Routledge v. Elmendorf

116 S.W. 156, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 174, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 171
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 24, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 156 (Routledge v. Elmendorf) 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
Routledge v. Elmendorf, 116 S.W. 156, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 174, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 171 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

—Mrs. Elise Haseloff Hugo instituted this suit against a large number of persons, which was consolidated with a suit in which James Boutledge was the plaintiff and Mrs. Hugo, widow and executrix of Chas. Hugo, deceased, the defendant. *177 The object of the first named suit was to ascertain the parties to whom a certain trust fund belonged, arising out of the sale of property placed by deed in the hands of her deceased husband, Charles Hugo, on August 4, 1896, for the benefit of B. E. Yoakum, H. D. Kampmann, deceased, A. C. Schryver, Hugo & Schmeltzer and Elmendorf & Company, who were the owners of the equitable title in the property.

It was alleged that on August 4, 1896, Charles Hugo, for the use and benefit of B. F. Yoakum, H. D. Kampmann, deceased, A. C. Schryver, Hugo & Schmeltzer, a partnership composed of Charles Hugo, Gustav Schmeltzer and William Heuermann, and Elmendorf & Company, a partnership composed of Amalie Elmendorf and other persons unknown to the pleader, purchased at sheriff’s sale about seventy-nine acres of land, known as the San Antonio Fair Grounds; that at the date of the purchase the beneficiaries named were indebted to the Alamo National Bank in the sum of $19,000, evidenced by their promissory note on which they paid a sufficient sum to reduce the said sum to $15,000, and to secure that sum made another promissory note, and ordered and instructed Charles Hugo, trustee, to dispose of the property held by him and to pay off the note and expenses, and to account for the balance to the beneficiaries. It was alleged that in execution of the trust the property had been sold for $20,000, of which $5,000 was in cash and $15,000 in promissory notes; that the trustee had paid note of the Alamo National Bank and the expenses, and at time of his death had $2,102.23 for account of the beneficiaries. That since his death, which occurred on September 14, 1906, Elise Haseloff Hugo, his executrix, had collected the amount remaining on the -notes for the land and held in her possession for distribution among those entitled to it the sum of $10,507.79. It was alleged that H. D. Kampmann was dead, and Elizabeth Kampmann, his widow, had qualified as survivor of the community estate; that the copartnership of Hugo & Schmeltzer had been dissolved, and Hugo & Schmeltzer Co. was claiming the interest of said copartnership; that Amalie Elmendorf was dead and Geo. C. Altgelt was her administrator.

Appellant set up a cross-action in the consolidated suit, and also filed an answer, which pleadings, consisting of some thirty pages of the transcript, amount to a claim of all the trust fund belonging to the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, deceased, by virtue of a certain assignment executed to appellant by the administrator of the estate. Appellant, after alleging the creation of the trust fund as herein-before set out, in addition alleged that all the beneficiaries made payments on the notes, but that Schryver after two payments failed and refused to pay any further amounts, but that Schryver contended for a percentage of the trust fund equal to the percentage .of the debt paid by him, and it was the contention of appellant that Amalie Elmendorf, whose share he claimed, was entitled to contribution against Schryver, and that before Schryver should be permitted to participate in a division of the fund that he should be charged with the various sums of money that he should have paid on the note. *178 The heirs of Amalie Elmendorf claimed their share of the trust fund and alleged that the assignment to appellant was null and void.

It was agreed by all the parties to the suit on March 16, 1908, which agreement was embodied in an interlocutory decree, that the total fund, principal and interest, was $10,933.10, out of which should be paid an attorney’s fee of $250, and all costs to the date afore: said; that there be paid to Elizabeth S. Kampmann, both individually and in her representative capacity 22.028 percent of the fund; to Elise Haseloff Hugo, G. Schmeltzer, and George and Lina Heuermann, as independent executors of the estate of Wm. Heuermann, jointly 22.028 percent; to Erna; Elmendorf, a minor, 00.734 percent; to Cedric Elmendorf, a minor, 00.734; to James Routledge, 02.937 percent; making a total disposed of by the agreement of 70.489 percent of the fund remaining after deducting costs and attomejr’s fees. It was provided that the balance of the fund should be placed in the hands of the San Antonio Loan & Trust Company and bear 4-38/100 percent per annum interest, and be subject to the order of the court on sixty days’ notice, and that upon payment of the sums named Elise Haseloff Hugo and Victor Hugo should be relieved from any further liability for the fund. It was further stated in the decree that Mrs. Emilie Elmendorf, Dr. E. H. Elmendorf, Mrs. Louis Dreiss and husband, Louis Dreiss, Herman Tolle, Leon Tolle, Emma Tolle, William Setter, Hugo & Schmeltzer Co., a corporation, should take nothing out of the fund. That decree disposed of all interests except that claimed by appellant of A. C. Schryver, G. C. Altgelt as administrator of estate of Amalie Elmendorf, and the heirs of Amalie Elmendorf.

The canse was tried by jury and the court submitted it on one issue alone as follows: “Did the parties interested in the fund in issue in this case, by the execution of the compromise agreement in evidence before you, intend that their interest in the trust fund in the hands of Charles Hugo should be transferred to James Routledge?” To which the jury answered in the negative. Hpon that answer the court rendered a judgment that out of the $3',095.67 subject to its orders, $1,247.05 should be apportioned to A. C. Schryver, and that George C. Altgelt, as administrator of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, should recover the remaining $1,848.62, and that all the other parties, among the number being appellant, take nothing by the suit. Appellant made his motion for a new trial, which being overruled, he perfected an appeal to this court.

We find that the facts show that the claim of the- estate, of Amalie Elmendorf, deceased, to the trust fund in controversy was not transferred to appellant by the sale to him of the notes, accounts and claims of that estate in the hands of the administrator. The necessary facts in connection with the sale to appellant are fully set forth in the further course of this opinion. Appellant claimed all of the trust fund belonging to the estate of Amalie Elmendorf through an assignment made to him by George C. Altgelt, administrator, which, after reciting that the application to sell had been made by the heirs and creditors of the estate and that the County Court had ordered the sale, is as follows: “Therefore I, George C. Altgelt, in my offi *179 cial capacity as administrator of the estate of Amalie Elmendorf, deceased, of Bexar County, Texas, for and in consideration of the premises and the sum of $50 to me in hand this day paid by James Boutledge, of Bexar County, Texas, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, have bargained, sold, conveyed, transferred and assigned, and do by these presents bargain, sell, convey, transfer and assign unto the said James Boutledge, of Bexar County, Texas, all of the accounts, notes, choses in actions, claims and judgments now in my hands of any and every description due and owing by any and all persons to Elmendorf & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 156, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 174, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/routledge-v-elmendorf-texapp-1909.