Schutz v. Burges

110 S.W. 494, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 249, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 567
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 S.W. 494 (Schutz v. Burges) 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
Schutz v. Burges, 110 S.W. 494, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 249, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 567 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit instituted by plaintiff in error, who, for brevity, will hereinafter be denominated plaintiff, against W. H. Burges, W. W. Turney, J. F. Williams and U. S. Stewart, defendants in error, to require a restatement of the account of W. H. Burges,'assignee of the estate of plaintiff; to compel him to pay over to creditors any balance remaining in his hands; to reduce the allowances for accounts and, should he fail to do so, that he be removed as assignee, and that plaintiff recover of him and the other defendants, being sureties on his bond, the sum of $20,000. There were sixteen special exceptions to the petition all of which were sustained by the court, and that action is the subject of this writ of error.

The petition alleged the execution and delivery by appellant of a deed of assignment for the benefit of his creditors, conveying all his property, real and personal, to W. H. Burges, the acceptance of the same by him and the execution and approval of a bond with the other defendants as sureties thereon. It was then alleged as follows:

“Plaintiff further shows that, as shown by exhibit ‘B,’ said assignee allowed each and every claim presented to him for a sum in excess of that for which each should have been allowed, either by the allowance of interest thereon or in some manner not made clear to plaintiff and which does not appear in said report filed by said assignee; and plaintiff says that instead of allowing said claims for the amounts above set out as shown by said assignee’s report they should have been allowed for the respective sums shown in exhibit ‘B’ as shown in the third column above mentioned, or else said assignee should be charged with the excess by him allowed on said claim, respectively, which latter plaintiff desires to have done.

“Plaintiff further shows to the court that at the time he executed said assignment and at the time said claims were presented to said assignee and for a long time thereafter, this plaintiff was dangerously ill and not able to transact business of any character or to give any attention to said assignment, and the claims presented to said assignee thereunder; that after his recovery from said illness he repeatedly demanded of the said Wm. H. Burges, assignee, to be informed as to the claims presented to said assignee by virtue of said assignment and of the respective allowances thereon, but the said Burges, although promising tó give him said information, for one reason or another failed so to do, and this plaintiff never had any knowledge of what claims had been allowed by said assignee nor of the respective amounts allowed thereon until the filing of the report of said assignee in this court in this cause, and plaintiff, therefore, never had any opportunity to file exceptions to said claims or allowance thereof, and he now excepts to same and each and every one of same, says that they should have been allowed for the respective sums shown in the third column of said exhibit ‘B’ and no *252 more; and further states to the court that but for the conduct of said assignee in failing to disclose to him the respective amounts of said claims and the sums for which they were respectively allowed and thus keeping him in ignorance of all said claims he would have long since excepted to said claims, respectively, and the allowance made thereon by said assignee, and this being his first opportunity to make such exceptions, he prays the court that same be now heard and he have such relief against the action of said assignee as to the court may seem proper.”

The first -exception was that the petition was insufficient in its complaint in connection with the allowance of claims by the assignee because under the provisions of articles 78 and 82 of the Revised Statutes no duly verified claim can be disputed unless done within eight months from date of assignment and there was no allegation that any claim was disputed in that time, and because it was not shown wherein the claims were excessive. The sustaining of the exceptions is made the subject of the several assignments of error.

Article 78 referred to' prescribes what is essential in proof of a claim by a creditor consenting to an assignment, and in article 82 it is provided that when a statement of a creditor has been verified and filed, as provided in article 78, it shall be prima facie evidence to justify its allowance by the assignee as a valid claim against the estate, and he shall- so allow it, and the creditor shall be allowed his proportional share of the estate, unless the assignor or other creditor, disputing the same, shall within sixty days after the expiration of the time in which creditors are allowed to file their claims, institute an action to set aside the allowance and to restrain payment of the claim, and shall be successful in his suit. The limit in which claims may be allowed by the assignee is six months from the time of the first publication of notice of the assignment. It follows that an allowed claim could not be contested after eight months from the time of the first publication of the notice of the assignment. It was said by this court in the case of Briam v. Sullivan, 66 S. W., 572: “Under a proper construction of article 82, Sayles Civ. Stats., the assignee is not compelled to allow a claim that he knows to be illegal; but, by its provisions, proof of the claim of a creditor as provided by law will justify the allowance of the claim, and give the creditor a right to his proportional share of the debtor’s estate. The statute does not rob the assignee of all discretion, but, under certain->circumstances, justifies his action and forces a contest of the claim on the assignor or disputing creditor.” While the statute is intended for the protection of the assignee in the allowance of claims, he would not be protected in the allowance of claims known by him to be fraudulent or in excess of the true amount, but in this case there is no allegation that the claims allowed were fraudulent and there is nothing to intimate in what the excess consisted except that it is intimated that interest on the claims was allowed, without an allegation that the interest was not proper or legal.

If the illness of appellant could under any circumstances excuse a failure to comply with the law, the length of the sickness is not shown, and the petition is also indefinite as to when the demand *253 was made of the assignee for information as to the claims presented to him and the amount of the allowances: There is not an allegation in the petition that fixes the time of the request at any period within the statutory eight months. We doubt if a refusal of the assignee to show appellant the books could' be urged as an excuse for a failure to attack any claim of a creditor within the prescribed time; because appellant could have applied to a court to compel an exhibition of the books and accounts by the assignee to him, and that action he failed to take. The law provides that the assignee shall allow the assignor and creditors to take a copy of any creditor’s statement of his claim, but there is no allegation that permission to make such copy was demanded and refused. The^assignee could be compelled by mandamus to allow the making of such copy by the assignor or a creditor.

The allegation as to the demand for information concerning the allowed claims was insufficient and formed no basis for action.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.W. 494, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 249, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schutz-v-burges-texapp-1908.