Hall v. McCormick

7 Tex. 269
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 7 Tex. 269 (Hall v. McCormick) 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
Hall v. McCormick, 7 Tex. 269 (Tex. 1851).

Opinions

Hemphill, Cb. J.

The first error assigned is the overruling of the demurrer to the plaintiffs’ petition. This I shall consider together with the third, which is, that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to tiie amended answer of W. S. Hall, administrator of the deceased.

In this answer the defendant avers that he took out letters of administration upon the estate of the deceased in December, 1845; that this fact was duly published, and creditors notified to present their claims; and that the claim now sued upon was not presented within one year after the grant of administration, &c.

This was demurred to, on the ground that the claim being a judgment of record against the deceased in his lifetime, the plaintiff was not bound to present the same, as in the said plea is supposed, &e. The demurrer was sustained, and we are to consider whether this were rightly done; or, in other words, whether the previous presentation of the claim to the administrator be or not essential to support tire action.

A sjjace of nearly three years from the publication of the administra!or had elapsed previously to the commencement of the suit, and three systems of rules and regulations in relation to the estates of deceased persons had, during that period,'been in force. But they were substantially uniform in the provision requiring, as an essential preliminary to tiie institution oí a suit, that a ;iaim for money should be presented to the administrator. The seventeenth section of the law of 1840 is to the effect that no bearer of a claim for money shall commence an action before presenting his claim. The fifteenth section of the act of 1846 declared that no action should lie on a claim before its presentation for acknowledgment; and by other sections of the act, tiie claim was not limited to a demand for money, but embraced also demands for personal property or for land. The fiftieth section of tiie act of 1848 inhibits the holder of claims for money from suing the executor or administrator, unless tiie claim, properly authenticated, lias been presented to such executor or administrator, &c. It clearly appears, then, that by none of the laws regulating- the proceedings in Probate Courts, in force since the grant of administration, lias the bearer of a claim been exempted from the necessity of presenting liis claim for approval or rejection ; and this claim can form no exception to tiie general rule, unless it can be shown that it is not within tiie scope and intent of the provision, or that no benefit to tiie succession could be attained by the performance of tiie act enjoined.

In tiie cases of Gaines v. Garrett and Cole v. Robinson, it was held that, under the facts presented, it was not necessary that the claims should have been presented, to authorize tiie institution of suit. But tiie demand under consideration does not come within either of the classes represented in those suits. It is true that it is a judgment of a court of record; and in this particular it is assimilated to tiie claim in the case of Cole v. Robinson. Tiie reasons which exempt a judgment from the operation of the rule requiring tiie pi-esent-ation of claims are, in that case, set forth at large. The expressions are general, and some of the reasoning, if detached from the context, is sufficiently comprehensive to embrace all judgments of record. But this, in a subsequent portion of the opinion, is expressly restricted to judgments which had not, by lapse of time and the negligence of the plaintiff, become dormant, so as to have lost their liens, and which had no vitality except as foundations for new suits. If they bad lost their liens and become dormant, it was said that, perhaps in such cases, it was essential that they should be presented and rejected before being sued upon.

In tliis case there was hut one execution issued, which was returned in July, 1843. By the act of Fein-nary 5th, 1840, the judgment operated as a lien (in all the property of the defendant, situated in the county in which the jndg-[139]*139menfc was rendered, ii execution were issued within twelve months and due diligence used to collect the same. In this case the lien liad been extinguished" for several 3'ears before the commencement of suit. The judgment was dormant and liad no force, except as constituting a foundation for a new actiou. The due diligence contemplated by the act of 1S40 was defined, in the case of Bennett and Wife v. Gamble, (1 Tex. R., 124,) to be the issuing of another, after-the return of the first execution not satisfied ; and that the effort should be continued from term to term until satisfaction had been obtained. I-Iere the plaintiffs desisted, after the return of the first execution, from further prosecution of their rights. The property now attempted to be subjected to the payment of this debt was always within reach of tlie process of the court; and the pretense, if that were available, cannot be set up, that all such efforts would have been idle and nugatory. • Whatever may have been tlie result of such attempts, it i.s clear that the lien of the judgment lias been lost by the negligence of tlie plaintiffs ; and their demand is but a claim which cannot be enforced against the estate, unless it has been assented to by the administrator and approved by tlie chief justice of the county court, or has been established by a judicial proceeding for that purpose.

If the lieu had been preserved, it might have been enforced, irrespective of the assent or other action of the administrator. The death of the debtor would not have disinemnbered his property of the lien ; and as this could have been satisfied under judicial process, without tlie necessity of a new suit, and as the assent of the. administrator and the approval of tlie chief justice could not have imparted to tlie judgment a higher sanction, there is no reason why this assent or approval should have been sought by the creditor; but as the judgment has been suffered to become dormant, ami cannot be revived or have operative force, unless by an action or a proceeding with that object in' view, the claim i.s not distinguishable from tlie general mass of demands against tlie succession, and falls within tlie rule requiring presentation to the'administrator before suit can be brought for its establishment. The terms of the statute are comprehensive, embracing in their literal import all demands for money, and necessarily excluding all exceptions where the statute lias provided none, unless they be snch as plainly come within the purview and intention of the law, or be founded on extraneous considerations of equal or paramount sanction or force.

In the case of Cummings v. Jones, (Dallam, 532,) it was held that the petition must contain an allegation of a demand and refusal by the administrator, and. that it was equally necessary that they should be proven. This rule lias since been frequently affirmed, and lias all the authority derived from uniformity of decision. One of the points at issue, and which must he established in all snch suits, is as to tlie presentation of the claim; and the action of the court in excluding the defense of the administrator, in which this issue was distinctly made, is clearly erroneous.

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Related

Hare v. Reily
269 S.W. 473 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
Adams v. Crosby
19 S.W. 355 (Texas Supreme Court, 1892)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Tex. 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-mccormick-tex-1851.