Davenport v. Hervey

30 Tex. 308
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 30 Tex. 308 (Davenport v. Hervey) 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
Davenport v. Hervey, 30 Tex. 308 (Tex. 1867).

Opinion

Moore, C. J.

In January, 1851, the appellant, William Davenport and James McDaniel, by appointment from the county court of Harrison county, became the administrators of the estate of Thomas Murphy, deceased, and have since continued to act in that capacity. At the August term, 1859, of said court, their exhibit and ábcount of the condition of said estate, which had been previously filed, was presented to the court, on their application for a final settlement of their administration on said estate. Exceptions were filed to their account by McFall & Co., Done-gal! & Co., James W. Hervey, and J. A. Heard, purporting to act for the heirs and creditors of the estate. On the hearing of these exceptions and the examination of their account, as re-stated by the administrators, it was ordered by the court that the administrators should settle said estate upon the basis exhibited in their account as re-stated, from which it appeared that there were only assets in their hands sufficient to pay the general creditors seventy-two cents on the dollar of their claims against said estate. From this order of the county court the exceptors .to said account give notice of an appeal to the district court. But [326]*326the appellee, James W. Hervey, alone perfected his appeal, by giving an appeal bond. On the hearing of this appeal in the district court, it was adjudged by the court that there were sufficient assets in the hands of the administrators to pay all of the debts of the estate, and the sum of $500 surplus, over and above the amount sufficient for the payment of said debt, for distribution among the heirs of said estate. And from this judgment William Davenport, one of the administrators, prosecutes this appeal.

The first ground upon which it is insisted the judgment of the district court should be reversed is, that that court had no jurisdiction to try the case, for the reason, as is said, that the appeal bond for the removal of the case into that court was not filed with the clerk of the county court within fifteen days after the order or decree of the county court from which the appeal was taken. The transcript does not show on what day of the August term of the county court its decree was made. We judicially know, however, that the term of the court for that month commenced on the 29th day of it. And it seems not improbable . tha? it must have been several days before a re-statement of the accounts could have been made by the administrators and the final action of the court had in the case. If so, the appeal bond, which was filed on the sixteenth of September, was given within the time prescribed by the statute. At all events, as this objection was not made in the district court, when the facts could have been easily shown, and it does not appear from the record before us that the district court had not jurisdiction, it must be held, in accordance with the uniform presumption in favor of the correctness of the action of that court when the contrary is not shown, that it did not wrongfully assume jurisdiction in the case.

Again, it is said the district court had no jurisdiction, because appellee, Hervey, the appellant from the judgment -of the county court, was a stranger to the record, was not [327]*327aggrieved by the judgment, and had no interest in it. The statute authorizes any person who may consider himself aggrieved by the decision, order, decree, or judgment of the county court, to appeal to the district court, provided he shall, within fifteen days after such decree, order, or judgment, file with the clerk of the county court a bond for costs and damages. (Hart. Dig., Art. 1232.) To prosecute such appeal, the party making it must no doubt have an interest in the proceedings in which the decree or order is passed, which may be injuriously affected thereby. (Stevenson v. Schiver, 9 Gill & Johns., 324.) The practice in the ecclesiastical and admiralty courts, to which that in our county court is in many respects quite analogous, is for the party claiming the right to litigate to propound his interest in the matter in dispute. When any one seeks to become a party contestant, certainly justice demands that the opposite party may require him to declare his interest in the matter before he shall be compelled to enter into any litigation with him. (McRae v. Pegues, 4 Ala., 158.) In the case of Thompson v. Farr, 1 Spear, 93, it is said by Wardlaw, J.: “ This executor might have required that the persons who opposed his claim, after showing their interest, should have exhibited a formal allegation, containing at least the grounds of the opposition clearly specified; and after a decree in his favor he was not, upon appeal, bound to plead to any issue in the circuit court which was tendered by a person who was not a party before the ordinary, or which contained any question not decided by the ordinary. But after the executor, waiving his right to all preliminary inquiries, has pleaded to the issue, and the appeal has been decided against him, it is too late for him to object in the court of last resort that one of his adversaries had no interest in the subject-matter.” Many, if not most, of the orders of the county court are wholly ex parte, and the statute does not restrict the right of appeal to such parties as are before the court when the order is made, but secures [328]*328it to any one interested who gives bond within fifteen days after the making of such order. But as the matter is heard de novo in the district court on the appeal, the executor or administrator might then, no doubt, require the appellant to propound his interest, and when this was done he might contest it if he saw fit. But if he failed to do this, it is certainly too late for him to object for the first time in this court that his adversary has no interest in the subject-matter. In this case, when the appellee and his associates filed their objection to the exhibit and account of the administrators for final settlement, they propounded their interest by the statement that they excepted to the account on behalf of the creditors and heirs of the estate. We cannot say that they were not interested in the estate in both of these characters. If their declaration of interest is not so clear and full as it might be, no objection was made to it by appellant. And certainly his own exhibits show that appellee had been, if he was not still, a .creditor of the estate. Nor do the vouchers filed by the appellant sustain the assertion made for him in this court, that appellee’s claims against the estate had all been paid in full.

It is also said that the appeal only authorized the district court to adjust and decree the amount which appellee was entitled to receive as a creditor. If this were correct, it would present no objection to.the judgment of the district court; for, as we have just said, appellee claimed to act in behalf of the heirs, as well as creditors, and as the decree of the county court did not determine who are the heirs, their being no funds, in its judgment, in the hands of the administrators for distribution among them, we cannot say that appellee may not be entitled to a share in the estate as an heir. Nor should the judgment of the district court be reversed if it appeared that appellee had no other interest in the estate than as a creditor. It is the order or decree of the county court, passing upon the exhibit and account of the administrators for final settlement, from [329]*329which this appeal is prosecuted, in which the first and essential question is, to ascertain and fix the amount of assets in the hands of the administrators for distribution among the heirs and creditors of the estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 Tex. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-hervey-tex-1867.