Rex Supply Co. v. Shepherd

293 S.W. 342, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1927
DocketNo. 1504.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 342 (Rex Supply Co. v. Shepherd) 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
Rex Supply Co. v. Shepherd, 293 S.W. 342, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 124 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

This is an appeal by writ of error from a judgment perpetually enjoining plaintiffs in error from further attempting to collect a sum alleged by plaintiffs in error to be unpaid on a certain judgment, of which judgment plaintiffs in error 'alleged they were assignees.

The controversy arose out of the following facts: T. W. Shepherd died November 15, 1912, leaving surviving him his widow, Mrs. Eva Shepherd, defendant in error, and six children, two of whom were minors. Mrs. Shepherd, on February 3, 1913, qualified as community survivor. February 12, 1913, Hugh Jaelcson, executor of the estate of A. W. Spaight, sued Mrs. Shepherd, individually and as community survivor, on three vendor’s lien notes, aggregating, including interest.and attorney’s fees, the sum of $4,287.25, and to foreclose the vendor’s lien on block 2, South Park addition to the city of Beaumont, and on April 8, 1913, obtained judgment by default against Mrs. Shepherd as survivor in community (not individually) for the amount sued for, and foreclosure of the vendor’s lien. The property was sold under the judgment, and the proceeds applied, reducing the judgment to $2,425.91. In 1921, plaintiffs in error, David E. O’Fiel and his associates, as assignees of Jackson, began by various processes, such as writs of execution and garnishment, to attempt to collect the judgment from Mrs. Shepherd. This suit was brought by Mrs. Shepherd to restrain O’Fiel and his associates from further attempts at any time or in any court to collect said judgment from, her, or to subject any of her property to the satisfaction of said judgment.

We shall not state the pleadings of the parties, other than to say that Mrs. Shepherd, in her petition for injunction, alleged that the community estate of her husband and herself was insolvent at the time her husband died; the value of the assets belonging thereto being $8,500, or less, and the debts owing by said estate, not including the indebtedness upon which the Jackson judgment was founded, amounted to approximately $9,000, of which $7,000 was preferred and secured, and that the estate was exhausted and extinguished by her assumption and payment of the debts, and that no part of the estate remained subject to said judgment, but upon the payment by her of said community debts becamcf'hers un-incumbered in any wise; that, when her husband died, she was left without a home, and that she was entitled to the sum of $5,000 out of the estate in lieu thereof; that many of the articles exempt to a family under the law were not present in said estate, and that she was entitled to the sum of $500 in lieu of same; that neither she nor her minor children possessed any separate estate or funds with which she could support herself and them, and that she was entitled to an allowance under the law of $1,000 for a year’s support exempt from community ■ debts, all of which exemptions and allowances, including that for a homestead, to which she was entitled, amounting to $6,500; that, after setting aside to her said items, there remained only the sum of $2,000 chargeable with community debts; that she applied $3,000 of life insurance collected by her, and which was her separate and individual funds, to the payment of the community debts, thereby entirely exhausting and extinguishing the community estate subject to the payment of commu *344 nity debts, and $1,900 more, not including the Jackson judgment, and that she further assumed and paid with her own credit and funds approximately $6,000 more of the community debts, making a total of $9,000, of which $7,000 was preferred and secured, by reason of all which she said the community estate became and was her own separate and individual property, not liable to, nor chargeable with, community debts.

It appeared without dispute:

(1) That the entire community estate of T. W. Shepherd and Mrs. Eva Shepherd consisted of (a) 165 shares of the capital stock of the Beaumont Laundry of the par value of $50 per share; (b) 3 shares 'of the capital stock of the First Mortgage Trust Company of Houston, Tex., of the par value of $100 per share; (c) two small pieces of land at Spin-dletop, Jefferson county; and (d) two small pieces of land at Sour Lake, Hardin, county, Tex.

(2) That, at the time of the death of T. W. Shepherd he and his wife were not possessed of a homestead of any character, but that she and her children were left without a home.

(3) That all of the articles and property exempt to a family from community debts under the law, except the household and kitchen furniture, were absent from the estate of T. W. Shepherd at the time of his death.

(4) That Mrs. Shepherd nor her minor children were possessed of any separate estate of funds with which to support themselves.

(5) That the value of the exempt property under the law at the time of Shepherd’s death was considerably in excess of $650.

(6) That the debts which the estate owed at the time of T. W. Shepherd’s death, preferred, secured, and unsecured, (not including the Jackson judgment) were: (a) Preferred (funeral, last sickness, and probate court costs) $6S8 ; (b) secured claims, $6,091.31; (c) unsecured claims, $1,789.08. The whole of the debts, preferred, secured, and unsecured (not including the Jackson judgment) amounted to $8,568.39.

(7) That Mrs. Shepherd, with the assistance of her children, paid off and fully discharged all of the estate’s indebtedness, other than the Jackson judgment, actually paying the sum of $8,292.91; she having saved $275.48 by compromise settlement.

(8) By agreement of all parties the property at Spindletop was valued at $300, and that at Sour Lake at $200.

(9) That block 2, South Park addition, foreclosed on and sold under the Jackson judgment, was reasonably worth $5,250. That said property was sold, and, after applying the proceeds of the execution sale to the judgment, there remained the sum of $2,425.91 unsatisfied.

(10) That Mrs. Shepherd never considered or treated said property (the property foreclosed on and sold under the Jackson judgment) as a. part of the community estate of herself and her deceased husband, and never received any benefit or revenue therefrom, nor exercised any control over same at any time.

(11) That the claims upon which the Jackson judgment was based nor the judgment itself were ever presented to her as a claim against the community estate of herself and her deceased husband.

(12) That Mrs. Shepherd, some four or five years after the death of her husband, largely with the aid of her children, bought a home for herself and minor children, and sold same about a year after its purchase.

The case was tried to a jury upon special issues, in answer to which they found: (a) That the reasonable market value of the 165 shares of stock in the Beaumont Laundry at the time of the death of T. W. Shepherd was $8,250 (par value of $50 per share); (b) that Mrs. Shepherd and her minor children were entitled to an allowance of $4,000 out of the community estate in lieu of a homestead; (c) that she was entitled to an allowance of $500 in lieu of the exempt articles absent from the estate; and (d) that she and her minor children were entitled to $950 as an allowance for one year’s support.

It thus appeared that the estate owned property worth $8,950, and that exemptions existed in the sum of $5,450, leaving the sum of $3,500 chargeable with the community debts.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Alamo Nat. Co. v. Key.
114 S.W.2d 931 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1938)
Tilley v. Kangerga
83 S.W.2d 787 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 342, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rex-supply-co-v-shepherd-texapp-1927.