74 Tex. 601 | Tex. | 1889
Plaintiff in error instituted this suit as administrator of T. J. Williams, deceased, alleging that Wilson Lump-kin executed to his intestate his promissory note for the sum of nine-hundred dollars, payable on the 11th day of January, 1887, secured by a mortgage on real estate described in the petition. He further charged that his intestate executed to defendant J. A. Hein his promissory note, for one hundred and thirty-one dollars, and to secure the payment of
The petition charges that Hein, in violation of his promise, had pretended to sell said Lumpkin note to defendant Silliman, who had notice when he received such transfer of all the facts connected with the transactions between plaintiff’s intestate and said Hein; that Hein at the same time sold said Silliman plaintiff’s intestate note for one hundred and thirty-one dollars.
The plaintiff prayed for judgment for the debt and foreclosure of the mortgage, and in the event that it appeared that Silliman had the right to collect the Lumpkin note as collateral security for the payment of the one hundred and thirty-one dollar note, then that the court would by its judgment direct that said note should be first paid out of the proceeds of the mortgaged property, provided the court should hold that it could so direct the payment of an unestablished claim against the estate of a. deceased person.
The defendants Lumpkin and Hein were duly cited to answer but-made default.
The defendant J. M. Silliman appeared and answered, charging that he was the owner and holder of the Lumpkin note and entitled to judgment for the debt and foreclosure of the mortgage and against plaintiff quieting his title to the note, and praying that Lumpkin be cited to answer his complaint made by his answer.
Silliman in his answer also prayed that if it he found true that Hein only held the Lumpkin note as collateral security for the payment of said one hundred and thirty-one dollar note, then that defendant Silliman be subrogated to his rights, and that the amount of said note, with interest thereon from the 1st day of February, 1887, amounting to the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, be first paid out of the proceeds of the Lumpkin note and mortgage.
Without other notice to Lumpkin than the original citation, at the instance of plaintiff the cause was tried with a jury. The jury, in response to special issues submitted by the court, found that the Lumpkin note was delivered to Hein by plaintiff’s intestate for the purpose of securing him in the payment of the aforesaid note to him, amounting at the date of the verdict to $154.92.
2. That plaintiff’s intestate never authorized Hein to sell and transfer the Lumpkin note and mortgage absolutely, but only to secure the. payment of his note executed to Hein.
3. That Hein did not sell the Lumpkin note to Silliman absolutely, but sold to him the note executed to Hein by plaintiff’s intestate and
Whereupon the court decreed that J. M. Silliman held the legal title to the Lumpkin note, and was entitled to a judgment for the amount of said note, and foreclosure of the mortgage as holder thereof as collateral security for the note made to Hein, and that he hold such note and mortgage in trust for the estate of T. J. Williams, subject alone to the payment of such amount due on the Hein note as he, Silliman, should establish against said estate in due course of administration.
The sheriff was ordered to return into the District Court the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property, to be distributed in pursuance of the terms of the decree’as above stated. It was ordered that as against defendant Hein plaintiff take nothing, and that any excess of the proceeds of the sale of the mortgaged property remaining after the payment of the amount adjudged upon the note and the costs against him be paid to said Lumpkin.
From this decree plaintiff sued out a writ of error and assigns errors as follows:
“1. That the court erred in rendering judgment in the name of J. M. Silliman against Wilson Lumpkin, because Silliman had no established claim against the estate of Williams authorizing the rendition of a judgment in his name, etc., and because said Silliman failed to join plaintiff in error in his action, or to file a cross-bill- and have said defendant Lumpkin cited, etc.
“ 2. That plaintiff alone under the pleadings, issues, and verdict was entitled to a judgment, and in his own name, against defendant Lumpkin for the debt and for foreclosure of the mortgage, and the district judge could not lawfully make an order directing the administration of the debt,” etc.
We do not think these objections are well taken, nor that any error was committed of which the appellant can complain. The decree gives him all that he was entitled to recover.
Under authority of the case of Huyler v. Dahoney, 48 Texas, 235, the court might have ordered the amount of the proceeds found to be due to Silliman to be paid to him without requiring him to establish his claim in the administration of the estate of Williams, and without the necessity of further proceedings on his part.
In his brief filed in this court Silliman joins in the prayer of appellant for the reversal of the decree, but he did not assign error, and the defendants Hein nor Lumpkin having joined in the prayer to reverse we can not so dispose of the case.
We think the pleadings of plaintiff alone sufficiently presented the case as to all parties to justify the decree as rendered without it being necessary for the defendant Silliman to plead more than he did, or even so
The decree sufficiently indicates the amount of the judgment that plaintiff will be authorized to withdraw for him to be able to take the amount coming to him through the decree, even if defendant Silliman does not proceed, as the decree directs and as he may easily do, to establish his claim for his interest.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Delivered October 25, 1889.