was alleged that in execution of the trust the property had been sold for $20,000, of which $5,000 was in cash and $15,000 in promissory notes; that the trustee had paid note of the Alamo National Bank and the expenses, and at time of his death had $2,102.23 for account of the beneficiaries. That since his death, which occurred on September 14, 1906, Elise Haseloff Hugo, his executrix, had collected the amount remaining on the notes for the land and held in her possession for distribution among those entitled to it the sum of $10,507.79. It was alleged that H. D. Kampmann was dead, and Elizabeth Kampmann, his widow, had qualified as survivor of the community estate; that the copartnership of Hugo Schmeltzer had been dissolved, and Hugo Schmeltzer Co. was claiming the interest of said copartnership; that Amalie Elmendorf was dead and Geo. C. Altgelt was her administrator.
Appellant set up a cross-action in the consolidated suit, and also filed an answer, which pleadings, consisting of some thirty pages of the transcript, amount to a claim of all the trust fund belonging to the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, deceased, by virtue of a certain assignment executed to appellant by the administrator of the estate. Appellant, after alleging the creation of the trust fund as hereinbefore set out, in addition alleged that all the beneficiaries made payments on the notes, but that Schryver after two payments failed and refused to pay any further amounts, but that Schryver contended for a percentage of the trust fund equal to the percentage of the debt paid by him, and it was the contention of appellant that Amalie Elmendorf, whose share he claimed, was entitled to contribution against Schryver, and that before Schryver should be permitted to participate in a division of the fund that he should be charged with the various sums of money that he should have paid on the note. *178 The heirs of Amalie Elmendorf claimed their share of the trust fund and alleged that the assignment to appellant was null and void.
It was agreed by all the parties to the suit on March 16, 1908, which agreement was embodied in an interlocutory decree, that the total fund, principal and interest, was $10,933.10, out of which should be paid an attorney's fee of $250, and all costs to the date aforesaid; that there be paid to Elizabeth S. Kampmann, both individually and in her representative capacity 22.028 percent of the fund; to Elise Haseloff Hugo, G. Schmeltzer, and George and Lina Heuermann, as independent executors of the estate of Wm. Heuermann, jointly 22.028 percent; to Erna Elmendorf, a minor, 00.734 percent; to Cedric Elmendorf, a minor, 00.734; to James Routledge, 02.937 percent; making a total disposed of by the agreement of 70.489 percent of the fund remaining after deducting costs and attorney's fees. It was provided that the balance of the fund should be placed in the hands of the San Antonio Loan Trust Company and bear 4-38/100 percent per annum interest, and be subject to the order of the court on sixty days' notice, and that upon payment of the sums named Elise Haseloff Hugo and Victor Hugo should be relieved from any further liability for the fund. It was further stated in the decree that Mrs. Emilie Elmendorf, Dr. E. H. Elmendorf, Mrs. Louis Dreiss and husband, Louis Dreiss, Herman Tolle, Leon Tolle, Emma Tolle, William Netter, Hugo Schmeltzer Co., a corporation, should take nothing out of the fund. That decree disposed of all interests except that claimed by appellant of A. C. Schryver, G. C. Altgelt as administrator of estate of Amalie Elmendorf, and the heirs of Amalie Elmendorf.
The cause was tried by jury and the court submitted it on one issue alone as follows: "Did the parties interested in the fund in issue in this case, by the execution of the compromise agreement in evidence before you, intend that their interest in the trust fund in the hands of Charles Hugo should be transferred to James Routledge?" To which the jury answered in the negative. Upon that answer the court rendered a judgment that out of the $3,095.67 subject to its orders, $1,247.05 should be apportioned to A. C. Schryver, and that George C. Altgelt, as administrator of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, should recover the remaining $1,848.62, and that all the other parties, among the number being appellant, take nothing by the suit. Appellant made his motion for a new trial, which being overruled, he perfected an appeal to this court.
