Lockhart v. White

18 Tex. 102
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 18 Tex. 102 (Lockhart v. White) 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
Lockhart v. White, 18 Tex. 102 (Tex. 1856).

Opinion

Hemphill, Ch. J.

The assignments of error are :—

1st. In refusing charges asked by plaintiffs.

2d. In the charge to the jury.

3d. In refusing to grant a new trial.

4th. In giving the charges asked by defendant.

5th. Other irregularities and errors on the record.

The fourth assignment may be disposed of with the remark, that no charges were asked by the defendants, and consequently there is no ground for the assignment.

The first alleged error noticed by counsel for appellants, in his argument, is the refusal to give the third instruction asked by plaintiffs below (who are appellants in this Court). This was to the effect, that if the jury believed from the evidence, [108]*108that the administrator of W. H. Allsbrooks paid any debts due by the estate without an order of the County Court, she was responsible upon her bond for all the debts of the deceased.

The appellant insists that under Art. 1192, the mode of payment of debts of an estate is prescribed, and payment without an order of the Court makes the administrator responsible for all the debts.

This view of the law is believed to be unsound. The Art. 1187 declares the order in which debts shall be paid ,*• and by Art. 1189, the administrator, when he shall have funds of the estate, is required to pay. Under Art. 1191, he is required, at the first Term after the expiration of twelve months, to file an exhibit of the claims against and condition of the estate. Upon this exhibit, the Court, under Art. 1192, acts and decrees payment in proportion to the solvency of the estate. Some claims clearly may be paid by an administrator, without the delay of twelve months or an order of the Court, as, for instance, funeral expenses, those of the last sickness, of administration, &c. These are first in rank, and none others can claim a pro rata distribution with them. The law points out the order in which debts shall be paid.

Where there is danger of insolvency, the administrator, for his own safety, should delay until the pro rata due each creditor can be ascertained. But the order of the Court is not requisite to the validity of a payment. If this be proper in itself, and such as the Court would on application decree, it cannot be impeached for the want of a previous order to that effect. And if the payment be not in due order, that is if payment be made to one or more creditors, of a portion or the whole of their claims, (as is charged to the case here,) and no such payment is made on other claims of the same class or degree, this would not render the administrator liable for the debts unpaid out of his own property. The County Court might refuse to allow such payment, in the account of the administrator, and make him liable to the extent of the assets [109]*109thus misapplied ; but the administrator could claim to stand in the place of the creditors paid by him, and receive the proportion due to them. This is believed to be the rule in Equity, where distribution of an estate among creditors is decreed on a Creditor’s Bill, and there is a close analogy between the distribution under such decree and under the provisions of our Statute. (2d Wms. on Ex’ors, 891 note q.) There was no error in refusing the charge, as asked by plaintiffs.

The next charge asked by plaintiffs and refused by the Court, was to the effect that if the jury believed from the evidence, that the marriage of Jane Waggoner with W. H. Allsbrooks took place within seven years after separation and last authentic accounts of Waggoner, such marriage is a nullity, unless it be proven that Waggoner was dead or divorced at the time of the marriage with Allsbrooks; and she was not entitled, as the widow of Allsbrooks, to any allowance out of his estate: and the amount so allowed is assets of the estate, and liable for the debts of the plaintiffs. In relation to this subject, the Court, in the general charge, instructed the jury, that absence of a person beyond sea for seven years raised the presumption of his death, but that under the facts of this case, the second marriage of the defendant with Allsbrooks being on license and regularly celebrated, and the subsequent recognition of her by the County Court as his lawful widow, raised a presumption in favor of the legality of the marriage, which could be rebutted only by a preponderance of evidence showing that her first husband was alive and within the Republic or State within that period, and that she knew such fact at the time of her second marriage.

An incontrovertible answer to the position and argument of appellants is this : that Allsbrooks left one child by his wife at the time of his death, and whether the widow be or be not entitled to the allowance under Arts. 1153,1154, the child certainly is, and could claim the whole for itself, to the exclusion of the plaintiffs and all others except those claiming for [110]*110funeral expenses and those of the last sickness. The amount of the allowance is beyond the reach of creditors, and if the subject of contest at all, it can only be between the mother and child. But it is not admitted that Mrs. White was not the lawful wife of Allsbrooks, and not entitled to her share of the allowance as his -widow. She had been separated from Wag-goner, her first husband, five years before her marriage with Allsbrooks. There was no proof that she had any knowledge of his existence. There was but one witness who had heard of him since the separation. He heard of him once in Eastern and once in Western Texas. Though the law presumes a continuance of life, yet where this presumption necessarily involves a presumption of crime, and comes in conflict with the presumption of innocence, the former, which is the weaker, yields to the latter presumption, and the party affirming that an individual is not dead will be bound to prove it. Thus on a question of settlement, where a woman twelve months after her first husband was last heard of, married a second husband and had children by him, it was held on appeal to the Sessions, that the burthen of proving that the first husband was not dead at the time of the second marriage, lay upon the party objecting to that marriage. (1 Cowen v. Hill’s notes, 643; Rex v. Inhabitants of Twyning, 2 Barn. & Ald., 386; Yates v. Houston, 3 Tex. 449.) There is no evidence that Waggoner was heard of within twelve months (though that exact term is not necessary to raise the favorable presumption) prior to the marriage with Allsbrooks, and under the rule established in the above case, the continuance of the life of Waggoner will not be presumed. The second marriage was consequently lawful and valid.

There was no error in refusing the charge asked, questioning the legality of Allsbrooks’ marriage, or the rights of his widow as such to the allowance under the Statute ; and if there was any error in the main charge on that subject, it consisted in this, that it was not sufficiently favorable to the [111]*111defendant, Mrs. White ; and consequently it operated no prejudice to the plaintiffs. Certainly the facts of the regularity of her marriage with Allsbrooks, and the subsequent recognition of her by the County Court as his widow, were circumstances which fortified and strengthened the'presumption of her innocence.

The right to impeach the decree of the County Court ordering the allowance, and the payment under that decree, by action on the bond charging waste against the administratrix and her sureties, admits of serious question.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Tex. 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockhart-v-white-tex-1856.