Ames v. Herrington

139 S.W.2d 183
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1940
DocketNo. 1934.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 139 S.W.2d 183 (Ames v. Herrington) 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
Ames v. Herrington, 139 S.W.2d 183 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

This is a suit by a former ward to collect money alleged to be due her estate by former guardians and their respective sureties. On arrival at the age of 14 years the minor, Doris Meekie Rice, selected Dr. W. Ross Hodges to be her guardian. He instituted this suit. Later she married J. P. Herrington and joined by him they were substituted as plaintiffs in this cause. They are appellees herein.

Each of the defendants denied liability and offered special defenses hereinafter considered. Trial before the court and jury resulted in a verdict and judgment against the former guardians and their respective bondsmen. These defendants appeal.

This litigation covers numerous transactions by different guardians through a term of years from September 29, 1922, until the institution and trial of this suit in 1937. So many transactions are involved and so many assignments of error presented only controlling points will be discussed.

Briefly the history of these probate proceedings and the instant suit is in sub *186 stance as follows: September 20, 1922 W. H. (Ward) Rice died intestate, leaving a wife, Frona Rice, and daughter, Doris Meekie Rice, then two years of age. There was no administration of his estate, except the guardianship proceeding on the daughter’s estate. December 17, 1922, the widow, Mrs. Frona Rice, married J. B. Ames. They separated April 20, 1933, and October 13, 1933, she instituted a suit for divorce and recovery of property alleged to belong to her and said daughter. Ames died February 6, 1937.

September 29, 1922, Mrs. Rice (Ames) instituted in the “County Court at Law of Eastland County” temporary guardianship proceedings on the estate of the daughter. The probable value of that estate was estimated at $25,404. On the same date, the court appointed the mother temporary guardian, and also named appraisers for the estate. October 2, 1922, an inventory and appraisement was returned and filed in the said court, and it showed cash on hand belonging to the minor $5,904, Liberty Bonds $15,900 and individual interest in real estate valued at $3,350. The first two items aggregate $21,804. The judge approved the inventory and ap-praisement and on November 14, 1922, entered an order making the temporary guardianship permanent. The same day Frona Rice, as principal, and the American Indemnity Company, as surety, executed a guardian’s bond in the sum of $43,608.

This guardianship ran along with various expenditures by the guardian from time to time from the ward’s estate until June 8, 1923, when the guardian Frona Rice applied to said “County Court at Law” to continue the guardianship proceedings in the name of Frona Ames, she having married J. B. Ames December 17, 1922. The guardianship was so continued.

July 2, 1923, the surety, American Indemnity Company, filed a petition in said County Court at Law to be released from any further liability on the bond executed November 14, 1922. An order releasing it was entered September 24, 1923. This bond is made the basis of recovery against the American Indemnity Company.

(This action by the surety company was precipitated by the following circumstances : When the Indemnity Company became surety on the said bond there was a joint agreement between it and Frona Rice whereby said company was permitted to take possession of $15,900 in Liberty Bonds for safe-keeping during the time it was on the bond. The Liberty Bonds matured. The surety company forwarded them to a bank at Ranger where Mrs. Ames resided that she might indorse them and thereby enable the Indemnity Company to cash the bonds. While they were in the bank at Ranger she instituted suit in Eastland County for the possession of the bonds. The Indemnity Company was impleaded and a trial resulted in a judgment ordering the delivery of the possession of the bonds to the guardian, and also releasing the surety from further liability on the bond. The matters recited in this paragraph may not be material under the disposition made of this appeal, but they serve to keep in mind the events leading up to this litigation.)

After, the Indemnity Company was released on September 24, 1933, Mrs. Ames, joined by her husband, J. B. Ames, as principal, with Frank Ames and Mrs. M. F. Ames, as sureties, executed a new guardianship bond in the sum of $39,000, on October 13, 1923. Additional sureties were required, however, and Frona Ames, joined by her husband as principal and S. P. Rumph and D. S. Rumph, as sureties, executed another guardianship bond in the sum of $39,000 on October 18, 1923.

Frank Ames and Mrs. M. F. Ames were not joined in this suit, and it is alleged that M. F. Ames is dead and that in any event both were insolvent. Neither were the Rumphs made parties, but it is alleged they were both dead, that they went through bankruptcy and their estates insolvent.

After the posting of the above bonds of October 13 and 18, the guardianship proceedings continued without interruption until November 28, 1928, when the Supreme Court of Texas, passing upon the validity of the law creating the “County Court at Law of Eastland County,” held said court to be unconstitutional, and its acts and orders void. State v. Gillette’s Éstate, Tex.Com.App., 10 S.W. 2d 984.

Thereafter, Frona Ames, on February 18, 1930, again sought to be appointed guardian of her daughter’s estate. This proceeding was in the regular probate court of Eastland County, Texas. She was so appointed March 7, 1930, and *187 March 12, 1930, she gave bond and took the usual oath. The inventory and ap-praisement offered and approved showed the value of the minor’s estate at this time to be $4,835.35. A guardianship bond in the sum of $10,000 was executed by Mrs. Ames, with J. B. Ames, S. P. Rumph and J. E. Gilbert, sureties. (There were conflicting allegations and proof as to the capacity in which Ames signed this bond. The jury found he signed as surety.)

While the ward’s estate was being administered under this last guardianship bond, Frona Ames sued J. B. Ames on October 13, 1933, for divorce, asking for division of community property, and seeking to recover from him personal and real property then held by him, but alleged to be in fact the property either of herself or of the minor daughter.

That cause, originally and primarily one for divorce, was No. 15,750, on the docket of the District Court, and will be so referred to in this opinion. Frona Ames individually and as such guardian on December 15, 1933, filed a third amended original petition in that cause. As stated, she sought to establish and recover extensive property rights on behalf of herself and her daughter, and during the trial of that case it appears that Frona Ames, or her attorney, concluded that in the capacities in which she was suing she was representing conflicting interests, in that she was asserting individual rights which clashed or conflicted with the rights and interests of her ward. Thereupon it became expedient, if not necessary, to have the interests of the ward represented by someone who could give primary consideration to the ward’s interest as they were reflected or involved in that litigation.

At that stage of the litigation the regular probate court, acting upon application therefor, entered an order January 19, 1934, discharging Mrs. Ames as guardian of said estate on the ground that she had grossly mismanaged the same.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lemon v. Spann
633 S.W.2d 568 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1982)
Kownslar v. Westinghouse Credit Corp.
484 S.W.2d 460 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1972)
Cole v. Wadsworth
376 S.W.2d 13 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1964)
Wilson v. Henwood
337 S.W.2d 194 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1960)
State Ex Rel. Weede v. Bechtel
31 N.W.2d 853 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1948)
Texas Employers' Ins. Ass'n v. McKay
205 S.W.2d 833 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.W.2d 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ames-v-herrington-texapp-1940.