First State Bank of Bishop v. Grebe

162 S.W.2d 165, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 1942
DocketNo. 11110.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 162 S.W.2d 165 (First State Bank of Bishop v. Grebe) 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
First State Bank of Bishop v. Grebe, 162 S.W.2d 165, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 290 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

SMITH, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by appellee, Florine Ella Grebe, a minor, by her next friend and stepfather, Louis Hauptreif, against appellant, First State Bank of Bishop. The case has been twice tried and appealed. The first trial resulted in judgment in favor of the Bank and on appeal that judgment was affirmed by this Court. Grebe v. First State Bank, 106 S.W.2d 382. On writ of error the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of this and the trial court, and remanded the cause, Mr. Justice Critz dissenting. 136 Tex. 226, 150 S.W.2d 64, 65.

On the return of the mandate of the Supreme Court to the trial court, appellee filed a motion for judgment in the latter court. Appellant filed a plea in abatement, an amended answer including prayer that additional parties be made defendants in the suit, and set up various additional matters not adjudicated in prior proceedings. The trial judge overruled appellant’s plea in abatement, disregarded its amended answer, refused to allow its demand for a jury and thereupon, refusing to hear any testimony and granting appellee’s motion, rendered judgment for appellee for the amount of her claim plus interest computed at the time by the trial judge. The original trial of the cause was before the then district judge, Honorable Birge Holt, who subsequently retired, whereas, the judgment here in question was- rendered by Honorable Cullen W. Briggs, his successor in office.

The controlling question for decision here is that of whether the trial court erred in refusing to retry the case upon the return of the mandate of the Supreme Court, reversing and remanding the cause, and in rendering judgment upon the opinion of the Supreme Court without any further proceedings following the return of the mandate.

We quote from the majority opinion of the Supreme Court:

*167 “We shall designate the parties as plaintiff and defendant, as they were designated in the trial court.
“Plaintiff seeks a reversal of the judgments of the trial court and of the Court of Civil Appeals mainly upon two principal grounds. The first ground is as follows: That the funds on deposit in the bank in the name of W. F. Grebe were community property of W. F. Grebe and his surviving wife, and that one-half belonged to plaintiff and the other half belonged to her mother, as the sole surviving heirs of the deceased W. F. Grebe; and that after all the community debts were paid, the bank had no authority to transfer the minor’s share of such deposit to her mother, without requiring the mother to qualify as survivor in community, administratrix, or guardian, when it had knowledge of the status of the parties and the nature of the fund.
“The trial court filed findings of fact, among which are the following:
“(1) That W. F. Grebe died intestate on March 1, 1924, leaving surviving him as his heirs at law his wife, Mrs. W. F. Grebe, and a minor child, the plaintiff in this suit, and that no administration of any kind was had on his estate or on the estate of said minor; which facts the officers of the bank knew.
“(2) That at the time of his death W. F. Grebe had $3,956.47 on deposit with the bank. That on April 2, 1924, Mrs. W. F. Grebe had deposited to her account in the bank the sum of $1,242.37, proceeds from the sale of cotton made by her deceased husband before his death, and that the officers of the bank knew the source of said money and knew it to be community property.
“(3) That on May 14, 1924, Mrs. Grebe, having paid the funeral expenses and all debts of the deceased from the deposit in the name of W. F. Grebe, transferred, or directed the transfer of, the balance of $3,791.65 remaining in the account of W. F. Grebe to her account. All of said money was community property, which fact the bank then knew. The bank also then knew that W. F. Grebe left a minor daughter.
“(4) That on June 30, 1924, Mrs. Grebe made a loan of $6,000 to her brother-in-law, H. W. Grebe, and transferred that amount from her account to him; after which $377.68 remained in her account.
“(5) That the officers of the hank knew that the loan was made by Mrs. Grebe to H. W. Grebe, and knew that it was used by H. W. Grebe to buy land, and that the vice president of the bank took the acknowledgment to the deed to H. W. Grebe. Neither the bank nor any of its officers participated in the loan transaction or in the land purchase, except as above stated.”

It appears that the Supreme Court made an additional finding of fact which was not included in the findings made by the trial judge or this Court, and which the trial court had expressly refused to find, to-wit: that the bank knew that all the community debts of the Grebes had been fully paid at the time it paid over the community funds to Mrs. Grebe. As we interpret the opinion of the Supreme Court their decision of the case was based at least in part upon this additional finding, and it is inferable that but for this additional finding that decision might have been different, since the fact so found was incorporated into each statement of the hypothesis upon which the decision rested. Appellant complains bitterly against the action of the Supreme Court in making this additional finding, upon the familiar theory that trial courts and Courts of Civil Appeals alone have power to determine facts, and that the Supreme Court is without such power. It is elemental, of course, that it is not a prerogative of the Supreme Court to make findings of fact upon disputed issues appearing in the record before them. But it is clearly within their province, and it is their duty, to take notice of undisputed facts of record, and if material give them effect in their decision. We must assume, then, at least in the absence of the statement of facts in the former appeal, that the record before the Supreme Court in the former appeal conclusively disclosed the fact found by that Court in the majority opinion, but which the trial court not only failed but expressly refused to find, that the bank did know, at the time it paid over the community funds to Mrs. Grebe, that all the community debts of the Grebes had been paid. We make these observations in deference to appellant’s earnest complaint of the additional, and apparently material, finding made by the Supreme Court.

After announcing the rules of law deemed by them as applicable to the case made, and upon which they based their ultimate decision of the case, the Supreme *168 Court, in the majority opinion by Mr. Justice Sharp, concluded:

“ * * * jt therefore follows, in view of the undisputed facts in this case, that after all the community debts had been paid, one-half of the community funds belonged to the plaintiff, and that plaintiff is entitled to recover from the bank one-half of all community funds of the deceased and his wife that had been placed to the credit of the mother in such bank with full knowledge on the part of the officials of the bank of the nature of the account and the minor's interest therein.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W.2d 165, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-state-bank-of-bishop-v-grebe-texapp-1942.