Armstrong v. Anderson

55 S.W.2d 235
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 1932
DocketNo. 2737.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 235 (Armstrong v. Anderson) 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
Armstrong v. Anderson, 55 S.W.2d 235 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

Appellee Grace Marr Anderson, on October 20, 1931, filed in the probate court of El Paso county, Tex., in cause No. 5250, in probate, her petition complaining of appellant, and alleging that on Pebruary 20, 1928, she filed in said court petition to probate the last will of W. IC. Marr, who had died February 14, 1928, and alleging that on the 6th day of March, 1928, such will was admitted to probate. That by the terms of said will, petitioner was made sole devisee and appointed independent executrix without bond; that on March 6,1928, she qualified as independent executrix and received letters testamentary, and in .due course returned an inventory and appraisement which was by the court approved.

She alleges that about six weeks after the issuance to her of letters testamentary appellant, O. R. Armstrong, who had filed her petition and was representing her as her attorney, advised her that, by reason of the fact that two of the children bom to her and the said W. K. Marr were born subsequent to the execution of the will of W. K. Marr, under the laws of Texas, the provisions of said will were suspended, and that she could not act as independent executrix, but that an administrator would have to be appointed for the estate. She alleged that there was another child born of her marriage to W. K. Marr, who was born years before the will was executed, who was living at the time of the death of W. K. Marr, and is now living.

■She alleged that she was ignorant of the law, and had no other legal advice except that of her attorney, that she relied upon his advice, and that her said attorney, appellant herein, filed in the Probate Oourt a petition alleging that, by reason of the birth of said last two named children, “the provisions of said will would be temporarily suspended, and the provisions thereof constituting the said Grace K. Marr Independent Executrix would be suspended, according to the laws of Texas.” Said petition asked that the letters testamentary theretofore issued be withdrawn, and that letters of administration issue, to her.

This appellee alleged in said first-described petition that she acted as administratrix with the will annexed, under the advice of counsel, the appellant herein, until about April 9,1930, when, acting through her said counsel, and upon his advice, she filed her petition to resign as administratrix of said estate, accompanying such application with an exhibit of the condition of the estate and the administration account, that acting solely upon the advice of her said counsel, the appellant herein, she suggested his appointment to succeed her as administrator with the will annexed, and that he was so appointed and qualified.

She alleged that in the exhibit of the condition of the estate, and administration account, which accompanied her petition to resign as administratrix, and which was prepared by her said counsel, the amount of fees was left blank, and the amount which was to be paid to her attorney as attorney’s fees was left blank, and that she was advised by her attorney that these amounts would be filled in by the-court, and that she had nothing to do with allowing or fixing the attorney’s fees or commissions.

She alleged that the commissions, when filled in, showed an amount grossly in excess of the fees that were legally allowable in said estate, and that the amount filled in as an attorney’s fee was grossly excessive, and that she was wholly ignorant of the amount of either the commissions allowed or the attorney’s fees approved by the court until more than one year later, when she received a letter from her said attorney, then acting as administrator with the will annexed, and a copy of his first annual report, in which, for the first time, she was advised of the commissions that had been allowed, and t-he attorney’s fees *237 which had been approved. She set forth specifically numerous items upon which the commissions had been allowed, aggregating several thousand dollars, which were not legally allowable against said estate.

She further alleged that, at the solicitation of her said attorney, appellant herein, she executed an assignment to him of one-half of the fees or commissions to be allowed her as ad-ministratrix, which assignment was to compensate him for legal services rendered to her for representing her in other legal matters than those connected with the estate.

She alleged that she had never resigned as independent executrix of said estate, but was advised that her powers as such independent executrix were suspended by law, pending which suspension, administration was necessary, and acted upon that belief, as shown by the papers filed in the probate court; that the substitution of such administration, in lieu of the executorship, had been detrimental to the estate, and necessitated greatly increased costs,.including attorney’s fees, which would have been wholly unnecessary except for such substitution; that she was not advised of her legal rights to continue as independent executrix, nor of her right to pass upon the amount of attorney’s fees she would allow, nor was she advised of the illegality of a large portion of the commissions charged against the estate, until less than thirty days before the filing of her petition in the probate court, in which she ashed for the removal of appellant as administrator, and her reinstatement as independent executrix, and in which she ashed the court to reconsider and reaudit the attorney’s fees and commissions.

Appellant, defendant below, answered in the probate court with a plea in abatement, plea of limitations, general and special exceptions, and further answered reciting the original appointment of appellee herein as independent executrix, and her subsequent suspension as such, and appointment as admin-istratrix, alleging that, at the time he caused that to be done, he was of the opinion that the law of the state of Texas suspended temporarily her appointment as independent executrix. He alleged that appellee was correctly advised by him at all times, that she acquiesced in the several steps tahen by him with relation to the estate, and was cognizant of the amount of commissions and attorney’s fees, and alleged that the amounts of both were legal and reasonable.

On November 16, 1931, the probate court entered its order removing appellant, Otto R. Armstrong, from the position of administrator with the will annexed, and ordered him to file to the January term of the court, 1932, a true, full, and complete exhibit of the condition of the estate, together with the administration account thereof, properly verified, as required by law, and directed the clerk to reissue letters testamentary to this appellee, to which order and judgment appellant herein excepted and gave notice of appeal to the district court of El Paso county, Tex., for the Forty-First judicial district.

The cause coming on for hearing before the •district court in February, 1932, the defendant, appellant here, filed his first amended original answer, setting up, for the first time, that the petitioner, appellee here, was a married woman and without the legal capacity to sue without the joinder of her husband; pleading in bar the orders of the probate court accepting the resignation of petitioner as ad-ministratrix, and approving her final account and appointing Otto R. Armstrong administrator with the will annexed.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-anderson-texapp-1932.