Walker, Administrator v. Kerr

27 S.W. 299, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 498, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 340
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1894
DocketNo. 332.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 27 S.W. 299 (Walker, Administrator v. Kerr) 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
Walker, Administrator v. Kerr, 27 S.W. 299, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 498, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 340 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

LIGHTFOOT, Chief Justice.

The following statement by appellant is found to be substantially correct, and is adopted:

On November 24,1885, appellant was appointed temporary administrator of the estate of A. A. Ingram, deceased; and on March 1, 1886, was appointed permanent administrator. He qualified and took charge of the estate. Three notes for $1000 each, executed by A. A. Ingram, payable to the order of Theresa Ingram (who afterwards married Coates), were presented to appellant for allowance, as administrator. They were allowed by him, and on June 2, 1886, they were allowed and approved by the court and classed as third-class claims, secured by a lien on real estate. The real estate owned by the estate of A. A. Ingram was 1280 acres of the McKinney and Williams survey, in Navarro County. The notes referred to were given by the decedent in payment for an undivided half of said land, and were a vendor’s lien on the same. Before the notes were executed for the land, W. D. Ingram, who formerly owned it, executed a deed of trust for $1000 thereon in favor of C. P. Kerr. This land was sold under Kerr’s trust deed, and T. C. White bought it. Under an order of the. court entered on April 3,1887, Walker paid to the said White the amount of money paid but by him for said land, and took a deed to himself as administrator. This land was afterwards sold under order of the court, for the sum of $2000, and the remaining interest of the estate in the survey was afterwards sold for $3700. After the said notes had been allowed by the administrator, approved and classified by the court as third-class claims for the full amount, and after the land had been sold, it appears that the court, in May, 1887, entered an order directing appellant to pay the three notes so classified by the court, with interest —then amounting to $4200; and appellant, acting under said order of the court, paid off said claims.

On January 16, 1891, appellant filed his final account, asking to be discharged and the estate closed. Appellees, who held claims approved within the time required by law, and classified as fourth-class claims, filed objections to the administrator’s report, objecting to $2206.53 of the item shown by said report to have been paid on the claim of Theresa Ingram.

Appellant filed demurrers and answered to the contest presented by appellees, and among other matters, excepted to the contest because it *500 was a collateral attack on the order of the court: (1) In classifying the claim as third class; and (2) the order of the court in directing the administrator to pay the claims in full out of the proceeds of the property in his hands. In the County Court appellant’s exceptions were sustained and his final report approved. Appellees appealed from the order of the County Court to the District Court of Ravarro County.

The matter was heard in the. District Court at the October Term, 1891, when the exceptions were again urged, and overruled by the court, (to which ruling the defendant excepted), and on final hearing the court held that $2206.53 of the amount paid on the claim of Theresa Ingram was wrongfully paid, and the administrator was not entitled to credit in his final account for that amount, and the administrator appeals.

Opinion.—1. The second assignment of error is as follows: “The court erred in holding that appellant was not entitled to a credit in his final account for the sum of $2206.53 paid on the claim of Theresa Ingram, for the following reasons: (1) because the evidence shows said claim had been allowed by the court and classified as a third-class claim secured by a lien on real estate, and that the money paid was the proceeds of the sale of the land on which the claim was a lien; (2) because the evidence shows said money was paid on the judgment of the Probate Court entered in the administration more than two years before the contest was filed by appellees.”

In the testimony of the administrator, which was not objected to or disputed, he said: “The claim (referring to the Theresa Ingram notes, aggregating $4200), had been classified as third class, and in paying them I acted under the order of court entered in May, 1887, directing me to pay the claims, amounting to $4200—$2000 of which came from the 550 acres sold to Greer, and the balance was paid out of the proceeds arising from the remainder of the survey and other property of the estate.”

The Theresa Ingram claim of $4200 was only a lien on one-half of the 1280 acres of land, or, after the division, 550 acres. After the purchase by White under the first mortgage, the land was divided between himself and the estate, he (White) getting 550 acres, and the estate 750 acres. The administrator, under the orders of the court, bought for the estate the White 550 acres for $1750, which put the title to all of it in the estate, 550 acres being subject to the lien of the Theresa Ingram notes. When this land was sold by the administrator the 550 acres brought $2000, and the 750 acres brought $3750. From this it would seem (if the testimony is stated correctly in the record) that the Theresa Ingram claim of $4200 should have had paid upon it the $2000 for which the land sold upon which she held a lien; and the balance of her claim should have taken its place with the fourth- *501 class claims, to be paid pro rata out of the general assets of the estate.

The statement of facts is not full or clear. The court below holds, that when the 550 acres sold for $2000 that amount should have been credited on the $4200 debt, and that the balance—$2206.53—was wrongfully paid on said debt to the exclusion of the other fourth-class claimants. This far the judgment is correct, if the facts are correctly stated; but it goes further, and decrees that the whole item, of $2206.53 shall be stricken out from the credit side of the administrator’s account, and that the contestants shall be paid in full. This part of the decree was erroneous.

Where an administrator had paid out money to a creditor of the estate without authority of law, but the party upon whose claim such payment was made was entitled to a pro rata share in such money, the administrator becomes subrogated to the rights of such creditor, and is entitled to a credit to the extent of such creditor’s pro rata share.

After crediting the $2000 for which the land sold, upon which Theresa Ingram (Coates) held a lien to secure her claim of $4200, that debt having exhausted its security, thereby became a fourth-class claim for the balance, and was entitled to share with the other fourth-class claims pro rata in the general assets of the estate. Eev. Stats., art. 2037, sub-div. 3; Chandler v. Burdett, 20 Texas, 44.

It follows that the administrator is not entitled to the credit of $2206.53, but is entitled to a credit as follows: The $2206.53, with the remaining assets of the estate (after deducting the expenses of administration) should be paid upon the fourth-class claims pro rata, and the administrator being subrogated to the claim of Theresa Ingram (Coates) for the balance due upon the same, is entitled to credit for the pro rata of such fund so apportioned to such claim, whatever that may be.

2. It is claimed by appellant that tli e money was paid on the Theresa Ingram (Coates) claim under an order of the court more than two years before the contest was filed, and that the contest was filed too late. Appellees contend that there was no such order shown.

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Bluebook (online)
27 S.W. 299, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 498, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-administrator-v-kerr-texapp-1894.