Beversdorff v. Dienger

174 S.W. 576, 107 Tex. 88, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 125
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1915
DocketNo. 2406.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 174 S.W. 576 (Beversdorff v. Dienger) 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
Beversdorff v. Dienger, 174 S.W. 576, 107 Tex. 88, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 125 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

Hr. Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The suit originated in the County Court of Kendall County and was a contest over the probate of the will of John Hile, offered for probate by the defendant in error who was therein named as executor, and contested by the plaintiff in error, a daughter of Hile. The result in the County Court was adverse to the contestant, and the will was admitted to probate by a judgment rendered June 12, 1909. She duly filed her appeal bond in compliance with article 3632, Revised Statutes, 191’1, for the appeal of the case to the District Court. • In that court her appeal was dismissed because she failed to give notice of appeal in the County Court. The honorable Court of Civil Appeals approved the judgment of dismissal, holding that notice of appeal in the County Court is indispensable to an appeal to the District Court in a probate proceeding, notwithstanding the appeal bond prescribed by the statute had been duly filed.

The provisions governing appeals from the County to the District Court in probate proceedings, constitute a separate chapter in the *90 statutes, chapter 3.3, Revised Statutes of 1911, articles 3631-3639,'under title 53, “Estates of decedents.” Article 3631 declares:

“Any person who may consider himself aggrieved by any decision, order, decree or judgment, of the County Court shall have the right to appeal therefrom to the District Court of the county, upon complying with the provisions of this chapter.”

The effect of this article is necessarily to exempt such appeals from the regulation of any general provisions of law, and to impose, for their perfection, compliance with the articles of chapter 33 as the sum of procedure necessary to be observed. Aside from those articles which provide that no bond shall be exacted of executors and administrators unless the appeal concerns them personally, and that where the party desiring to appeal is unable to give the bond, the appeal may be prosecuted upon an affidavit of such inability, the only article in the chapter which lays any requirement upon an appellant is article 3633, which is as follows:

“He shall, within fifteen days after such decision, order, judgment or decree shall have been rendered, file with the county clerk a bond with two or more good and sufficient sureties, payable to the county judge, in any amount to be fixed by the county judge, and to be approved by the clerk, conditioned that the appellant shall prosecute said appeal to effect and perform the decision, order, decree or judgment which the District Court shall make thereon, in case the cause shall be decided against him.”

It is manifest that according to no provision in the chapter is it necessary that notice of appeal be given in the County Court; and that if the procedure is determined solely by the articles found in the chapter, as is unmistakably declared in article 3631, the appeal of a party of whom bond is required, is perfected when he files the bond in compliance with article 3633.

We have no general statutory provision requiring the giving of notice of appeal, and if there were any such general statute, it would yield in its effect to the procedure prescribed as complete for a particular class of cases.

Article 3084 has no bearing upon the subject since it has reference alone to appeals to the Courts of Civil Appeals.

The procedure defined for the government of probate appeals to the District Court, so far as it relates to this question, 'is not materially different from that provided for appeals from the Justice to the County Court. In both instances the trial on appeal is de novo. Article 3393 declares that an appeal from the.Justice to the County Court shall be perfected when the bond it prescribes has been filed in compliance with its terms-. It is silent as to any requirement that notice of appeal be given in the original court, as are the articles relating to appeals from the County to the District Court in probate proceedings. If it be true, as held by the Court of Civil Appeals, that the requirement for notice of appeal in the original court is to be imported as a 'general rule applicable to all appeals, in virtue of article 3084, unless the particular *91 appeal is excepted in terms from its operation, there could be no reason for holding appeals from the Justice to the County Court exempt from the rule. Yet in Edwards v. Morton, 92 Texas, 152, 46 S. W., 792, it was distinctly held by this court that such notice is not required in appeals from the Justice Court to the County Court, in the following language:

“The statute does not require that the appellant shall give notice in the Justice Court of his appeal to the County Court, and courts have no power to prescribe such a rule. No such notice is necessary to perfect an appeal from the Justice Court to the County Court.”

This further statement appears at the close of that opinion:

“No one can be denied the right of appeal because the Legislature has not provided that he should execute a bond or do any particular act, but each party has the-constitutional right to appeal if he complies with such regulations as have been prescribed by the Legislature for the class of cases to which his belongs

Edwards v. Morton stands in our decisions as an emphatic declaration that the statutory mode of appeal provided for a particular class of cases is alone to be .consulted for the procedure necessary in the appeal of cases of that class, and where it is silent in respect to the giving of notice of appeal courts have no authority to impose such a requirement as a condition' of the right. Nothing else could well be the law, and the strength of the proposition, best revealed by its simple statement, demonstrates its correctness. We advert here to the effect of this decision because it necessarily clears whatever confusion is found in our reports upon this question as related to probate appeals to the District Court. That there is some apparent confusion, arising, not from actual decisions, but from expressions in opinions, may be conceded.

Battle v. Howard, 13 Texas, 345, involved an appeal by an administrator from the County to the District Court. Notice of appeal was given in the County Court, but the appeal was prosecuted without bond. Upon this account it was dismissed in the District Court. Statutory provisions were in force then, as now, exempting executors and administrators from the giving of bond in such appeals, and it was accordingly held that the appeal was duly perfected. A ground urged in the case against the administrator’s right to appeal without bond, was the absence in the statute of any provision requiring that notice of the appeal be given in the County Court. Answering that objection, Judge Wheeler used the following language:

“Such provision is not necessary ‘to the exercise of the right of appeal. On general principles he who would appeal from the judgment of any court, must do so in open court at the time when the judgment is procured, and the fact .should appear in the proceedings in the case. This is all the notice which, in practice, the law has been held to require in any case. In the present case the administrator appealed from the judgment of the probate court, and the fact was entered of record.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W. 576, 107 Tex. 88, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beversdorff-v-dienger-tex-1915.