We find that the facts show that the claim of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, deceased, to the trust fund in controversy was not transferred to appellant by the sale to him of the notes, accounts and claims of that estate in the hands of the administrator. The necessary facts in connection with the sale to appellant are fully set forth in the further course of this opinion. Appellant claimed all of the trust fund belonging to the estate of Amalie Elmendorf through an assignment made to him by George C. Altgelt, administrator, which, after reciting that the application to sell had been made by the heirs and creditors of the estate and that the County Court had ordered the sale, is as follows: "Therefore I, George C. Altgelt, in my official *179 capacity as administrator of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, deceased, of Bexar County, Texas, for and in consideration of the premises and the sum of $50 to me in hand this day paid by James Routledge, of Bexar County, Texas, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, have bargained, sold, conveyed, transferred and assigned, and do by these presents bargain, sell, convey, transfer and assign unto the said James Routledge, of Bexar County, Texas, all of the accounts, notes, choses in actions, claims and judgments now in my hands of any and every description due and owing by any and all persons to Elmendorf Co. (so far as the interest of Amalie Elmendorf is concerned), or to the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, deceased; except, however, the claim of George C. Altgelt, administrator, v. Benno Engelke et al., involved in case No. 14758, in 45th District Court, above mentioned, and the claim against city of San Antonio." In applying for the sale the property is described as "all of the accounts, notes, choses in action, claims and judgments now in the hands of the administrator, due and owing by any and all parties," etc.
The right of appellant to any part of the trust fund must turn upon whether it was included in the description given in the application for sale and in assignment made thereunder. The interest of the heirs of Amalie Elmendorf in the trust fund held by Charles Hugo at the time of the sale was undoubtedly covered by the descriptive language "accounts, notes, choses in action, claims and judgments," but that language is qualified by the words, "now in the hands of the administrator," and unless the trust fund was actually or constructively in the hands of the administrator at the time of the sale there was no transfer of it to appellant. The question as to whether it was in the hands of the administrator at the time of the sale was one of fact which could only be determined by a jury, and, therefore, the court did not err in submitting the issue to the jury. If the interest in the trust fund was not in the hands of the administrator, and if the parties did not intend to transfer it, it was not a varying of the written instrument for the jury to find as they did. The first assignment of error is overruled.
The property transferred by the administrator must be restricted to that in "his hands" at the very time of the transfer. It did not refer to anything that might be discovered and reduced to possession by the administrator, but it was a present possession that was referred to. Claims were excepted from the transfer, but they were in the hands of the administrator at that time and collection of them was being prosecuted by him. The term "in the hands of" means, in actual possession or in such condition that actual possession is legally with the person described as holding it. We do not think that property is "in the hands of a person" when it is doubtful that he could obtain possession even by invoking the coercive powers of a court. Mere knowledge of the existence of some sort of claim upon the part of the administrator would not place it in his hands.
The land, from the sale of which the trust fund was realized, was conveyed to Charles Hugo and the legal title was in him. To him was confided the duty of selling the land and discharging the debts *180 of those who held the equitable title. In pursuance of that duty he sold the land and took notes secured by a vendor's lien in part payment of the purchase money. Some of them were not due when the sale to appellant was made. The trust was not then executed and could not be executed until those notes became due and the debts were paid. The trust fund was in the hands of the trustee, and the administrator of the Amalie Elmendorf estate had no right to the possession of any part of the trust fund. It was not "in the hands of" the administrator at the time of the sale and could not be placed in his hands. The sale did not cover such a claim and it could not have been in contemplation of the parties to the sale.
A number of the heirs of Amalie Elmendorf swore that the sale of the interest of the estate in the Hugo trust fund was never contemplated, but the sale was intended to cover and embrace a lot of claims the evidence of the existence of which was in the hands of the administrator. That this was the case fully appears from the circumstances narrated by appellant as leading up to the sale. He states that while he and others were looking over the property of the estate that one remarked to him: "Why, here are all those old notes and claims of all kinds owing to the estate; suppose you buy those." The reference must have been to the accounts, notes, claims, etc., that were evidenced by inventories, papers or lists of claims then and there present, of which the claim on the trust fund was not one. The trivial price paid for the old claims indicates that there was no intention to convey any but claims that were deemed almost worthless. Appellant testified: "I considered that he was selling me something that was really not worth anything, the chance of being worth anything being very remote because Mr. Altgelt had reported them worthless, and next, Benno Engelke was the client of Mr. Hildebrand and Benno Engelke had been bookkeeper for Elmendorf Co. for over thirteen years, and that he kept the account books, and I knew that he was the only man in the United States that had an absolute knowledge of whether any of these claims were valuable or not, and I was confident in my own mind he would not be selling them to me for $50 if there was one in there worth over fifty dollars." If this be true, then the claim against the trust fund was not included because Engelke had reported that the estate had a fourth interest in the property from which the trust fund was realized, which interest was worth $3,750.
