Low, Administrator v. Felton

19 S.W. 693, 84 Tex. 378, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 946
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1892
DocketNo. 7350.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 693 (Low, Administrator v. Felton) 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
Low, Administrator v. Felton, 19 S.W. 693, 84 Tex. 378, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 946 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

STAYTON`, Chief Justice.

— On September 23,1875, William Hunt recovered, in the District Court for Williamson County, a judgment against M. Eubank as principal and Jeptha Dyches as surety for a sum of money. Dyches died in October of the same year, and no administration was had upon his estate. He left a wife and several children, and also a community estate subject to the payment of his debts. Executions issued against Eubank on July 5, 1876, on May 2, 1877, and on October 1, 1877, all of which were returned nulla bona.

Hunt died in 1882, and defendants in error under his will became the owners of the judgment. On June 3,1886, they instituted this proceeding against the widow of Jeptha Dyches, and against their children as well as Eubank, to revive the judgment or to recover on it. Some of the children were represented by a guardian, who was made a party. Mrs. Dyches died pending the- litigation, and there being no adminis *381 tration on her estate, the cause was prosecuted to final judgment against all the children of herself and Jeptha Dyches.

Judgment was rendered reviving the former judgment and against the heirs of Dyches and wife for the sum due, the judgment directing that one-half of the sum so adjudged should be paid out of the estate of Mrs. Dyches in due course of administration, and the other half by the children; but in the event the estate of Mrs. Dyches subject to forced sale was not found to be sufficient to pay one-half of the sum adjudged, then payment of any balance was to be made by the children, the court having found that they had received from the community estate through inheritance from their father assets subject to payment of debts amounting in value to more than the judgment.

This writ of error is prosecuted by an administrator of the estate of Mrs. Dyches, appointed since the judgment in this case was rendered, and by the same person who has been appointed guardian of the estates of the minor defendants in place of the guardian in office at the time the judgment was rendered.

Defendant Gossett, for himself and wife and as guardian for the minor defendants, answered by general demurrer and special exceptions, setting up, (1) the ten years statute of limitation in bar; (2) that the petition did not show with sufficient certainty what property, if any, had come to their possession; (3) because plaintiffs’ claim had not been presented to him for allowance as guardian; (4) because the suit could not be maintained without making the executor or administrator of the estate of Mrs. Dyches a party.

These exceptions were overruled. Limitation of ten years was also pleaded, with other defenses not necessary to notice.

Eubank answered by general denial, and adopted the answers of his codefendants.

It is now urged, that the court erred in overruling the exception which set up the defeuse of limitation. Mrs. Dyches and the children of herself and Jeptha Dyches were liable, on the ground that they had received property which was liable to sale for satisfaction of the judgment rendered against him, which under that judgment might have been sold under execution had he lived. The character of the claim made the basis of the action must determine the period of limitation applicable to it, and it must be conceded that the judgment against Eubank and Dyches is the foundation of this action. This action should be treated as an action upon that judgment rather than as a proceeding to revive it; and whether considered as the one or the other, the period of limitation was ten years. Rev. Stats., art. 3210.

This action was brought on June 3, 1886, and was not barred as to Eubank, for execution issued on the judgment against him within a year after its rendition, and the action was brought within less than ten years after that execution issued. Eo execution issued against *382 Jeptha Dyches, but the running of the statutes of limitation against the claim was suspended for one year from the time of his death,' as no administration was taken out on his estate. Rev. Stats., art. 3218.

Deducting one year from the period that elapsed between the date of rendition of judgment and the bringing of this action, less than ten years remain. It is contended, however, from the phraseology of the statute, that limitation ran from the time Jeptha Dyches died. The statute provides, that “in case of the death of any person against whom there may be cause of action, the law of limitation shall cease to run against such cause of action until twelve months after such death,” etc.; and it is contended, that there was no cause of action against Jeptha Dyches at the time of his death, and that for this reason the statute referred to has no application.

It may be conceded that Hunt had not the right to institute and maintain an action against Jeptha Dyches at the time of his death for the mere purpose of having a judicial determination of the fact that the latter was indebted to him and the amount of that indebtedness, or even for the purpose of obtaining an execution through which the payment of the judgment might be enforced; for the judgment already rendered fixed the fact of indebtedness as well as its amount, and authorized the issuance of execution to enforce its payment; and another judgment could have done no more. For this reason, the right to institute and maintain an action on that judgment in the same jurisdiction in which it was rendered would have been denied while Jeptha Dyches lived. But even during his lifetime, the right evidenced by the judgment and the wrong resulting from its nonpayment would have entitled Hunt to remedy — i. e., means to enforce its payment, though this might have required an adjudication of some fact by a court.

If by “cause of action” we are to understand to be meant only such right on the part of a plaintiff and violation of it by a defendant as would entitle the former to institute and maintain an action for the purpose of having the right and its extent judicially determined, and to have the ordinary process to enforce the right thus determined, then appellant’s contention might be sustained; but if by these words was meant the right of one having a lawful demand against another violated by that other’s failure to satisfy that demand, then the contention can not be maintained. It seems to ns that the words are used in the latter sense, and that they were intended to cover all cases in which there were demands against a person at the time of his death, whether these had so matured at that time as to entitle holders to institute and maintain actions against the deceased or not.

Before the death of Jeptha Dyches, Hunt had the right to have the sum adjudged to be due him paid, and the failure to pay it entitled him to every remedy known to the law to enforce its payment, even though *383 this might require a suit or action; and thus, within the meaning of the statute, had the creditor cause of action against the debtor; and on his death, as process could no longer issue to subject his estate to the payment of the debt, the creditor or his legal representatives became entitled to such remedy against the estate and representatives of the deceased as was necessary to enforce the payment of the sum due.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 693, 84 Tex. 378, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/low-administrator-v-felton-tex-1892.