Jones v. Gilliam

199 S.W. 694, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 1917
DocketNo. 1255.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 694 (Jones v. Gilliam) 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
Jones v. Gilliam, 199 S.W. 694, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1122 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

*695 HUFF, O. J.

Will P. Jones was appointed administrator of the estate of P. S. and Alma Roberts, deceased. The administration is pending in the county court of Chil-dress county, and as part of the assets of the estate it appears that it owned some ten sections of land situated in Hutchinson county, and oral testimony shows that the county court of Childress county, some time in April, 1915, authorized the administrator to sell the land in Hutchinson county. The order authorizing such sale is not in evidence. The evidence also shows that Jones, the administrator, made an oral contract with Ramsey & Gillespie, hy which he agreed to pay them a commission of 5 per cent, of the purchase price of the land if they should procure a purchaser of said land, ready, willing, and able to buy upon the terms offered, and that Ramsey & Gillespie, in connection with the Vernon Realty Company, found and procured a purchaser, in the person of Ike M. Smith, who entered into a written contract for the purchase of the land with W. P. Jones as administrator of the estate; the contract reciting that the purchase price should be $19,000, one-third cash and the balance to he evidenced by Smith’s note and subject to the approval of the county court of Childress county. The contract further recites, and the evidence shows, that Smith paid $250 down as earnest money, and the administrator was to furnish an abstract of title, and as soon as the abstract could be prepared and furnished and the order of the county court of Childress county, approving the sale and ordering it consummated, the trade should be finally closed. The contract was dated the 17th day of June, 1915. It sufficiently appears that the Vernon Realty Company, at the instance of Ramsey & Gillespie, procured Smith, the proposed purchaser. It appears from the oral testimony that the sale to Smith was reported by the administrator to the probate court, which approved and confirmed the sale, directing the execution of the deed upon the compliance with the contract by Smith. The order of that court, however, is not in evidence. Before the abstract could be completed and examined the evidence shows that Ike M. Smith died, and that his son, Ed. Smith, qualified as his executor. After the administrator received notice of the death of Smith he learned through one” Mr. Owensby that a Mr. W. T. Coble would purchase the land. Owens-by either wrote or wired the administrator, asking him if he (Owensby) would find a buyer for the land if there would be a commission to him. The administrator says he told him there was a commission in it, but that he would have to square it with other parties — the parties who procured the other buyer, Smith. He testifies:

That he went over the ground with Owensby and finally agreed on a settlement with him. “We agreed that he (Owensby) have a commission. I asked Ramsey if they would allow Owensby $200 on tlieir commission, 'or if they would be willing to take $750 and allow him $200 and he took up the matter with the other party, and told me he would do so — with the Vernon Realty Company. I then went to Amarillo and went over the situation with Owensby. I was to pay him, and agreed to pay him $200 or agreed with Ramsey & Gillespie to pay him $200, and the other parties $750 in all.”

He afterwards stated that he induced Owensby to take $100, and that he only paid in all $850, and the total commission would have been $950. After Smith’s death the administrator filed in the probate court his report of the sale to Coble, reciting in that report that the court had theretofore, in July, 1915, confirmed the sale to Ike Smith, setting up the terms of the sale to Ike Smith, further reciting: .

“Your administrator would show to the court that the said Ike M. Smith has never complied with the terms and conditions of said sale, but, on the contrary, failed and refused to carry out and perform the conditions and terms of said sale, and has failed to pay the cash payment for said lands, or to execute the notes for deferred payments, as set out in said report; the said Ike M. Smith has since died, and that the heir's and executors of the estate of the will of said Ike M. Smith have also failed and refused to comply with the terms of said sale, and to make the cash payment for said land, and to execute the notes for the deferred payments as set out in said report of sale.”

He then sets out that he had sold the land to Coble for the same price, the terms being different, in that Coble was to pay two-thirds cash and one-third on time. The order confirming the sale to Coble is not in the record, but it is treated by the parties as having been consummated by the administrator. It also appears that the executor of Ike Smith executed on the 5th day of February, 1916, a quitclaim deed, or release of Will P. Jones, the administrator, reciting therein that Ike M. Smith did not, during his lifetime, comply with the terms of the agreement, but failed to do so, and that he died thereafter in September, 1915, without in any manner complying with the terms of the agreement, and that his executor, likewise, since the death of Smith, and after his appointment as executor, failed and declined to carry out and comply with the contract. The administrator filed his annual statement of his account with the estate, in which he charged the estate with the two items, $375 each, one to Ramsey & Gillespie, and the other to the Vernon Realty Company, and thereafter also filed his application for final settlement and discharge. The heirs of P. S. Jones and Alma Roberts filed a contest of several of the items in the county probate court, among which was the commission theretofore charged against the estate. The county court refused to allow these two items, and. Jones appealed to the district court from that judgment, and upon, hearing on appeal to the district court the same result was had, and from ‘ the judgment of the district court this appeal is prosecuted.

It was admitted in the trial court and in *696 this court that it was agreed that the only-items in controversy before this court are the items, one dated 3/1/16, amounting to $375, paid to Ramsey & Gillespie,' and another paid to the Vernon Realty Company, for the same amount, aggregating in all $750, and 5 per cent, on this sum of $750.

The assignments and propositions in this case present the question whether a land agent, who has found a purchaser, ready and willing to enter into a contract with the administrator of an estate of a deceased person, and who does enter into a written agreement with the administrator, is entitled to recover the commission agreed upon between the administrator and the agent. The agreement so made depends upon the power of the administrator to so contract. It is elementary that the title to the land belonging to a decedent does not vest in the administrator, but in his heirs. The land cannot be sold by the administrator except for certain specified purposes and upon an order duly made by the probate court. The administrator is not vested with the discretion with reference to such sales, but it rests with the probate court. In other words, the administrator is an officer of the court, and only the executive arm of the court with reference to sale of lands. Such representative therefore acts under the direction and under the control of the court. The power is in the court to fix the terms of the sale. It is therefore the duty of the administrator to strictly conform to the terms or requirements of the order.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rowe v. Palmer
277 S.W.2d 781 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1955)
Meadows v. Russell
203 S.W.2d 647 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1947)
Moore Holifield v. Commissioner
7 B.T.A. 1302 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1927)
Holifield v. Commissioner
7 B.T.A. 1302 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1927)
Scott v. Taylor
294 S.W. 227 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1927)
Reeves v. Fuqua
277 S.W. 418 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 694, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-gilliam-texapp-1917.