The sale of the claims to appellant was made, as testified, to expedite a compromise among the heirs of Amalie Elmendorf, and in making the compromise they investigated the property belonging to the estate and it is not pretended that there was any evidence of the claim on the trust fund among the papers, and on the other hand appellant stated that he knew nothing of its existence.
If, however, we discard everything but the language of the transfer itself, there was no transfer of the trust fund, because it was not "in the hands of the administrator" at that time, either actually or constructively. The administrator, George C. Altgelt, did not for that reason return it on the inventory of the estate, and he could not be bound by any inventory theretofore made by a former administrator, *181
nor even if made by himself under a mistake as to the status of the property. (White v. Shepperd,
The construction placed by us on the term "in the hands of" is supported by all decisions coming under our notice. Price v. Society,
The fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth and eleventh assignments of error attack the action of the court in admitting testimony of the administrator of certain of the heirs of Amalie Elmendorf and of attorneys for some of them as to their knowledge of the existence of the trust fund and as to their intention in connection with it. Appellant testified that no one knew of the existence of the claim on the trust fund except Benno Engelke and that he was confident that the claims would not have been sold to him by Benno Engelke if any one included had been worth fifty dollars. He testified, as to Engelke, as follows: "I knew he had been the administrator of this estate for a period of over a year and that he, by reason of his long service in that business over there, both as bookkeeper and as administrator of the estate, was the man in the best position to know whether the claims were worth anything or not, and I was confident he would not be selling them to me if they were of any value, but I was willing to buy them anyway, to get this compromise through and protect my client." If Benno Engelke was the only man *182 who knew about the claim, of course, the witnesses did not know, and they swore to nothing on that score but what appellant swore to. If they knew nothing of the existence of the claim, they could not have intended to sell it. The claim on the trust fund was not included in the list of claims nor in the notes given by the administrator to appellant. Appellant showed by his testimony that the claim against the trust fund could not have been included in the claims transferred, "because Mr. Altgelt had reported them worthless." That shows the intention of the parties to convey only the claims that Altgelt had reported, and the trust fund was not reported. We do not think, in view of the admissions of appellant, that he is in a position to complain of the testimony as to knowledge and intention. The administrator swore positively that the claim was never in his hands.
The words "now in the hands of the administrator" were open to explanation, and the court allowed both appellant and appellees to state their intention in regard to their use, and we think that the testimony was permissible. The intention of the parties was the main point, and if it could not be gained from the instrument itself, other evidence could be resorted to. In the case of Smith v. Brown,
It appears from the twelfth assignment of error that appellant applied to the stenographer to make out a statement of facts in narrative form, which he either failed or refused to make, but made out one embodying questions and answers, and from that appellant prepared the statement of facts and he sought to have the amount paid the stenographer for the questions and answers taxed as costs in the case. The court very properly refused to do that and complaint is made of that action. The questions and answers prepared by the stenographer are not a part of the record and it would be an anomalous proceeding to tax them up as costs in this case. Under the law the statement of facts should have been put into narrative form by the stenographer and appellant could have compelled him to comply with that duty, and if he chose to permit the dereliction of duty and paid for a transcript of the evidence illegally prepared, he can not make appellees pay for it. This matter will be unimportant in view of our disposition of the case. *183
It appears from the bill of exceptions made the basis of the fourteenth assignment of error, that during the course of the trial one of the jurors failed to put in his appearance at the hour to which the court had adjourned, but after some minutes came in an intoxicated condition, although he stated he would be sober in five minutes and would be sober next morning. Appellant sought to postpone the trial until the following day to allow the juror to become sober, but the court discharged the juror and proceeded with the trial with a jury of eleven men. In his qualification of the bill of exceptions the court stated: "That it was evident that the juror was very drunk and when questioned did not seem to have any idea of the issues involved in this suit; and, in my judgment, was wholly disabled from sitting in the case." It is provided in article 3229, Revised Statutes, following the Constitution, that where, pending the trial of any case in the District Court, one or more of the jurors not exceeding three may die or be disabled from sitting, the remainder of the jury shall have power to render the verdict." The question of disability must necessarily rest in the judgment and discretion of the trial judge, and unless it should appear that there has been an abuse of such discretion, an Appellate Court will not disturb his action in the premises. The declaration of the trial judge that the juror was very drunk and that he seemed to have no idea of the issues in the case, must be taken as founded on facts, and his judgment that the juror was wholly disabled must be sustained. There is nothing in the facts stated in the bill of exceptions that militates in any way against the action of the court. It is insisted that the juror did not admit that he was drunk, but that the court concluded that he was intoxicated because of his conduct and answers. The determination as to whether a man is drunk does not usually depend on his admission of the fact, but on the other hand, as experience teaches, is in the face of protestations of being sober. The question as to whether he was drunk and disabled from sitting on the jury was not confided to the judgment of the drunken juror, but to that of the trial judge.
