Hickman v. Hickman

234 S.W.2d 410, 149 Tex. 439, 1950 Tex. LEXIS 447
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1950
DocketA-2695
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 234 S.W.2d 410 (Hickman v. Hickman) 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
Hickman v. Hickman, 234 S.W.2d 410, 149 Tex. 439, 1950 Tex. LEXIS 447 (Tex. 1950).

Opinion

Me. Justice Brewster

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Hector H. Hickman died November 26, 1948, leaving as survivors his widow, Mrs. Hazel Hickman, and a daughter seven months old. His will gave all his property to his three brothers, Roy N., I. N. and Bernal B. Hickman, and named them as independent executors.

On January 31, 1949, the probate court appointed Mrs. Hickman and Bernal B. Hickman temporary administrators of the estate pending proceedings for probate of the will, which was being contested by Mrs. Hickman and the daughter.

On March 7, 1949, the will was probated and the brothers qualified as executors. Contestants appealed to the district court.

On April 22, 1949, Mrs. Hickman, for herself and as next friend for her daughter, filed in the administration proceedings an application to have set aside to her and the child a homestead of 200 acres and all the exempt property of the estate. The probate court dismissed this application for want of jurisdiction, and Mrs. Hickman appealed to the district court, which, after a hearing, adjudged to Mrs. Hickman and her daughter a described tract of 200 acres out of a tract of 917.2 acres, which was the separate property of the deceased, as a homestead during the lifetime of Mrs. Hickman or as long as she may elect so to use it or so long as the daughter’s guardian, in the event of the death of Mrs. Hickman or her abandonment of the homestead, may be permitted under court orders so to use it. The court further found: (1) that at the time of Hickman’s death there was on hand, as his separate property or as the community property of himself and Mrs. Hickman, a large amount of household and kitchen furniture and numerous implements of husbandry; and (2) “that there were on hand five milk cows and their calves, * * * one 1946 International Pick-up which the court finds to be exempt property; * * * all wearing apparel and clothing of every kind, including two gentlemen’s diamond rings; seven head of hogs; twenty head of goats, all of which items the court finds the applicants are entitled to have set aside to them as exempt property for their use and benefit.” He then *442 found that some of these exempt articles of a value in excess of $500 were not then among the effects of the deceased, and decreed that Mrs. Hickman be paid $500 in lieu thereof, as provided by Arts. 3486 and 3487, R. C. S., 1925. He found, also, that “since the filing of this application in the County Court, asking that exemptions be set aside to them,” the administrators have sold the following exempt property: five cows and four calves for $1103, 20 goats for $90, 7 hogs for $419, a new tractor and attachments for $1125, an old tractor and attachments for $910, a combine for $1000, a 2-wheel trailer for $165, a cream separator for $45, bees for $30; and that Mrs. Hickman and her daughter are entitled to have the total of $4887 paid to them “in the place and stead of said items.”

After modifying the trial court’s judgment in three minor particulars not questioned here, the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed it. 228 S. W. 2d, 565.

The cause is here with Roy N. Hickman et al., the three brothers, as petitioners, and with Mrs. Hickman and her daughter as respondents.

Petitioners’ first point complains of the judgment allowing respondents a money judgment for the exempt articles sold by consent of all parties. They assert that since the sales were voluntarily made by Mrs. Hickman, the money received is not exempt property.

There is no dispute that Mrs. Hickman and petitioners did agree to the sale on the theory that it would be for the benefit of all concerned; that it should be made by the two administrators without court order; and that the price received would be considered fair and would not be contested. The testimony, however, is conflicting on what the agreement was as to the effect of the sale, so we must adopt that version which supports the trial court’s judgment. It was that the parties “agreed that the money received for the property would take the place of and be in lieu of the items sold, and it would be without prejudice to the rights of anybody concerned.”

In that situation we see no merit in petitioners’ contention. They were sui juris and were presumed to know that respondents were entitled to have the exempt property set aside to them for their use and benefit. Knowing that, they agreed that the items should be sold by the administrators and that the money realized would take their place “without prejudice to the rights of any *443 body concerned”, which certainly meant without prejudice to the right of Mrs. Hickman and the child to claim the use and benefit of the proceeds. If it did not mean that it meant nothing, from the standpoint of respondents. We see no reason why petitoners should not live up to their agreement. Cases like Whittenburg v. Lloyd, 49 Texas, 633, and Schneider v. Bray, 59 Texas, 668, cited by petitioners, are not contrary to our holding because in them the debtor voluntarily converted exempt property into non-exempt property but without his complaining creditor’s participation or consent; so it was properly held that the non-exempt property was subject to execution to satisfy the creditor’s judgment.

Petitioners next contend that if the trial court was correct in decreeing that the money is exempt, its use should have been limited to the lifetime of Mrs. Hickman and to the lifetime or minority of the child and that respondents should have been required to give security for its ultimate payment to petitioners.

Our discussion of petitioners’ first point applies in large measure to this. Having agreed that money, which they surely knew to be both fluid and fugitive, should “take the place of and be in lieu of” the exempt personal property, they must be content with such disposition as the law makes of the personal property itself; they are not in position to invoke additional limitations or conditions on its use by respondents. Art. 3485, R. S., 1925, provides that the court “shall by an order entered upon the minutes, set apart for the use and benefit of the widow and minor children and unmarried daughters remaining with the family of the deceased, all such property of the estate as may be exempt from execution or forced sale by the Constitution and laws of the State.” It says nothing about any order limiting the use to the lifetime of the widow and minor children nor does it require them to give any bond insuring that the property will ultimately be returned to the estate. So the trial court correctly refused to impose any such conditions on respondents, because to do so would be to prejudice their rights, contrary to the agreement.

Our holding is in accord with our public policy as declared in Arts. 3486 and 3487, R. S., 1925, that the court shall make an allowance of cash, not to exceed $500, to the widow and children to compensate them for any specific exempt articles not among the effects of the deceased; and no conditions whatever are fixed against their right to this payment. It applies the principle stated in Carson et al. v. McFarland et al. (Civ. App.), *444 206 S. W. 2d, 130 (er. ref.) : “Our exemption laws should be liberally construed in favor of express exemptions, and should never be restricted in their meaning and effect so as to minimize their operation upon the beneficent objects of the statutes.

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Bluebook (online)
234 S.W.2d 410, 149 Tex. 439, 1950 Tex. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hickman-v-hickman-tex-1950.