Keating v. Vaughn

61 Tex. 518
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 9, 1881
DocketCase No. 5132
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 61 Tex. 518 (Keating v. Vaughn) 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
Keating v. Vaughn, 61 Tex. 518 (Tex. 1881).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

— The first assignment of error is: “ The court erred in overruling defendant’s general demurrer to plaintiff’s petition.”

Under this assignment it is contended that the county judge had no power, on the resignation of the assignee named in the trust deed, to appoint another assignee.

Neither by assignment of error, nor by proposition based on it, is it urged that the action of the county judge ivas not invoked by a proper person; hence that question need not be considered.

We are of the opinion that the resignation of the assignee, Peavy, was in contemplation of the statute a refusal further to execute the trust. The fourteenth section of the act of March 24,1879, in terms provides that the county judge shall have power, when an assignee refuses to execute the trust, to remove him, and to appoint another.

It would require an exceedingly technical and unreasonable construction to be placed on the act to justify the holding that when the assignee appointed by the deed declines further to act, and requests the appointment of some other person, that a state of facts does not exist which authorizes the county judge to act, as fully as though he had first entered up an order removing the assignee. The acceptance of the resignation is certainly equivalent to an order of removal, which, when made, calls for the appointment of another. Full notice to all persons interested in the estate seems to have been given, and we see no sufficient reason assigned for holding that the appointment of Vaughn was not valid.

It is urged, through the third assignment, that it was error to overrule the obiections made to the introduction of the deed of v assignment.

[522]*522These objections were: 1st, that the deed of assignment stipulated for releases to the assignor by such creditors as should take benefits under it, and did not convey all the estate of the debtor subject to forced sale; 2d, that it reserves to the assignor any surplus which may remain after paying the debts.

The first ground is based on a mistake as to what the deed does really convey.

The second section of the act of March 24, 1879, requires that there shall be annexed to the deed of assignment, in addition to a statement of the indebtedness of the assignor, names and residences of the several creditors, character of debt, etc., “a full and true inventory of all such debtor’s estate at the date of such assignment, both real and personal, in law or in equity, and the incumbrances existing thereon, and of all vouchers and securities relating thereto, and the value of such estate, according to the best knowledge of such debtor or debtors.”

In this case the assignment deed conveyed certain designated property, without in terms declaring that the property thus conveyed was all the assignor possessed, except that exempt from forced sale. The inventory, however, which was made a part of the assignment, as the law directs, as well as the oath of the assignor, which the statute also requires to be made, contained clear and unequivocal declarations that the property conveyed by the deed and named particularly in the inventory was all the estate of the assignor, of every character whatever, which he owned, except named property which was exempted from forced sale.

We are of the opinion that these papers should be taken together as the assignment, and the deed be read in the light of the facts found in all these papers. Such certainly is the true rule. Burrill on Assignments, 128; Norton v. Kearney, 10 Wis., 448; Van Vleet v. Slauson, 45 Barb., 317; Kruse v. Prindle, 8 Oreg., 158; Burrows v. Lehndorff, 8 Iowa, 96; Hott v. Bancroft, 30 Ala., 195; Downing v. Kintzing, 2 S. & R., 326.

Thus tested, it is quite evident that the assignor conveyed all his property of whatever kind, or however situated, to the assignee for the benefit of his creditors, excepting only such as the law under which he was acting permitted him to except; and by force of the first and ninth sections of the act, every conceivable interest in property which the assignor or his creditors had passed by the deed and might be found and title thereto asserted by the assignee for the benefit of the creditors.

In this case it is, therefore, not necessary for us to determine [523]*523whether, as a fact, it may be shown by extrinsic evidence that a deed which in express terms does not convey all of the property of the debtor, not exempt from forced sale, does in fact do so.

Under the statute, it is unimportant whether the assignor by the assignment reserves to himself any surplus which may remain after payment of the consenting creditors, for the statute itself regulates that matter independent of what the terms of the deed may be in this respect, if the assignment be as is this, under the third section of the act, which, with some of the following sections, refers to assignments made for the benefit of consenting creditors only.

Under such an assignment, strictly, other creditors than those consenting to the release of the debtor do not take at all; but the eighth section of the act provides that non-consenting creditors may garnishee the assignee for any excess of such estate remaining in his hands after the payment to the consenting creditors of their debts and the costs and expenses of executing the assignment.

If non-consenting creditors should, not pursue that course in case of an excess, the sixteenth section of the act, when the trust has been executed and the assignee desires to be discharged therefrom, provides that the excess shall be paid into the district court, subject to be paid out upon the decree of that court, which would, no doubt, be so made as to protect non-consenting creditors who might show themselves entitled thereto, arid take the necessary steps to fix a legal claim on the fund, in so far as the fund would go; if, however, no claim to such a fund was made by any creditor, the court, after the lapse of a reasonable time, would certainly direct the excess to be delivered to the assignor.

Thus the statute regulates the whole matter, and must control, if there be any conflict between its provisions and the deed. If the property passes to the assignee for the benefit of creditors generally, or for the benefit of consenting creditors alone, no provision which the assignor may make in the deed can interfere with the distribution of the estate as the statute requires; nor can the rights of creditors, intended to be protected by it, be destroyed by the levy of attachments or other process on the assigned property by dissatisfied creditors. They cannot disregard the plain intent of the statute, and abuse the process of a court to accomplish purposes utterly at war with the manifest purpose of the act.

Proof of the appointment of the assignee, Vaughn, seems to have been made by the production of the original order of the county judge appointing him, together with his bond duly approved and filed as the law directs, and not by certified copies; such being true, [524]*524the objection to the evidence, based on the ground that the clerk of the county court had no authority to certify them, does not arise.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Tex. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keating-v-vaughn-tex-1881.