Schmitt, Administrator v. Jacques

62 S.W. 950, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 125, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 17, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 62 S.W. 950 (Schmitt, Administrator v. Jacques) 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
Schmitt, Administrator v. Jacques, 62 S.W. 950, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 125, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 52 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

This suit was instituted by appellee .against appellant individually, and as administrator of the estate of Louis A. Frankel, deceased, and the American Surety Company, a surety on his bond. The cause was submitted on special issues to a jury, and upon the answers and the uncontroverted testimony in the case a judgment was rendered in favor of appellee as against appellant in his representative capacity, and in his favor individually, and in favor of the surety company. The judgment against appellant, as administrator, was for $2710, being one-half of what remained of the money realized from the sale of the property after deducting $1580 paid out for debts on the property.

The suit was brought to recover the value of certain property alleged to have been converted to the use of the estate by appellant. Appellee claimed, and showed, title to the property through an execution sale *127 issued under a judgment in his favor against E. J. Hutcheson. Appellant claimed title, for the estate, through a bill of sale executed by Hutcheson to Louis A. Frankel, which was shown to be a fictitious and fraudulent sale without consideration to secrete the property of Hutcheson from his creditors and especially appellee. Deceased and Hutcheson were partners at the time of the sale, and there was testimony to warrant a finding that it' was not intended by the parties that he should part with the title to his property, and that Hutcheson really was a partner after the sale, as he had been before. Frankel was killed by Hutcheson on November 30, 1898, and appellant was on same day appointed temporary administrator of his estate, and in December, 1898, he sold the property to Staacke Bros, for $7000. He sold the entire property, one-half of which belonged to appellee.

It will be noted from the statement heretofore made, that this suit was instituted against appellant individually and in his representative capacity, but he was released from individual responsibility. There has been some diversity of opinion in American courts as to the liability of an administrator or executor, some holding that an administrator who obtains and converts property belonging to another, under the impression that it belongs to the estate, is not liable personally, but only as administrator; others, that he is liable personally, and not as a representative, while others hold that he is liable either as representative or individually. Woerner, Am. Law Adm., 645.

Speaking on this subject the Supreme Court of the United States, after noting that there are decisions that countenance the doctrine that no action will lie against an administrator except upon a claim which ■existed against the testator or intestate, said: “But upon a full consideration of the nature and of the various decisions on the subject, we are of opinion that whatever property or money is lawfully recovered or received by the executor or administrator, after the death of his testator or intestate, in virtue of his representative character, he holds as assets of the estate, and he is liable therefor, in such representative character, to the party who has a good title thereto. * * * We do not mean to say that the principal may not, in such cases, resort to the administrator in his personal character, and charge him, de bonis propriis, with the amount thus received. We,_ think, he may take either course, at his election; but that whenever an executor or administrator lawfully received money or property, he may be compelled to respond to the party entitled in that character, and shall not be permitted to throw it off after he has received the money, in order to defeat the plaintiff’s action.”

It appears from the facts in this case that appellant, in his representative character, took possession, in good faith, of the property and sold it for the benefit of the estate, and the suit was properly prosecuted against him as administrator.

The first assignment of error presents error in the action of the trial court in overruling an exception to the petition, in that it failed to al *128 lege that the claim sued on had been presented to the administrator for allowance and the same rejected. It appears from the evidence that appellee bought the half interest of Hutcheson in certain personal property belonging to the firm of Hutcheson & Frankel, at an execution sale, and the property was afterwards sold by the administrator. The property before the sale belonged to appellee, and after the sale the fund received from such sale was the property of appellee, if he desired to ratify the sale, as he did by his suit. Red River Bank v. Higgins, 72 Texas, 66.

In the case cited, Livingston made a contract to erect two houses for Joseph Brittan, for which he was to receive installments as the work progressed. Livingston, after receiving two installments, and after having performed enough work to entitle him to. the third payment, died. Higgins was appointed administrator of his estate, and completed the dwellings. He fixed a mechanic’s lien on them, and a balance of $3687.25 being unpaid, he sued Brittan for the amount, and for foreclosure of the lien. Brittan caused the bank and others to be made parties.- The bank claimed that the contract between Livingston and Brittan had been transferred to it by the former in consideration that it should furnish Livingston with money necessary to finish the houses, and the bank under the agreement had furnished $4020, which was unpaid to the extent of $2820.06. It was said by the Supreme Court: “If the appellant was the owner of the fund in the hands of Brittan, through an assignment as alleged, then he could maintain an action against the administrator or any other person who interfered with his right, by reason of the fact that in such case he would not claim through the estate of Livingston, but adversely to it. If it was not the owner, but merely a creditor of the estate of Livingston,- then appellant had no standing in court against the administrator, not having authenticated, presented, and had rejected his claim; and this would be so if, being a creditor, it had an equitable lien on the fund.”

In this case appellee sued as the owner of a fund arising from the sale by the administrator of his property. He did not claim through, but adversely to, the estate of Frankel. It was his money realized from a sale of his property that he sought to recover, and not a debt due by the estate. He might have sued for the property itself, and in the alternative for its value, but. he could not sue for the latter without seeking to recover the former.

The administrator sold the whole of the property as that of the estate, and there is no merit in the contention that a sale by an administrator is a sale simply of the interest the estate has in it, and no matter if the estate gets full value for the property, it can not be held for conversion. It does not matter whether the administrator gave a warranty of title to the purchasers or not, nor whether he could be held as warranting the title; he sold the property of appellee and appropriated the proceeds arising therefrom, and is responsible therefor. The case referred to from the Supreme Court of the United States and the *129 many authorities cited in Woerner’s American Law of Administration, page 645, amply sustain the proposition that an estate is liable for the conversion of property belonging to another by its administrator.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.W. 950, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 125, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmitt-administrator-v-jacques-texapp-1901.