Rabb v. Rogers

3 S.W. 303, 67 Tex. 335, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 879
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1887
DocketNo. 2293
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 3 S.W. 303 (Rabb v. Rogers) 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
Rabb v. Rogers, 3 S.W. 303, 67 Tex. 335, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 879 (Tex. 1887).

Opinion

Willie, Chief Justice.

This suit was originally brought by Frank Rabb, a minor, by and through his guardian, G. A. Rabb, against M. A. Rogers, as surviving widow in community of John Rabb, deceased, and bonded as such ; and also against her upon her bond as guardian of the person and estate of said minor. Allegations of mismanagement and misappropriation of said community property by Mrs. Rogers, as also of a waste and conversion of her said ward’s property, were made in the petition. The plaintiff asked that she be compelled to account as to these estates, as also the estate of his deceased brother, which he al[337]*337leged. had also been wasted and misapplied by said defendant. Collins, Gussett, 0. M. Rogers and C. C. Heath were made defendants as surities upon the respective bonds of Mrs. Rogers; C. M. Rogers was also charged as her husband with whom she had intermarried whilst in charge of the community property of herself and John Rabb. The pleadings of all the defendants, except IT. Gussett, were general and special demurrers and general denials. Gussett moved to quash the original citation, but made no other defense so far as the record shows.

All the citations were quashed and the cause was continued to the next term. At that term the record recites the general demurrer of the defendants came on to be heard and was sustained, and the plaintiff was allowed to amend his pleadings which was accordingly done, and the allegations of the original were changed in the following respects:

1. G. A. Rabb was made a party defendant, as surety on bond.

2. Allegations of change of residence of M. A. and C. M. Rogers were made.

3. Allegations were made that since the marriage of defendant M. A. Rogers with C. M. Rogers, March, 1879, no administration has been had on the estate of John Rabb; but that in violation of law said defendant Martha A. Rogers, joined by, and with the defendant, 0. M. Rogers, had disposed of a large and valuable portion of said estate, invested the moneys thereof, without authority of law, in property out of Nueces county; had collected and appropriated large sums from pasturage on the lands of said estate ; sold and disposed of cattle and stock; and failed, and refused, to account for the portion of the same ; and account and exhibit, make of any of the same, of the interest of said minor, Frank Rabb; and openly avowed their intention to appropriate all of said estate, and the portion of said minor to which he is justly entitled.

4. It was averred that said M. A. Rogers exhibited to the probate court a pretended final exhibit, upon which she obtained a discharge; and on the twenty-second of November, 1882, plaintiff was appointed guardian, etc., and received from said M. A.

Rogers, five thousand and two dollars and sixty-three cents, as shown by final exhibit; that petitioner, as guardian, etc., caused the pretended final exhibit to be reviewed and reconsidered in said probate court, and, because the same was false, and failed to account for large sums of money due said Frank Rabb’s estate, and was unaccompanied with vouchers, the same was set aside, and [338]*338defendant M. A. Rogers ordered to make a proper final exhibit of said estate.”

5. It was averred that 0. M. Rogers had received money for pasturage due the estate, and had failed to account for the minor’s portion. This amended petition purports to be the petition of G. A. Rabb, guardian of the estate and person of Frank Rabb, and the recovery sought is for the benefit of said minor.

A few days after this amendment was filed the district judge, of his own notion, and without any objection having been made by the defendants to its being filed and considered by the court,. entered the following order :

“It appearing to the court that on a former day of this term, a general demurrer to plaintiff’s petition was sustained and plaintiff given leave to amend ; and it further appearing to the court that under said leave plaintiff has filed among the papers of this case an instrument endorsed ‘ plaintiff’s first amended original petition,’ which upon examination is considered by the court not such an amendment as can be filed herein, but instead is considered by the court as the institution of an entirely new and distinct suit, entitling defendants to full service of citation, as in other cases, wherefore the plaintiff declining to further amend, and failing to ask for service upon said defendants under his said amendment, it is therefore considered by the court that said original cause, number one thousand six hundred, be and the same is hereby dismissed, and that defendants go hence without day; and that said defendants recover of - said plaintiff all costs in this behalf expended, for which let execution issue.” Whereupon the cause was dismissed, and from this judgment of dismissal the present appeal is taken.

This judgment is sought to be sustained here upon the following proposition, viz.: .

An amended original petition, which makes entirely new and different parties plaintiff, and makes additional defendants and additional demands which would entitle the appellant to a 'judgment much more onerous than that which was claimed by the original petition, is such an amendment as should require service as in an original suit.

But the amended petition did not make a new party plaintiff. The original suit was the suit of F. A. Rabb, minor; by his guardian, G. A. Rabb. The amended petition made it the suit of G. A. Rabb, guardian of Frank Rabb, suing for the benefit of his ward. Each petition was filed for the benefit of the minor [339]*339alone; was based upon rights which belonged to his estate, and was prosecuted by his guardian; and we can see no substantial difference between the parties plaintiff to the respective suits. If there is any difference, it consists in the substitution of the guardian for' the ward as plaintiff in a suit which could and should be prosecuted by the former in behalf of the minor. The recovery in either case is for the benefit of the minor, and the defendants can not object that it was had by the proper party, when they have not, by the change of parties, been deprived of any substantial defense. This court has sanctioned a change of parties from an agent to his principal (Price v. Wiley, 19 Texas, 142); from a party suing for the use of another to the beneficiary •of the suit (Martel v. Somers, 26 Texas, 551); and have held that between a suit by a next friend for the benefit of a minor, and a suit of a minor by his next friend, there is no substantial difference. (G. C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Styron, 66 Texas, 421.)

The change in this case was of much less importance than in the cases above cited, as the guardian was in effect the party plaintiff in each petition; and the principle upon which the last ■case rests would have authorized the suit to proceed, whether it were by the minor and through his guardian, or by the guardian for-the benefit of the minor. In the following cases, too, much more important changes as to the character in which the plaintiff sued than was made in. the present case were sanctioned by this court: 9 Texas, 525; Id., 553; 48 Texas, 555; 12 Texas, 420; 25 Texas, 75; 15 Texas, 127; 8 Texas, 46. We think, therefore, that the court might well have overruled any demurrer which took •exception to the party plaintiff in the original petition, and should certainly have allowed the guardian to proceed for the benefit of his ward under the amended petition.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W. 303, 67 Tex. 335, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rabb-v-rogers-tex-1887.