Hildenbrandt, Admr. v. Ames, Admr.

66 S.W. 128, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 377, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 293
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 128 (Hildenbrandt, Admr. v. Ames, Admr.) 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
Hildenbrandt, Admr. v. Ames, Admr., 66 S.W. 128, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 377, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 293 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This suit comes as aftermath of the ever memorable storm of September 8, 1900, which devastated a large portion of the city of Galveston and caused the untimely death of a great number of the residents of said city. The only issue involved in the suit is the proper disposition of the proceeds of a life insurance policy in the sum of $2500, taken out by Frank Doll in the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York and payable to his wife, Minnie Doll, “if living; if not living, to the insured’s executors, administrators, or assigns.” Frank and Minnie Doll both resided in the city of Galveston on the 8th of September, 1900, and neither have been seen since said fateful day. The appellant, E. E. Hildenbrandt, is the administrator of the estate of Minnie Doll, and the appellee, W. H. Ames, of the estate of Frank Doll, both said administrators having duly qualified as such under legal appointment.

The suit was instituted by appellee, as administrator of the estate of Frank Doll, against the insurance company and appellant as administrator of the estate of Minnie Doll, to recover the amount due upon the policy. The insurance company answered acknowledging its liability upon the policy, and paid the money into the registry of the court to be disposed of as the court might adjudge as between the appellant and the appellee. The appellant answered and claimed the fund as an asset of the estate of Minnie Doll. The case was tried by the court below without the intervention of a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the entire amount of the proceeds of said policy, and against the appellant for all costs of suit except a fee of $150 allowed the attorney for the insurance company, which fee was ordered paid out of the proceeds of said policy. It was further decreed that “this judgment, however, shall not prejudice the rights of the heirs of Minnie Doll, or the administrator of'Minnie Doll’s estate, to assert in the administration of the estate of Frank M. Doll, deceased, any interest in said fund as the community estate of Frank and Minnie Doll, deceased.”

The facts in the case are few and undisputed. The material parts of the policy sued on are as follows:

“In consideration of the application for this policy, which is hereby made a part of this contract, the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York promises to pay at its home office in the city of New York, unto Minnie Doll, wife of Frank M. Doll, of Flatonia, County of Fayette, State of Texas, if living, if not living to the insured’s executors, administrators or assigns, twenty-five hundred dollars, upon acceptance of satisfactory proofs at its home office of the death of said Frank M. Doll, during the continuance of this policy, upon the following conditions, and subject to the provisions, requirements and benefits *379 stated oil the back of this policy, which are hereby referred to and made part hereof. The annual premium fifty-two dollars and fifty cents shall be paid in advance on the delivery of this policy, and thereafter to the company at its home office in the city of Hew York on the fourteenth day of April in every year during the continuance of this contract.”

Frank M. Doll and Minnie Doll, his wife, both perished in the storm on Galveston Island, September 8, 1900. They lived at Thirty-ninth and avenue T, in the western part of the city of Galveston. He left B. G. Tartt’s grocery store in a wagon, on the cover of which was painted “B. G. Tartt, Grocer,” it being the only wagon of Tartt’s going to that part of the city on said date. Doll stated that he was going home to get his wife at his residence on Thirty-ninth and T. This was about one o’clock p. m. on September 8, 1900. The horse and wagon were never seen after the storm.

About 4 o’clock in the evening of September 8, 1900, Mr. Jennings was at Thirty-eighth and avenue S%, while the storm was raging, and he saw this wagon coming north, towards the city proper, on Thirty-ninth street between S and S%, about a block nearer the portion of the city than was Doll’s residence. The horse drawing the wagon was belly deep in water, and moving as though he were being driven and guided; the reins and harness on the horse moved up and down as though they were being handled by some one in the wagon, but witness could not see and did not know whether there actually was any person in said wagon. He could not see because of the cover on the wagon.. There was a heavy southwest current on avenue S at the time. The houses at Thirty-ninth and T were not blown down or washed away until about 7:30 p. m. Witness did not know Frank M. Doll or his wife.

This is all of the evidence in the case, and we think it is insufficient to raise the issue of the survivorship of either Frank or Minnie Doll, and until the sea gives up her dead, for aught that these facts disclose, we may not Imow whether one survived the other, or having in life together faced the overpowering fury of the mad waves which ingulfed and destroyed the homes and lives of a great number of the inhabitants of the fated city of Galveston, they were not divided in death by the space of even a moment’s time. The common law, which is at once the product and conservator of that rugged independence and sturdy self-reliance which has ever characterized the English speaking people, disdaining to borrow from the more ancient code of Borne, which has formed the foundation of the system of jurisprudence of many of the most enlightened nations of the world, refuses to indulge in any presumption either of survivorship or of the simultaneous death of persons who perish in a common disaster, and applies to this class of cases the general rule that courts will not change the existing status in possession of property except upon adequate proof of facts authorizing such change. According to the Boman law the presumptions were never in favor of a simultaneous death. If a parent and son perished in the same battle or shipwreck, the son above the age of fifteen was presumed to *380 Rave survived his father; under that age to have predeceased him. If persons perishing in the same disaster were all under fifteen years of age, the presumption was that the elder survived; if over sixty the younger was presumed to have survived; and if husband and wife perished in a common disaster, the wife being the weaker was supposed to have died first. In this connection it is interesting-to note the law on “this subject which prevails in other nations of the world. In Holland, Prussia, and Austria the presumption is that those who perish in a •common disaster die together, and no one receives or transmits succession. The law of India is the same effect. The Code Napoleon contains the following provisions:

“Article 730. If several individuals respectively entitled to inheritance from one another should die by the same event without anyone being able to ascertain which died first, the presumption of survivor-ship is determined by the circumstances of the fact; but, these being wanting, by the condition of age and of sex.
“Article 731. If those who thus died were under fifteen years of age, the eldest will be presumed to have survived; if all were above sixty the youngest will be so presumed; if some were under fifteen and some above sixty, the former will be so presumed.
“Article 733.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 128, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 377, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hildenbrandt-admr-v-ames-admr-texapp-1901.