Stone v. McGregor

87 S.W. 334, 99 Tex. 51, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 157
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1905
DocketNo. 1426.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 S.W. 334 (Stone v. McGregor) 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
Stone v. McGregor, 87 S.W. 334, 99 Tex. 51, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 157 (Tex. 1905).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Mrs. A. P. McGregor, suing as the surviving wife of G: C. McGregor deceased, instituted this suit in the District Court of McLennan County on the 29th day of August, 1903, against J. E. Stone, A. W. Wright, Fountain. J. Stone, Alonzo Stone, Ethel Swint (nee Stone) and her husband, D. F. Swint, Pearl Stone, and against John T. Battle as guardian of the said Pearl Stone. The object of the suit was to recover on a note dated February 5th, 1896, signed by J. E. Stone, payable to G. C. McGregor, due one year from date with ten percent interest, for the sum of $2,500, and to foreclose upon the real estate described in a deed of trust executed by J. E. Stone at the date of the note. The petition also sought to recover against Fountain J. Stone, Alonzo Stone, Ethel Swint and Pearl' Stone the amount of said note on a written' renewal of it by John T. Battle as guardian, also upon an alleged assumption of the note by the last named defendants, and upon the judgment of partition in the estate of Mrs. A. A. Stone with foreclosure of lien. The petition contains allegations that plaintiff was the owner of the land described and sought to recover possession, and, in the. alternative, for foreclosure of the lien claimed.

Defendants pleaded a general denial, the statute of limitations of two and four years, and, under oath, denied the authority of Battle, as guardian, to renew the note. The case was tried before the judge, who filed conclusions of fact from which we make this statement:

On February 15, 1896, J.- E. Stone executed and delivered to G. C. McGregor a note for $2,500 with ten percent interest from date, to become due at twelve months from date, and, to secure the note, Stone made a deed of trust upon a lot of land in Waco described in the petition. John T. Battle was appointed guardian of the estate of Fountain J. Stone, Alonzo Stone, Ethel Stone -and Pearl Stone, all of whom were minors at that time. Fountain J. Stone became of age February *55 11, 1899, Ethel Stone was married to D. T. Swint January. 16, 1901, Pearl Stone was a minor at the institution of this suit.

On March 31, 1898, Battle, as guardian of the minors named, instituted suit against J. E. Stone for a partition of the estate of Mrs. A. A. Stone and a decree of partition was entered setting apart to the minors property fully described in the decree which embraced the property in controversy, and, after describing the property set apart to them, the decree contained the following statement: “And it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed the title to all of property described as Lot Mo. One be, and the same is hereby vested out of the other tenants in common, and is hereby vested in Fountain J. Stone, Alonzo Stone, Ethel Stone and Pearl Stone, which property so embraced and described as Lot Mo. 1 is charged however, with an owelty or lien to the amount of $38,750:00 of the debt aforesaid as follows, to wit: $3,500.00 due G. C. McGregor.” G. C. McGregor was not a party to that suit. He died Movember 23, 1903, and his wife, Mrs. A. P. McGregor, is entitled to recover whatever right his estate has in the subject matter of this suit.

On the 33d day of January, 1901, a few days before the note would have been barred, John T. Battle, as guardian of Fountain J., Alonzo, Ethel and Pearl Stone, without any authority from the probate court, made the following endorsement on the note of J. E. Stone to McGregor, towit: “This note having been charged against the estate of Fountain J., Alonzo, Ethel and Pearl Stone, minors, and the property securing the same having been set apart to said minors in the partition of the Stone estate, I, John T. Battle, as guardian of the estate of said minors, hereby assume the payment of .this note according to its legal tenor and effect, acknowledge its justness and.promise to pay the same one year from this the 33d day of January, 1901.” The trial court found that the said endorsement and renewal was necessary.to the management of the said estate. Prior to the making of said endorsement by Battle, Fountain J. Stone, being then of age, executed and delivered to Battle a power of attorney by which he appointed said John T. Battle his attorney in fact, which was duly acknowledged and recorded, dated May 17, 1899, which power of attorney was in full force and effect at the time that Battle as attorney of Stone made the said renewal of the note, and stipulated, among other things, that it was the purpose of Fountain J. Stone in executing the same that as long as said Battle shall remain guardian of the said minor children, meaning Alonzo, Ethel and Pearl Stone, or any one of them, said Battle shall continue to manage and control the said Fountain J. Stone’s interest in said estate in connection with the guardianship, aforesaid, and, to enable said Battle to so act for said Fountain J. Stone, he, among other things, authorized and empowered said John T. Battle to sign the name of said Fountain J. Stone to any notes, mortgages, deeds, conveyances, or other instrument of like kind that may be necessary in and about the the management of said F. J. Stone’s interest. After Ethel Stone was married she and her husband advised with Battle with reference to the management of the property and desired him to represent them in a general way. Battle mentioned the indebtedness due to McGregor; no question was ever made by Ethel Stone or Fountain J. Stone as to any act done by Battle, and, whenever they wanted any information, *56 said Battle informed them of all acts done by him; nor was the renewal concealed from them by Battle.

The trial judge made this statement in connection with his findings of fact: “I further find that the said Fountain J. Stone, Alonzo Stone, Ethel Stone and Pearl Stone and John T. Battle as guardian, by virtue of the terms of said partition decree made a part hereof, became bound and assumed the payment of the note sued upon, and that said G. C. McGregor accepted them and their estate as his principal debtors, and that his rights or the rights of plaintiff were not barred by the statute of limitations at the time this suit was filed.”

“Owelty of partition is a sum paid or secured, in the case of partition in unequal proportions, by him who has received the larger portion to him who has the less, for the purpose of equalizing the portions.” Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, vol. 21, p. 1179, par. 4; Bouv. Law Die.

Plaintiff’s husband, G. C. McGregor, was not a party to the proceeding in which the decree of partition was entered between J. E. Stone and his children, therefore, the provision in the decree which charged the debt due to McGregor upon the property set apart to the minor children was not “owelty” as to McGregor. The effect of the decree was that the minors, Fountain J., Alonzo, Ethel and Pearl Stone took the property subject to the lien of the deed of trust' from Stone to McGregor.

The contention that defendant in error is entitled to recover by subrogation to the rights of J. E. Stone is not sustained by the facts. Granting that J. E. Stone had a lien upon the property set apart to his children to secure him in case he should pay the debt due McGregor., that right did not pass to McGregor by the judgment and there is nothing to show that it was ever transferred to him by Stone, nor do the facts show that if Stone had paid this debt he would be entitled to enforce the lien upon the property.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W. 334, 99 Tex. 51, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-mcgregor-tex-1905.