Kreis v. Kreis

57 S.W.2d 1107
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 1933
DocketNo. 3967.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 57 S.W.2d 1107 (Kreis v. Kreis) 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
Kreis v. Kreis, 57 S.W.2d 1107 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinions

The parties to this appeal will be designated as in the trial court.

Except as supplemented herein, the facts of this case are sufficiently stated on a former appeal, 36 S.W.2d 821. Many of the same questions disposed of on the former appeal are again presented. These will not be mentioned, as we deem it unnecessary to again discuss questions which we think have already been correctly decided. Other questions are mere corollaries of controlling questions, and still others are of a trivial nature whose importance does not justify discussion.

Two major legal issues appear here: (1) Whether the will of J. M. Kreis, ancestor of plaintiffs, disposed of his wife's community interest in the property in question; and (2) whether the plaintiffs' petition constitutes a collateral attack upon the probate proceedings of the Uvalde county court.

The first of these was, we think, correctly answered in the negative on the former appeal. This leaves an undivided one-half interest in a large amount of property still in controversy, the status of which depends primarily on the answer to the second question above mentioned. The chief controversy is between the heirs of Arthur B. Kreis, deceased, and those of D. F. Kreis, deceased. Arthur B. Kreis received under the will of J. M. Kreis an undivided interest in one-half the property involved in this suit. After his death, his brother, D. F. Kreis, was appointed administrator of his estate by the county court of Uvalde county. A fourth amended original petition was filed after the former appeal by plaintiffs, the heirs of Arthur B. Kreis. Many fraudulent acts were charged against D. F. Kreis. Among these that D. F. Kreis procured his mother (also the mother of Arthur B. Kreis) to file a fictitious claim against the estate of said Arthur Kreis in the Uvalde county court, and fraudulently procured its allowance and an order of sale for the property of said estate to pay same. The petition alleges, in part:

"And it was thus by these acts of the said D. F. Kreis and his attorney and by their frauds as aforesaid, deceived and imposed upon and thus caused to mistakenly approve such bogus account and to order the sale of said lands and to approve such pretended sale to defendant A. West. That all of these things and other frauds were perpetrated by said D. F. Kreis for the continued purpose of divesting the title to said lands out of these plaintiffs and of vesting all of the title in himself; and he was the indirect purchaser of said lands at such administrator's sale, through his brother-in-law A. West, who thereafter made the deed to same to said D. F. Kreis as aforesaid, and by reason of which said pretended sale to said A. West and the subsequent deed of same back to D. F. Kreis in person was all one fraudulent act to vest title in said D. F. Kreis in violation of the law prohibiting an administrator to be the direct or indirect purchaser at his own sale. * * *

"Plaintiffs further aver and charge, and as they believe, the claims against the estate of their father Arthur B. Kreis, which said D. F. Kreis reported as allowed and paid by him were fraudulent, fictitious and void and not properly charged against said estate, and never in fact paid by him. * * *

"Plaintiffs were ignorant of the matters and things, frauds, intrigues and maneuvers named and charged against said D. F. Kreis and A. West and either or both of them, until about the first day of October, A.D. 1928."

Plaintiffs pray, in part, that title be divested out of defendants and vested in plaintiffs and for such general and special relief as they may be entitled, either in law or equity. Plaintiffs do not ask for a cancellation of any order of the probate court of Uvalde county. The trial court sustained many exceptions to this petition, the controlling one being in substance and effect that plaintiffs' suit was a collateral attack upon the orders of the probate court of Uvalde county. Upon plaintiffs refusing to amend, judgment was rendered for defendants, from which this appeal was prosecuted.

We are of the opinion that plaintiffs' petition, as a whole, and in its relation to that portion of their cause of action under discussion, though inartfully drawn, may properly be construed to be a proceeding to impress upon the property in controversy a constructive trust for the benefit of petitioners.

"It is unquestionably a common and familiar application of `their remedial justice' for courts of equity to force upon the conscience of a party the duty of a trustee in regard to property which has been acquired by artifice or fraud." Hendrix v. Nunn, 46 Tex. 147.

An administrator holds the title as trustee for those whom he represents. 24 C.J. 637, and authorities there collated; Storer v. Lane,1 Tex. Civ. App. 250, 20 S.W. 852, 854. The estate is trust property in his hands, which he may not purchase either directly or indirectly. This has long been the rule, and such a purchase by an administrator is now expressly inhibited by statute. Article 3579, R.S. 1925; Nabours v. McCord, 97 Tex. 526, 80 S.W. 595, 598 and *Page 1109 authorities cited, 24 C.J. pp. 633 and 634; 39 Cyc. pp. 554-555.

A purchase by the trustee may be set aside without regard to its fairness or the price paid, Nabours v. McCord, supra, because "it is poisonous in its consequences," Crawford County Bank v. Bolton, 87 Ark. 142,112 S.W. 398, 400. "The rule stands `upon one great moral obligation to refrain from placing ourselves in relations which ordinarily excite a conflict between self-interest and integrity.'" Id. See, also, Wipff v. Heder, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 685, 26 S.W. 118. A court of equity, when properly called upon, does not speculate or quibble when an administrator has acquired the title and possession of his trust estate or any part of it while acting in such capacity. It impresses it immediately with a constructive trust in favor of those beneficially entitled to it. A petition which plainly shows such a state of facts is sufficient, though it does not eo nomine call it a trust estate. It is not necessary to plead legal conclusions, nor state conclusions that are already made plain by the facts stated. The petition in the instant case meets this test. The fact that a fraudulent order was procured from a probate court as part of the scheme does not change the character of the action. We regard the allegations as to such order as only a part of the history of the fraud perpetrated. As we interpret this portion of the petition, its facts are sufficient to show that a trust estate was purchased by or for the trustee or administrator. The naked charge of such a purchase, coupled with appropriate allegations of ownership and a prayer for relief, would, it seems, have stated a cause of action upon this particular feature of the case. It is not necessary in such case to set aside the probate orders. They stand as made, but the character of the title which the holder has is stripped of its ostensible, and impressed with its real, character, viz., a trust estate. This has been pointedly held in cases whose facts closely parallel those of the instant case. From some of these we quote:

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57 S.W.2d 1107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kreis-v-kreis-texapp-1933.