Robinson v. City Nat. Bank of Colorado

56 F.2d 225, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1976
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 1931
DocketNo. 1002
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 56 F.2d 225 (Robinson v. City Nat. Bank of Colorado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. City Nat. Bank of Colorado, 56 F.2d 225, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1976 (N.D. Tex. 1931).

Opinion

WILSON, District Judge.

In the early part of 1917, John Taylor, Sr., of Marion county, Ky., died testate leaving a large estate, considerable portion of which, consisting entirely of lands, was located in Texas. In his will, John Taylor, Jr., and J. Clark Taylor were named as executors. The will directed the executors to reduce the assets of the estate to cash by selling same at either public or private sale. The executors came to Texas to do this, as applied to the Texas lands. No ancillary administration was sued out as could have been under articles 3352 and 3365 of Revised Civil Statutes of Texas. They merely filed a record of the probated will in Mitchell county, Texas, where some of the lands were situated, this being done for the sole purpose that the recordation of same should constitute a muniment of title. Their authority, however, to take possession of and administer the lands in Texas was not resisted, and they took peaceable possession and control of same and proceeded to sell the lands, taking in payment therefor cash, and vendor’s lien notes payable to them, described as executors. About $20,000 of the cash so received was deposited in the City National Bank of Colorado, the defendant here, in their names, and a like amount of such notes were left with the bank for safekeeping. Thereafter, the executor, John Taylor, Jr., died, and on the 6th day of May, 1929, the remaining executor, J. Clark Taylor, was removed by the Marion county court because of unfitness to discharge the trust. Op the following day the Kentucky court appointed James H. Robinson, the plaintiff here, administrator de bonis non, with will annexed.

Thereafter, on the 25th day of February, 1930, in his personal capacity and not as administrator, he filed this suit at law against the defendant to recover the money and notes it held. The petition alleges diversity of citizenship and substantially the history of the matter as above stated, and in addition, that the executors were in actual possession of the money and notes and personally entered into the contract with the defendant bank at the time the money was deposited and notes left for safe-keeping; that same so held by defendant are unadministered assets of the estate; that the administration is still pending in Kentucky, and furthermore that a suit for the distribution of the estate was pending in the circuit court of Kentucky, having jurisdiction over such matters; that he was ordered to collect all of the funds and assets of the estate, to the end that same be distributed under the terms of the will, after all debts, charges, and expenses against the estate were paid; that his predecessors, the executors, because of their actual possession of the money and notes prior to their deposit with the defendant and because of their personal contact and dealings with the defendant in so making said deposits, such not being original assets, had the right, by reason thereof, to enforce, by a personal action in this court, sitting in Texas, the payment and delivery to them by said defendant of-such funds; and that he, as the duly qualified administrator, succeeded to all of the rights of such executors and to the title, right of possession, and control of said assets, including their said right to bring such personal action to recover same.

Defendant bank filed a plea in abatement in this court, challenging the right of plaintiff as a Kentucky administrator, in the absence of ancillary administration in Texas, to maintain this suit for the estate in any capacity; that his powers were derived solely from the appointing court in Kentucky, and was without any authority in such matters beyond the territorial limits of Kentucky, and upon such grounds prayed the ease be dismissed. A stipulation waiving a jury was entered and all matters submitted to the court. The facts were stipulated and the questions of law were submited by oral arguments, at the conclusion of which, or a few days thereafter, defendant’s plea in abatement was overruled, and judgment was entered for the plaintiff.

After the judgment was entered and before same was executed and before any appeal was taken or the term of court had expired, J. Clark Taylor, the removed executor, asked leave to intervene, and there being no opposition same was granted. Thereupon he filed a plea of intervention setting up in substance the same propositions as were pleaded by defendant bank. Plaintiff has raised no question that the intervention [227]*227came too late, but is meeting the plea on its merits. So the practical effect of the situation is a rebearing of tbe matters presented on the former trial.

I reiterate that the money and notes left with defendant were not original assets of the estate, but were the proceeds of the sales of Texas lands coming into the actual possession of the executors of the estate acting at that time, and that the deposit of money and notes which were payable to them was a personal transaction and contract between said executors and the defendant. Plaintiff on the former hearing and now insists, under the authority of Moore v. Petty (C. C. A.) 135 F. 668, 672; Old Dominion Trust Co. v. First National Bank of Oxford (C. C. A.) 260 F. 22; and like authorities of other states, including Texas, that the executors, John Taylor, Jr., and J. Clark Taylor, despite the fact they were foreign executors and there was no ancillary administration in Texas, could maintain a personal action in any Texas court of competent jurisdiction or in this court for tbe purpose of enforcing the collection of the money and notes deposited by them with defendant, and further insisted and insists now, under such authorities as Clark’s Administrator v. Farmers’ National Bank of Richmond, 124 Ky. 563, 99 S. W. 674, 675, that plaintiff James H. Robinson, as their successor, under appointment of the Kentucky court, succeeded to all of the rights of said executors in this regard, including the right to bring such a personal action in this court to recover the money and notes.

The case of Moore v. Petty, supra, was a ease where Pennsylvania executors, Petty and Negley, sued the real estate firm of Moore and Chick in the state of Iowa, without an effective ancillary administration having been taken out in Iowa. The suit was to recover part of the purchase price of certain lands which said firm, as their agents, had sold belonging to the estate under administration and which contract for sale with such agents had been entered into personally by the executors. The facts briefly were: The executors made a contract with these Iowa agents to sell certain of the lands belonging to the estate at a fixed price, agreeing to pay for their services a certain commission, and in the suit the executors claimed the land was sold for a greater price and that the agents retained not only their commission, but the difference between the agreed and the increased price for which the land was sold. It will be seen the situation was very similar to the one we have here; that is, the suit in Iowa was not to recover original assets of the estate and was to enforce a contract not made by the agents with the decedent, but with the executors themselves. The jurisdiction of the United States District Court in Iowa was challenged upon identical grounds as here.

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Bluebook (online)
56 F.2d 225, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-city-nat-bank-of-colorado-txnd-1931.