Blair v. Cisneros

10 Tex. 34
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 Tex. 34 (Blair v. Cisneros) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blair v. Cisneros, 10 Tex. 34 (Tex. 1853).

Opinion

IIisMPUXLL, Cu. J.

At first view it may appear anomalous that some of the facts, afLer the plea in abatement was ruled out, should have been admitted in evidence. But the, matters charged in tlie plea were averred in another portion of the answer; the. testimony was received without objection, and, in in fact, was admissible under the, general issue. The facts went to show that tlie property was not open to administration; that it had by law vested in tlie heirs, and that tlie appointment was consequently a nullity, and these are objections to the foundation of the action, and, in fact, to tlie validity of tlie entire proceeding.

The ground on which the plea in abatement was rejected lias not been stated. Tlie appellee admits that upon the death, under the laws then existing, all the property descended to tlie heirs, but, that it remained for the heirs to accept or reject tiie succession before they were accountable for its charges, or it could suffer by their acts, but that there was no limitation as to when such acceptance or rejection should take place, and that at the time the administrator was appointed the common law was adopted, and the administratrix, having taken charge of tlie estate, has a right to sue for all its possessions.

The appellants contend that the acts of possession and ownership on the part [21]*21of the ireiily were such as amount, tosn acceptance of the succession by the heirs, an r .nviqueulij'' preelud.'.l the nee.'sfity of administration. In exam-inin'' th;. ij.-ct there will app ‘nr a striking dUierence between Hie doctrines of ''-peni- ii ¡mil of English jurisprudence in relation to the rights of heirs in tlie tv : e< (,f t!i" deceased. Tlie really, b\ the English law. is cast upon the lieir, suef, 1, may be, to certain charges, never exceeding, however, the amount of pron-riy received. The. personally was, by tlie ancient principles'of tlie common law, supposed to have vested in the king, as parms put rice and general tr.- ■!"<■ of the, kingdom. This prerogative, for some time exercised by tlie kin.T’s i ivu ministers, was afterwards vested in the prelates, on the presumption Uial they were of belter consciences Ilian laymen, and had more knowledge (,i what would conduce to the benelit of the soul of the deceased. The goo.Is of the intestate were, held in trust for distribution in charity to tlie poor, and for uses denominated by the superstition of the times as pious. The abuse of this power, reposed in the ordinary, became so flagrant that by statute 31st Ed. ILL O. II. lie was required lo depute the administration to the nearest and most lawful friends of the deceased, and this is tlie origin of administrators, as they now stand, in most of the States recognizing the common law as tlie basis of their jurisprudence. Under this system it appears that the real property at once vested in the heirs, the personalty primarily in tlie sovereign, on certain trusts and for certain purposes. The modern doctrine seems to be, that the personal property is in abeyance until the grant of administration. Whatever may be the right of heirs in personal property nnadministered, it is clear that they arc entitled to the residuum after the discharge of the debts.

In this State, by our present laws, all the property vests in the heirs, at the death, subject, however, to administration.

In tlie. Spanish code no distinction was made between the real and personal property oí a succession. It descended, in one mass, to the heirs; was im-pressivfwhh the like qualities; and was all subjected to the same rules and dispositions. The heir, by force of a legal subtlety, was considered as representing the person of the deceased; ¡uní that in fact they both constituted the same p.w.-on. (L. 13, Tit. 9, Part. 7.) Consequently, on the. death, there passed to the, heir all the property, rights and actions of the deceased, as also liis debts and obligations. (Diccionario, verbo, HEREDERO.) The debts, the heir was bound to discharge, if the estate.vested in him, without qualification— whether th ■ assets received were sufficient or not. To save the lieir from such responsibility the law accorded to him a defined period within which to determine whether he would accept tlie estate, and afterwards the further benefit of inventoiy was granted, by which the lieir was relieved from responsibility beyond the amount received. Bnt notwithstanding the fiction that the deceased and heir constituted the same person, and that consequently the property and debts of the former passed to tlie latter, yet, it seems well established by the laws of Spain that the heir was not invested with the character of the representative of the deceased until he accepted the inhertanee. (Escriche, Dic-cionario, verbo, Heredero.) And consequently, at the death, he was nod vested with the property of tlie estate, bnt only with the faculty of acquiring it by acceptance. (Poutenoy v. Cecil’s Heirs, 8 La. B., 321.) This was the rule, under tlie code of 180S, in Louisiana. Under the present code, the succession is acquired by the lieir immediately on tlie deatli of the deceased, as declared in article 93-1, C. C.; though this is modified by article 9-10, suspending the right of the lieir until he decides whether lie accepts or rejects. Under all the codes and the laws of Spain, acceptance has a retroactive effect, and the lieir is considered as having succeeded from the death. (Escriche, verbo, ACEPTACION DE HERENCIA.)

But, without treating further of general principles in relation to the descent of a succession, let us consider the point more immediately presented for decision. One of tlie principal questions in the cause, is, whether, in fact, this succession was accepted by tlie heirs, in 1833, so as to vest, in the language [22]*22of the plea, the estate in the heirs, without the necessity of administration. Acceptance of a succession is divided into two classes, viz:

1st. Pure and simple, and

2d. Acceptance with the benefit of inventory.

By acceptance pure and simple, the heir, as a general rule, with some excexrtions, is charged with the debts and legacies of the deceased, though they exceed the amount of the hereditary property. By acceptance with the benefit of inventory, the responsibility of the heir does not, as before stated, extend beyond the amount received. Pure and simple acceptance may be either express or tacit. It is express, when the title, or quality, of heir is assumed, whether this be done verbally or in authentic or private writing; and it is tacit, when the heir does some act which necessarily presupposes his intention of accepting. (L. 11 and 18, Tit. (i, Part. 6; Diccionario, verbo, ACEPTACION DE HERENCIA.)

The appellants contend that by this latter mode was this estate accepted; that the acts of the surviving wife, the mother of the heirs, and of the heirs themselves, were such as to denote, unequivocally, their intention to accept the estate. When the intention of an heir is to be deduced from his acts, there may occasionally arise some difficulty in determining whether his acts are such as to induce acceptance, or whether they are only of a conservative character, or such as are usual in a provisory administration of the property. The law gave a certain time for deliberation and for the making of an inventory, and meanwhile the heir had the power to perforin such acts as were necessary for the preservation of the property, and to save it from loss and damage.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Tex. 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-v-cisneros-tex-1853.