Stewart v. Webb

156 S.W. 537, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1397
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 26, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 156 S.W. 537 (Stewart v. Webb) 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
Stewart v. Webb, 156 S.W. 537, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1397 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

On the 11th day of October, A. D. 1908, J. Y. Stewart, Sr., and wife, A. D. Stewart, conveyed to the defendant Elma Callis the W. % of section 61, in block No. 3, H. & T. C. Co. survey, situated in Scurry county, Tex., and upon said date the said Elma Callis, with her husband, executed and delivered to J. Y. Stewart, Sr., as a part of the consideration for the payment of the land, six vendor lien promissory notes for the sum of $400 each, the deed and notes expressly reserving the vendor’s lien as security for the payment of the same; and thereafter, on April 7, 1910, Stewart indorsed in blank, and transferred to Mrs. M. J. Webb a feme sole, the notes; also-transferring in writing the vendor’s lien, and prior to said transfers John R. Smith also indorsed the notes in blank for a valuable consideration for the benefit of Mrs. Webb, and J. Y. Stewart, Sr., having died and administration having been made upon his estate, Mrs. Webb brought this suit against the administrators of his estate, and also against Elma Callis and husband, C. H. Callis, the makers of the notes, and J. R. Smith as indorser. After the institution of the suit, Mrs. Webb having died, her heirs were suggested as proper parties plaintiff to-the suit, and by supplemental petition alleged the lack of necessity of any administration upon her estate; that no debts were owing by the same, which was sufficiently proven. Before the death of J. Y. Stewart this record discloses that the Callises, his vendees, mortgaged the same land to him as security for the payment of an indebtedness created after the original conveyance by him to them, and under a foreclosure of this mortgage the title of Elma Callis and husband was divested out of them and revested in the said J. Y. Stewart, Sr. The plaintiffs in their petition do not allege the presentation of the vendor’s lien notes to the administrators of the estate of J. Y. Stewart, and in lieu thereof state: “That the amount of the indebtedness herein sued for,.which the estate of J. Y. Stewart, deceased, will ultimately be bound, if any, in satisfaction of the indebtedness herein sued on, is an indefinite amount, and cannot for said reason be intelligently presented to the administrators of the estate for allowance and payment until after the sale of the above-described property under the foreclosure proceedings.” The administrators denied liability of the estate as to one of the notes; also specially pleading that the proceeds of sale be applied to the judgment against them as administrator, and in the event the sale of the land is insufficient to pay the judgment that they have judgment against their codefendants for the full amount, with a demand for subrogation. Judgment was entered by the district court of Scurry county against the administrators of said estate, as well as *538 against the makers of the notes, and the said John R. Smith as indorser upon the same; the administrators, the only defendants, appealing in said cause.

[1, 2] First. The administrators, appellants herein, assign “that the district court erred in granting judgment, * * * for the reason that there was no evidence showing that the notes sued on and used as a basis of this cause of action by plaintiff were ever presented to the administrators' of the estate of J. Y. Stewart, deceased, prior to the time of filing this suit,” clearly presenting the issue in this character of an action involving different litigants, and the rights of other parties, whether the district court has jurisdiction to render judgment upon the notes to foreclose the vendor’s lien and order a sale of the property for that purpose without presenting them to the administrators.

Second. The amount of the liquidated demand in this case is $2,860, which, if it were only the simple adjudication of a debt and lien against an estate, the claim would necessarily have to be presented, and, if allowed, would be dominated by the probate statutes and the county court. We think it is clear from the authorities in this state that, if the, probate court is unable to administer the rights of the parties where they are so correlated to the cause of action as that the district court would be the proper forum for the administration of the remedies as affecting the different and conflicting rights of the parties, the probate court would be devoid of jurisdiction, and that of the district court would attach. In this matter it is clear that the plaintiff would have been unable in the probate court, even if the administrators had allowed the vendor’s lien notes as a claim against the estate, to have obtained judgment against Elma Callis and her husband, the makers of the notes, and against John R. Smith, who indorsed the same before the transfer by J. Y. Stewart, Sr., to Mrs. Webb, having no jurisdiction over that part of the subject-matter of the suit. Again, the probate court wduld have been devoid of jurisdiction for the purpose of rendering judgment in favor of the administrators in this matter as against Elma Callis and her husband on account of surety-ship of the deceased, J. Y. Stewart. While this question, so far as we are able to ascertain, upon an investigation of the authorities, has ever been directly decided, and While, of course, it has been definitely decided in this state from the time of Robertson v. Paul, 16 Tex. 472, that a vendor’s lien should be enforced in the probate court, although it has preference and priority over all claims with reference to the particular security, however, it seems to us that in a matter of this kind, where there arise conflicting interests, and the adjustment of different equities for adjudication, and the enforcement of substantive rights which the probate court, separate and distinct from the enforcement of the vendor’s lien, is unable to adjudicate, that under the statute and under the constitution, with reference to the residuary jurisdiction of the district court, that necessarily that court in this character .of a case had the jurisdiction. The Court of Civil Appeals, in the case of National Guaranty Loan & Trust Co. v. Fly, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 533, 69 S. W. 231, where the matter was also sharply presented with reference to the enforcement of liens and the adjustment of equities, where the probate statute had not been complied with as to institution of the suit within 90 days after the allowance of the claim by the administrator, said: “Appellants sought in this suit to enforce its several liens, and to adjust the equities of all parties in the property covered by same, as well as to establish its claim against the estate of Jessel upon the contract of guaranty. It is clear that the relief to which appellant was entitled was beyond the power of the county court to grant, and, such being the case, we do not think it was necessary or proper for the claim against the estate of Jessel to have been presented to the administrator. Appellant was entitled to full relief, and he was not required to abandon any portion of his cause of action, or to divide same, and seek relief in the probate court on one portion and in the district court on another.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 537, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-webb-texapp-1912.