The fifteenth, sixteenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, twenty-second and twenty-third assignments of error are disposed of in the discussion of the matters hereinbefore set forth, and the special charge, the refusal of which is made the subject of the seventeenth assignment, was properly refused because the transfer of the claim from Altgelt, administrator, did not on its face transfer the claim to the trust fund to appellant, and the burden did not rest on appellees to show that the claim had been reserved and excepted from the transfer. When it appeared that the claim was not in the hands of the administrator appellees had met the case of appellant without proof of any reservation or exception. Under the facts of the case the court would have been justified in instructing a verdict for appellees.
All of the appellees, except Emilie Netter, George C. Altgelt and A. C. Schryver, have filed a cross-assignment of error in which that part of the judgment is assailed which provides for the payment of $1,848.60 to George C. Altgelt, administrator, for their use and benefit, the contention being that the trust fund ceased to be assets of the estate by virtue of a compromise agreement and decree dated April *184 20, 1905. In that agreement and decree provision was made for the payment of all the creditors of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, and the remaining property, with the exception of the Hugo trust fund, was partitioned among the heirs. The following provisions appear in the decree:
"All of said creditors after being paid the amounts aforesaid and receiving the lands aforesaid shall yield all the remainder of said estate to the legatees and devisees of Amalie Elmendorf and thereafter said creditors' claims shall be deemed extinguished, so that they shall not have any further demands upon said estate and so that all the remainder of said estate may vest in said legatees and devisees in accordance with the terms of this decree free and discharged from all debts.
"It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the said administrator, Geo. C. Altgelt, be and is hereby directed to make the payments herein provided for, and that thereupon said Altgelt, administrator, as well as the sureties upon his bond shall be discharged from all liability to this date, but the administration shall be continued in order to reduce to possession for the benefit of said legatees and devisees of Amalie Elmendorf, deceased, two certain claims yet outstanding.
"It is ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that all property of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf not disposed of by this decree shall vest as follows: Mrs. Mary Engelke, wife of Benno Engelke, 1-5; the heirs of Henry Elmendorf, 1-5; the heirs of Emil Elmendorf, 1-5; the heirs of Emilie Netter, 1-5; the heirs of Edward Elmendorf, 1-5. That the claims .of the following parties are hereby approved and allowed as claims against said estate for the following amounts, viz.: Otto Staffel, as guardian of Armin, Stella and Edward Elmendorf, and Mary Elmendorf, $3,738.20; Edwin Kampmann, $1,224.05; San Antonio Loan Trust Co., as guardian of the estate of Emilie Netter, $1,224.05; Dr. W. Netter, $1,224.05; Mrs. Henry Elmendorf, individually and as executrix of the estate of Henry Elmendorf, $3,672.16; Mrs. Emilie Elmendorf, $9,079; Hermann Tolle, individually and as guardian of the estate of Leon and Emma Tolle, $3,672.16; Mrs. Mary Engelke, wife of Benno Engelke, $3,672.16.
"And they each of them do agree to accept the moneys herein set apart to them in payment of their claim and to accept from the estate the property set apart to them herein for the balance due to them on their respective claims and said purchase price and property accepted shall be in full satisfaction of their demands."
It is apparent, we think, from the testimony that the "two certain claims yet outstanding" mentioned in the decree are the two excepted from the transfer to Routledge, because there were at that time no other claims outstanding, the claim on the trust fund not being recognized as being in existence at that time; and because the sale to Routledge which excepted two claims was made about the same time that the decree was entered. The only purpose, therefore, in continuing the administration was the prosecution of the two claims excepted in the transfer to Routledge, and all of the debts being settled *185 there could be no necessity for placing the money from the trust fund in the hands of the administrator and burdening it with the costs that would necessarily arise from its handling by the administrator. It was agreed by all parties "that George C. Altgelt was qualified and acting as administrator of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, deceased, subject to the limitations and qualifications of the compromise decree and agreement made in said estate on April 20, 1905." That agreement was embodied in the decree of that date and in it, as before stated, the authority of the administrator was limited to the prosecution of two certain claims. The continuance of the administration was limited and had no reference to any other matter except the prosecution of the two certain claims.
