Ballard v. McMillan

25 S.W. 327, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 679, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 680
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 1893
DocketNo. 85.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 327 (Ballard v. McMillan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballard v. McMillan, 25 S.W. 327, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 679, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 680 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

LIGHTFOOT, Chief Justice.

Appellee having been appointed a receiver in the court below at the instance of the creditors of C. F. Schmidt, deceased, to take charge of the assets not exempt by law, the estate being insolvent, and prevent the surviving widow from wasting the same (there-being no children), the court appointed a special master in chancery, with power to hear proofs of claims against the community estate, to make a record thereof, and report to the court. After the master had given notice, as required by the decretal order, for all creditors to prove their claims, J. M. Ballard, on August 7, 1890, filed the following claim, verified by affidavit:

*681 M. A. McMillan, Receiver, to J. M. Ballard, Dr.

October 7, 1887, to cash deposited........................ 8330 00

July 14, 1888, to cash deposited......................... 200 00

November 5, 1889, to salary from March 12,1887, to November 5, 1889 ......................................... 1,976 66

$2,506 66 Or.

May 14, 1889, by land to J. S. Ballard..........$1,350 00

by cash on salary............... 547 15 1,897 15

Balance due............................... $609 51

The receiver filed general and special demurrer, and a special answer denying that the claim is a valid debt against the estate. J. M. Ballard died before the trial, and his widow and children became parties.

To said account the receiver, by his answer, presented the following defenses before the master: Special exception to the affidavit of J. M. Ballard to said account, in that the same was not an open account within the meaning of article 2266, Revised Statutes, and could not be established by oath; general denial; plea of payment; plea in reconvention, praying judgment against said J. M. Ballard for $5000, funds belonging to said estate alleged to have been appropriated and converted by*said J. M. Ballard; cross-bill, charging that after the death of said C. F. Schmidt said J. M. Ballard, being his clerk, wrongfully and illegally obtained possession of a deed to the land in controversy, executed by Maggie Dobbins to said J. M. Ballard at the request of C. F. Schmidt, before his death, and had same recorded; that said land had been previously conveyed by C. F. Schmidt to said Maggie Dobbins without consideration, for her to hold in trust for him, and for the purpose of placing it beyond the reach of his creditors; that there had been no delivery of said deed to J. M. Ballard, and that J. M. Ballard never paid anything to said C. F. Schmidt in consideration of said deed; and praying decree of court that said deed be cancelled and held for naught.

J. M. Ballard died February 9, 1891, and his wife, Emma Ballard, for herself and as next friend for Emma Bessie Ballard and John Madison Ballard, minors, his sole heirs, became parties intervenor, and on May 13, 1891, filed their first amended original petition, setting out the facts substantially as set out in the original account above referred to; and averring, in reference to the credit for $1350 there set out for land deeded to J. S. Ballard (the land in controversy), that C. F. Schmidt being indebted to the said J’. M. Ballard, and desirous of settling said indebtedness, had said land conveyed to said J. S. Ballard, the consideration therefor being a credit of $1350 given by J. M. Ballard on his said ac *682 count against said C. F. Schmidt. That the deed to said land was made by request of J. M. Ballard and at the instance of C. F. Schmidt by said Maggie Dobbins to said J. S. Ballard; and as between J. M. Ballard and J. S. Ballard, was made in full liquidation of certain indebtedness held by- said J. S. Ballard against J. M. Ballard.

On April 20, 1891, the receiver filed an amendment to his original answer, alleging that the deed to the land in controversy was not made by Maggie Dobbins to J. M. Ballard as alleged in said answer, but was made by said Maggie Dobbins to J. S. Ballard; and prayed the order of the court that J. S. Ballard be made a party to the suit, and that on final hearing said deed to him, the said J. S. Ballard, be cancelled and held for naught.

Said J. S. Ballard appeared and filed his answer to the receiver’s cross-bill, presenting therein the following defenses: After general and special demurrers, he filed a special plea setting 'out, that about May 24, 1889, J. M. Ballard, deceased, was indebted to said J. S. Ballard for about $1400 or $1500, and in satisfaction of said indebtedness conveyed to J. S. Ballard the land in controversy. That the deed was made by Maggie Dobbins, at the instance of C. F. Schmidt, and by agreement between said Schmidt and J. M. Ballard, directly to J. S. Ballard. That said deed was by said Schmidt delivered to said J. M. Ballard for and in behalf of J. S. Ballard, and was by J. M. Ballard delivered to him, the said J. S. Ballard, who had same duly recorded. That on February 18, 1890, and since the institution of this suit, Mrs. Maggie Dobbins and Mrs. C. F. Schmidt, for the purpose of defrauding intervener and casting a cloud upon his title, made a deed of conveyance to the land in controversy to N. A. McMillan, as receiver of said estate; and praying that said deed be cancelled, and that the title to the land be declared to be in the said J. S. Ballard.

The demurrer and special exceptions of all the intervenors to the pleadings of defendant receiver having been overruled, and defendant receiver’s special exception to the affidavit of J. M. Ballard to his said account having been sustained by the special master, the case came on for trial on the 22nd day of May, 1891, before said master, who, after hearing the evidence and argument of counsel, rendered his report of findings and conclusions of said trial to the judge of the District Court, recommending, (1) that no part of the claim of intervenors, Emma Ballard for herself and as next friend of Emma Bessie Ballard and John Madison Ballard, be allowed; and (2) that the deed from Maggie Dobbins to J. S. Ballard be cancelled and held for naught, and that the title to the land in controversy be vested in the said 1ST. A. McMillan as receiver of said estate.

The exceptions saved by the intervenors to the rulings of the special master, as well as exceptions to his said report', having been approved by *683 said special master, were filed before the judge of the District Court, together with their protest against said report, and their demand that said report be set aside and that intervenors be granted a jury trial in said cause before him, the judge of said District Court.

The report of the special master came on for hearing on the 22d day of May, 1891; and the exceptions to the report of the master being overruled, the court confirmed said report in all things, and entered its decree accordingly:

1. ' That intervenors, Emma Ballard for herself and.as next friend for Emma Bessie Ballard and John Madison Ballard, take nothing by their said suit.

2. That the title of J. S. Ballard to the land in controversy be divested out of him and vested in the said N. A. McMillan, receiver of said estate.

Which decree appellants bring up for revision.

Opinion. — 1.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 327, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 679, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-mcmillan-texapp-1893.