Blanton v. Mayes

10 S.W. 452, 72 Tex. 417, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1267
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1889
DocketNo. 2524
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 10 S.W. 452 (Blanton v. Mayes) 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
Blanton v. Mayes, 10 S.W. 452, 72 Tex. 417, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1267 (Tex. 1889).

Opinion

Stayton, Chief Justice.

On a former appeal it was held that the one executor who qualified had the power to sell the land in controversy [419]*419to appellee if debts against the estate represented by him existed. Mayes v. Blanton, 67 Texas, 246.

On the trial from which this appeal is prosecuted the court instructed the jury in effect that the title acquired by appellee through his purchase was valid if at the time he purchased there were debts against the estate represented by the executor which made it necessary for him to make the sale; and it further placed the burden not only of showing these facts, but that the money paid by appellee for the land was applied by the executor to the payment of these debts on the appellee.

Under this charge, which placed on appellee a burden greater than the law imposes upon him, a verdict was rendered in his favor.

If the evidence was sufficient to show that debts legally a charge on the estate of the testator existed at the time appellee bought from the executor then the judgment must be affirmed, unless there be some error in the ■proceedings not involved in tile question of the power of the executor to sell the land.

The testator, Schlutter, died on May 6, 1875, and soon after that date Howard, one of the three executors named in the will, caused it to be probated, and qualified as executor, the others having declined to do so. The will and order of Probate Oourt authorized the administration of the estate without the control of the court. The executor Howard died on June 25, 1876, after having sold and conveyed the land in controversy on January 27, 1876, to appellee in consideration of $1000 then paid.

On August 4, 1876, appellant was appointed administratrix of the estate. She does not show fully what particular debts stood against the estate at the time she qualified, but in a report made by her to the Probate Oourt, to its March Term, 1878, she stated that while the estate is entirely solvent, yet considerable indebtedness hung over it at the time petitioner assumed the responsibility and duties of the administration; that the estate among other items was largely in arrears to the State, county, and municipality for overdue taxes and penalties." She then proceeds to state that from moneys derived from the estate otherwise than by sale of property she had succeeded in paying at the time the report was made all indebtedness against the estate except about $800 due for taxes for the year 1877.

The evidence further shows that a part at least of the taxes due for the year 1874 were unpaid at the time of the death of the testator; that taxes, State, county, and municipal, were paid on August 7, 1875, but that of this the municipal tax was for the year 1875 and the State and county taxes for the year 1874.

It is not shown that State and county taxes for the year 1875 were paid by the executor, but it does appear that they were not paid by appellant, and it does not appear that they are unpaid. The inference is strong that the executor paid them.

[420]*420The taxes for the year 1876 had accrued before the land in controversy was sold to appellee, and were not paid until after appellant qualified as administratrix.

On the day before municipal taxes for 1875 and State and county taxes for 1874 were paid, it is shown that the executor for the estate borrowed $1150, to secure which he, joined by the widow of the testator, who owned half of the estate, executed a mortgage on property of the estate.

It is further shown that the money thus borrowed was procured to pay taxes, and that for this purpose it was turned over to the executor, but that it was not repaid to the lender until after appellant qualified as administratrix.

Taxes due at the time of the death of the testator and those subsequently accruing would constitute debts of the estate that would empower the executor to sell property, and we do not see if he borrowed money on' the credit of the estate to pay taxes imposed by law that the indebtedness thus created would not be one that would empower him to sell property in order -to raise money to discharge it.

Taxes on the estate seem to have amounted to about $800 annually, and if no other indebtedness than for accrued taxes for the years 1874, 1875, and 1876 were shown to have existed, this would be sufficient to-confer on the executor the power to sell, which he exercised in making the sale to appellee.

Looking to the evidence there was no error in that part of the court’s charge which informed the jury that the existence of indebtedness on the part of the estate at the time the executor sold to appellee would confer on the former the power to make the sale, for the indebtedness shown was all such as Avould confer on the executor the power to sell.

There was no objection to the evidence of indebtedness offered on the ground that there was no sufficient pleading to authorize the admission of the evidence. The appellee pleaded that he purchased the property in good faith, that it was sold to pay debts of the estate, and that the estate or the beneficiaries under the will had the benefit of the money paid by him, and he sought its recovery in case he was not entitled to hold the land. Evidence was offered under these pleas, and it is urged that it was error to admit evidence of the good faith of appellee in making the purchase and paying the price of the land, or to give a charge under which the jury might have found on this issue in favor of appellee if they had not found in his favor for the land.

The evidence was properly admitted and the charges on this issue correctly given, but if there had been error in either of these respects it would be immaterial, for on the issue of title to the land the finding was in favor of appellee, which could not in any manner have been affected by the evidence and charges given on another issue.

Appellant for the purpose of showing that the executor had not applied [421]*421the money received from appellee to the discharge of the debts of the -estate, proposed to prove a settlement made between the executor of Howard’s will and the appellant as the administratrix of the estate of Schlutter, but on objection it was excluded.

Such evidence would have been admissible for the purpose of showing that neither the estate of Schlutter nor the beneficiaries under his will ■ever received benefit from the money paid to Howard by appellee, but as the case was disposed of it became unimportant, for in order that appellee should be entitled to the land under his purchase from the executor it was not necessary that he should show that the latter properly appropriated the money paid by him for the land. It was sufficient that he .showed a state of facts that gave the executor power to sell.

The fourth, seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth assignments of error relate to the ruling of the court in giving and refusing charges upon the facts which would confer power on the executor to sell the land to appellee, and have already been considered. The action of the court in these respects was as favorable to appellant as the former decision made in this case, following Johnson v. Bowden, 43 Texas, 674, and Anderson v. Stock-dale, 62 Texas, 54, would authorize.

A person was empaneled on the jury that tried this cause who was disqualified for jury service by reason of having been convicted of a disqualifying crime.

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.W. 452, 72 Tex. 417, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blanton-v-mayes-tex-1889.