Rogers v. Reward

54 Tex. 30
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1880
DocketCase No. 631
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 54 Tex. 30 (Rogers v. Reward) 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
Rogers v. Reward, 54 Tex. 30 (Tex. 1880).

Opinion

Bonner, Associate Justice.

shall confine this opinion to the leading and controlling questions in the case which have been argued by counsel.

[34]*34I. Was the grant of letters of administration to Ethan Melton valid, he not having been next of kin to tho deceased?

Eliel Melton, the deceased, was a citizen of Texas, and hence the provisions of the statute (Pasch. Dig., art. 1400), prohibiting administration to be granted upon the estates of members of the G-eorgia Battalion and other volunteers from foreign countries, to any than the next of kin, did not apply.

The probate court had jurisdiction over the subject matter and sufficient authority, under the power of attorney from Tabitha Melton, the mother and next of kin, to grant the administration to Ethan Melton, and its judgment in this particular cannot be collaterally impeached. Murchison v. White, infra.

II. Was the land in controversy assets of the estate of Eliel Melton, or was it a donation to his heirs and not subject to administration?

It does not satisfactorily appear under what law the bounty warrant for 1,920 acres of land was issued. It is, however, sufficient for the purposes of this case, to say that it was issued by the proper authority, the secretary of war; that it was, years subsequently, approved by the commissioner of claims appointed for this purpose, and was acted upon as a valid claim by both the commissioner of the general land office and the governor of the state, by the issuance of a patent thereon to the land in controversy.

It purports on its face to have been a bounty warrant in consideration of the services of Eliel Melton in the army and his fall at the Alamo, and as such is contradistinguished from a subsequent claim issued to his heirs as a donation warrant.

This bounty warrant, we must presume, was issued by virtue of some law or regulation recognizing either an express or implied contract, or pre-existing obligation on [35]*35the part of the government of Texas, to those gallant soldiers who had enlisted in her armies and had fallen in her defense, and hence under former decisions of this court became assets in the hands of the administrator. Soye v. McCallister, 18 Tex., 80; Soye v. Maverick, 18 Tex., 101; Allen v. Clark, 21 Tex., 404; Goldsmith v. Herndon, 33 Tex., 705; Marks v. Hill, 46 Tex., 345.

It differs from those cases where a gift has been made by the government as a pure donation, generally by special legislation. Eastland v. Lester, 15 Tex., 98, commented on in Soye v. Maverick, 18 Tex., 101; Causici v. La Coste, 20 Tex., 286; McKinney v. Brown, 51 Tex., 97.

HI. Was the purported deed from Tabitha Melton to Polly Rogers et al., under which the plaintiffs claim, a deed or a will?

In a proper case, where there is such ambiguity connected with an instrument as to forbid that the court, as a question of law, should construe and declare its legal effect to be either a deed or a will, this issue should be submitted to the jury as a question of fact. Ferguson v. Ferguson, 27 Tex., 344.

The instrument under consideration was recited in its commencement to have been an indenture, further on it is called a deed, and near the end it is styled a will.

In its general form it was a deed.

We are of opinion that the testimony adduced on the trial pertained rather to the question of its delivery as a deed, than to that of whether a deed or a will.

There were several issues submitted to the jury, this among others, upon the determination of which, in the affirmative or negative, they could find either for the plaintiffs or defendants, and we have no means of ascertaining upon which the general verdict for the defendants was based.

If it be conceded that there was sufficient ambiguity connected with the purported deed as to have authorized [36]*36the submission to the jury, whether a deed or a will, then we are of opinion that the burden of proof to show that it was a will was upon the defendants, and that, as now presented by the record, the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict, if based upon this issue.

IY. Could the plaintiffs sue for the land, pending administration upon the estate of Eliel Melton?

The court charged the jury substantially, that, if the administration was still pending, this suit should have been brought by the administrator, and that the plaintiffs could not legally have instituted or prosecuted it, and that in this event they should find for the defendants.

That this is the general rule under our probate system cannot be questioned either upon principle or authority.

There are, however, exceptions to this general rule also well established.

In Crain v. Crain, where a similar question was before the court, it is said:

As to the other ground, that the action is premature, the succession not being closed, it is only necessary to say that the administratrix is a trustee, acting for the benefit of creditors and distributees, and that in cases where she will not or cannot act for the protection and preservation of the estate, the cestui qui trusts have a right to act in the behalf and for the protection of then eventual interests, and that such rights are the proper subject of judicial cognizance.” 17 Tex., 87.

It is said in Patton v. Gregory that there are exceptions to tins general rule as well established as the rule itself. That the exceptions against the heirs, as improper parties, have not been sustained in any except the two cases reported in volume second, Texas reports, and that from the tendency of the decisions such exceptions do not seem to have been favored. 21 Tex., 517; Evans v. Oakley, 2 Tex., 184; Morse v. Morse, 2 Tex., 402; Blakey v. Duncan, 4 Tex., 184; Easterling v. Blythe, 7 Tex., 211; Lacy v. [37]*37Williams, 8 Tex., 182; Bufford v. Holliman, 10 Tex., 560; Clay v. Clay, 13 Tex., 201; Cochrane v. Thompson, 18 Tex., 652; Geddings v. Steele, 28 Tex., 148.

In this case the defendants were in possession of 1,420 acres of the land sued for, claiming under deeds from the administrator himself, made both in his representative and individual capacity, and hence the interest of the administrator was directly antagonistic to that of plaintiffs, and he could not with any consistency have instituted the suit in their behalf. Besides this, several years had intervened since the administrator had taken any step whatever in the administration, and in the meanwhile the land had been in the adverse possession of- the defendants.

It would seem that such case as this would clearly come within the exceptions to the general rule, and we are of opinion that the court erred in the charge to the jury under this issue.

V. By far the most important question in the case relates to the power of the district court of Navarro county to order the sale of the 1,420 acres, part of the land in controversy.

Its importance is a sufficient excuse to justify us, in attempting its proper solution, to briefly review the provision of the constitution and the laws then in force, applicable to the question, and the decisions of this court pertaining to the same.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Tex. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-reward-tex-1880.