Vann v. Calcasieu Trust Savings Bank

204 S.W. 1062, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 740
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 8, 1918
DocketNo. 7402.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 1062 (Vann v. Calcasieu Trust Savings Bank) 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
Vann v. Calcasieu Trust Savings Bank, 204 S.W. 1062, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 740 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by appellee against appellants, Andral Vann and N. B. Knight, administrators of the estate of Francis A. Ogden, deceased, to recover a balance of $72,537.08, with interest from June 11, 1915, at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, and an additional 10 per cent, as attorney’s fees, alleged to be due upon a note for $74,000 executed by said Ogden in favor of plaintiff on February 14, 1914, and paya’ ble four months after date.

The petition, which was in usual form of petition in suit upon a note, alleged that the claim had been .presented to defendant administrators on June 11, 1915, and they had refused to allow same as a claim against the estate of said Ogden.

The following summary of the other pleadings in the case, which we copy from appellants’ brief, is sufficient for an understanding of the questions discussed and decided in this opinion:

Having theretofore filed an original and a first amended original answer, defendants, on March 23, 1913, filed their second amended original answer, upon which, together with certain supplements and amendments, the case was tried. The second amended original answer of defendants admitted that plaintiff was entitled to recover except in so far as it might be defeated in whole or in part by the facts of said answer constituting a good defense thereto.

As a defense against said claim, defendants showed in their answer that said Francis A. Ogden was, at the time of his death, a resident of and domiciled in Harris county, Tex.; that he died June 6, 1914; that on June 8, 1914, the defendants were appointed temporary administrators of his estate by the county court of Harris county, Tex., continued as such until July 8, 1914, when they were appointed permanent administrators of said estate, and had continued as such permanent administrators from that time. They further showed: That prior to the death of said Francis A. Ogden he had purchased 48,-000 acres of land situated in Calcasieu parish, in the state of Louisiana, at a purchase price of $480,000. At the time of his death he was owing a balance of the purchase price *1064 of said land amounting to $241,000, secured by liens upon said property. That at the time of the death of said Erancis A. Ogden the plaintiff claimed to be a creditor of his estate -by virtue of the indebtedness sued on in this case, and as such creditor, on the 9th day of June, 1914, was appointed and thereafter qualified as administrator of the estate of said Erancis A. Ogden in the state of Louisiana. That said administration was merely an ancillary administration of the estate of said Ogden situated in the state of Louisiana, whereas the administration of the defendants was the domiciliary administration of said estate.

The answer further alleged: That on December 12, 1914, the plaintiff, as administrator of the estate of said Ogden in the state of Louisiana, made a pretended sale of substantially all of said 48,000 acres of land at a price of $5 per acre. That it became the purchaser of said land at its own sale. That it used the proceeds of said sale in paying the prior liens upon said property, leaving its indebtedness, except a small credit thereon, unsatisfied. That within a few days afted it had secured said conveyance to itself for said properties it sold and conveyed 7,-240 acres of said land to the North American Land & Timber Company, at a price of $7 per care, and thereby realized for itself a profit upon said resale of said land of $14,480, over and above the price paid by it to itself as administrator for said lands. That the plaintiff, at and before the said conveyance of said land to itself by itself as administrator, knew that said sale of said portion of said land could be made to the North American Land & Timber Company, Limited, at said price of $7 per acre. That there was a prior understanding and agreement by and between .the said North American Land & Timber Company, Limited, and plaintiff, to the purpose and effect that plaintiff should purchase said land at said pretended administrator’s sale thereof, and that the same should be thereupon shortly thereafter sold to said North American Land & Timber Company, Limited, at and for said profit of $14,480, and that the plaintiff (the said North American Land & Timber Company declining to bid at said sale) should be interposed as the nominal purchaser of said property at the price of $5 per acre, with the end and purpose in view that the plaintiff should, as it afterwards did, acquire for iteslf the profit to be realized upon the pretended resale of said land. That if in fact there was no prior agreement, that said plaintiff, by the use of such diligence as it was required to have used, could have ascertained the fact that said land could be sold to said North American Land & Timber Company at said price of $7 per acre, and that it was the duty of plaintiff as such administrator to have used such diligence and made said sale and secured said advanced price for the benefit of said estate. That said pretended resale of said property was made prior to the execution by plaintiff to itself of the conveyance of said land, and while the sale to plaintiff was executory and in fieri and subject to plaintiff’s control, and the legal title to said property in fact remained in the estate of the said Erancis A. Ogden and of plaintiff as the administrator of said estate.

Defendants made substantially the same character of allegations with reference to the sale of the remaining 40,000 acres of the land to a corporation known as the Prairie Earms Company, at a price of $7 per acre. They alleged that by reason of said transactions the plaintiff had realized for itself a profit of $96,000 upon the resale of said properties made in the manner alleged, and that the plaintiff in equity and in law held said profits in trust for the benefit of said estate, of which defendants were the domiciliary administrators. There were other allegations with reference to the transactions by which the plaintiff was enabled to make said profit,1 and with reference -to the conduct of negotiations between plaintiff and other parties interested therein, all to the effect that plaintiff had fraudulently used its office of administrator to acquire said profit of $96,000, and, said sum being more than the amount of indebtedness sued upon herein, that the same was entitled to be taken in offset and extin-guishment of the demand of plaintiff sued in this case. In the same answer, the defendants pleaded said facts as a counterclaim and in reconvention against plaintiff, and sought judgment over against the plaintiff. They alleged that said facts amounted to a conversion of said lands by plaintiff and rendered the plaintiff liable to the defendants as tire domiciliary administrators of said estate for the reasonable market value of said land, which was alleged to amount to the sum of $720,000. On said cross-action they prayed for judgment for said sum of $720,000, and in the alternative that they recover the profits actually realized by plaintiff as a result of said transaction.

An intervention was filed on the part of certain persons claiming to be heirs at law of said Francis A. Ogden. This intervention, however, was subsequently during the course of the trial dismissed.

On June 7, 1916, plaintiff filed its first amended first supplemental petition.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 1062, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vann-v-calcasieu-trust-savings-bank-texapp-1918.