The administrator claims in his brief that the decree should not have specified that the fund should be "for the use and benefit of certain persons named in fixed proportions because the trial court was without jurisdiction to order or direct the distribution of said fund." The proposition is that until the close of the administration the County Court had exclusive jurisdiction to decree a partition of the property. Admitting the proposition to be correct, no fault can be found with the decree of the District Court which did not interfere with the jurisdiction of the County Court, but merely followed a decree of the County Court which partitioned all the property of the estate in fixed proportions among the heirs. The decree of the County Court absolutely fixed the several interests of the heirs in the trust fund and they were entitled to their proportionate shares by that decree just as it was decreed in the District Court. The decree of the County Court recognized the existence of other property than that specially mentioned therein because it was "ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that all property of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf not disposed of by this decree shall vest" in certain proportions in the heirs.
Appellant has no ground of complaint as to the share that was allotted to A. C. Schryver, even though he had any interest in the fund. Schryver had a right to a certain interest in the trust property, and if he desired to accept a less interest that was his business and not that of anyone else. He was not deprived of his interest in the property by a failure to pay his part of the debt, and his deduction of his part of the debt from his share was a voluntary act on his part. He was entitled to what was allotted to him under the agreement between the parties interested in the trust property. Under our view of the case appellant had not acquired any interest in the trust fund and it is immaterial so far as he is concerned as to how it was divided.
The judgment will be reformed so as to allot the money in controversy directly to the different beneficiaries, and as reformed will be affirmed.
Reformed and affirmed.
It was alleged and proved in this case that the administration had been fully settled except as to the two claims herein mentioned, and the heirs of Amalie Elmendorf were the only ones authorized to defend against the claim upon the property allotted to them. The administration of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf had been pending *187
for more than twelve months and under the statute the heirs, devisees or legatees had the right to a distribution of all the estate that could be distributed, and when once distributed the administrator could not resume control of it. (Rev. Stats., art. 2158 et seq.) As said by the Supreme Court in Henderson v. Lindley,
Under the facts of this case the court would have been authorized to have instructed a verdict as against appellant. There is nothing in the record that tends to show that an admitted and undisputed claim for over three thousand dollars in money was transferred by the heirs of Amalie Elmendorf to appellant for the paltry consideration of fifty dollars. In the petition that sought the compromise and the sale of the note and accounts to appellant, and which he signed, it is stated that all the personal property held by the administrators consisted of "a number of odds and ends of personal property, being all the personal property remaining in the hands of the administrator after conveying the personalty to the Alamo National Bank above mentioned." An undisputed claim to more than three thousand dollars in money would not be denominated "odds and ends." Appellant did not testify that he intended to buy the claim to the trust fund. He was buying the notes and accounts in the hands of the administrator in order to accomplish a compromise for his clients, and not for profit. He knew nothing about the trust fund. His intention as well as that of the other contracting parties, as evidenced by all the circumstances, was to buy the claims evidenced by the papers in the hands of the administrator which he had examined. Had it been error to admit evidence of the intention of the parties and error to submit that issue to the jury, the state of the evidence is such that neither injured appellant. Neither the fund nor a claim to it was in the hands of the administrator, and was not included in the contract of sale. There was no error in not submitting the matter of the intention of appellant to the jury, because his testimony removed that issue from the case. He did not know of the existence of the fund and did not intend to buy anything but a lot of worthless paper in order to bring about a compromise and thereby further the interests of his clients. The consideration of fifty dollars is so grossly inadequate *188 that the conclusion is irresistibly reached that there could have been no intention to convey the trust fund to appellant. The consideration is so inadequate that the mind revolts at the enforcement of such a contract if it really existed as is claimed, and courts will give the parties who would lose by it the benefit of every doubt in the construction of a contract dependent on such a consideration.
The words "now in the hands of the administrator" should be construed in the light of the circumstances so as to give effect to the intention of the parties. The primary object in the construction of contracts is to arrive at the intention of parties. This intention should be arrived at if possible from the words of the writing itself, but if the terms used are not clear in their meaning evidence of the intention of the parties direct is admissible to show the sense in which the words were used. (Kelly v. Fejervary (Ia.),
Overruled.
Writ of error refused.