Lauraine v. Masterson

193 S.W. 708, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 286
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1917
DocketNo. 7282.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 193 S.W. 708 (Lauraine v. Masterson) 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
Lauraine v. Masterson, 193 S.W. 708, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 286 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinions

The writ of error by which this cause has been brought before us is from a judgment in a suit in intervention brought by defendant in error in a receivership proceeding pending in the district court for the Eleventh judicial district.

On December 26, 1908, in a suit brought *Page 709 by lien creditors, Norman G. Kittrell, Jr. was appointed receiver of all the property real or personal, belonging to A. C. Allen and his mother, Mrs. Margaret E. Allen. This receivership has been pending in the court below since the date of the receiver's appointment, and the receiver has possession of all of said property. On November 6, 1914, defendant in error, H. Masterson, filed a petition in intervention in the receivership proceeding in which he alleges the execution of two certain promissory notes by the said A. C. Allen in person and as attorney in fact for Mrs. Margaret E. Allen; said notes being described as one note, for the sum of $8,596.11, bearing date the 17th day of February, 1911, due on or before two years after date, and one note for the sum of $2,115.15, also bearing date the 17th day of February, 1911, and due on or before two years after date, each of said notes being payable to the order of the said H. Masterson.

It was further alleged that said notes were secured by deeds of trust on the property of the said A. C. Allen and Mrs. Margaret E. Allen, and that the said Norman G. Kittrell, Jr., who was at the time of the execution of said original deeds of trust and notes in possession of all of said property as receiver, acting under the orders and directions of said Eleventh judicial district court, was named as trustee in said deeds of trust. It further appears from the petition that practically all the property described in said deeds of trust is owned jointly by the said A. C. Allen and Mrs. Margaret Allen.

Said petition names as defendant A. C. Allen, Mrs. Margaret E. Allen, as a person non compos mentis, Norman G. Kittrell, Jr., as receiver of the estate of A. C. Allen and Mrs. Margaret E. Allen, and T. N. Jones, as guardian of the estate of Mrs. Margaret E. Allen, a person non compos mentis; it appearing that prior to the institution of said intervention the said Mrs. Margaret E. Allen had been duly adjudged a person non compos mentis, and the said T. N. Jones had been appointed and was then acting under such appointment by the probate court of Bosque county, as guardian of the estate of the said Mrs. Margaret E. Allen.

The petition prayed for joint and several judgments against each of said defendants in the amount of principal, interest, and attorney's fees due on said notes, and for a foreclosure of the deed of trust liens on the property described therein, for an order of the receiver to sell said property to satisfy the debt thus established, and for general relief.

No answer appears to have been filed by A. C. Allen individually; but T. N. Jones, as guardian of the estate of Mrs. Margaret E. Allen, came in on the 27th day of November, 1914, and filed his answer in which he admits the execution of the notes set out in said petition of intervention, upon information and belief, but stating that he would require the production of the notes in evidence, and further alleging upon information and be lief that the notes were executed for legal services rendered the estate of A. C. Allen and Mrs. Margaret E. Allen, and were given on a contingent basis of one-half of what was saved to the said estate in certain litigation, as represented by the difference between the claims asserted and the judgment rendered, and that the said notes were secured by third deed of trust lien on substantially all of the property belonging to the said Allens. He further admits in said answer that the fees charged and evidenced by said notes were fair and reasonable.

Norman G. Kittrell, Jr., as receiver of the estate of A. C. Allen and Mrs. Margaret E. Allen, filed an answer on November 21, 1914, which contains a general demurrer and general denial, and submits to the court the question whether or not the said notes and deeds of trust having been executed pending the receivership should be asserted as a lien taking precedence over unsecured claims against the said A. C. Allen and Mrs. Margaret E. Allen, or either of them, existing prior to the dates of said notes.

Judgment was rendered in said suit in intervention on 27th day of November, 1914, which, after reciting the personal appearance of all parties defendant, and that a jury was waived and all matters of fact and of law submitted to the court, further recites that the court, having been advised in the premises, found as a fact that the intervener's cause of action was liquidated and evidenced by the promissory notes hereinbefore described, and that the answer of the guardian showed that said notes were for services rendered to the estate of Mrs. Margaret E. Allen, under a contract that was fair and reasonable under the circumstances, and of which the ward received the benefit of the services of the said H. Masterson; that said notes were secured by deeds of trust on the property described in said judgment; that said trust deeds were subordinate to existing deeds of trust in favor of J. J. Sweeney and also to the deed of trust held by H. Kempner and H. Masterson; and that the attorney fees named in said notes has accrued. It was therefore ordered and adjudged by the court that the said H. Masterson have judgment against all the parties, jointly and severally, in the sum of $12,652; that deed of trust lien described in said petition as it existed on February 17, 1911, be foreclosed, and that said property be ordered sold under execution or order of sale, or otherwise, as the court may hereafter order to satisfy said judgment, by the receiver, Norman G. Kittrell, Jr., who was instructed and ordered to make deed to the purchaser thereof, subject to the further order of the court as to the method of sale, and subject also to the first lien in favor of J. J. Sweeney and the second lien in favor of H. Kempner and H. Masterson. Said judgment contained *Page 710 the further recital that it appeared to the court that R. M. Vaughn, N.H. Atkinson, John C. Williams and S. Kahn and M. Kahn, as assignees of H. E. Kahn, held notes of like kind secured by the same deeds of trust, whereupon it was adjudged by the court that the proceeds arising from the sale of the property described in said deeds of trust should be prorated among and between the said Williams, Vaughn, Atkinson, Masterson, and Kahn Bros., in proportion to the amounts due them. All costs were adjudged against the defendants, provision was made for the issuance of writs to enforce the judgment, and it was further adjudged and decreed by the court that no personal judgment be awarded the intervener against A. C. Allen for any deficiency or balance that may exist on the judgment after the sale of the property described therein. None of the parties defendant in said judgment excepted thereto or gave notice of appeal therefrom, and none of them are parties plaintiff in the writ of error.

On the 2d day of February, 1915, the said Mrs. Margaret E. Allen died, and plaintiff in error has been duly appointed by the county court of Harris county, Tex., as temporary administrator, and later as permanent administrator of said estate; and acting as such administrator, on the 26th day of November, 1915, filed with the clerk of the district court of Harris county his petition for writ of error, upon which service has been duly had, and has filed his assignments of error, and now brings said judgment before this court for review and correction. The record contains neither statement of facts nor bills of exception.

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W. 708, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lauraine-v-masterson-texapp-1917.