Callahan v. Stover

263 S.W.2d 630, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1664
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 1953
Docket4864
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 263 S.W.2d 630 (Callahan v. Stover) 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
Callahan v. Stover, 263 S.W.2d 630, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1664 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

ANDERSON,'Justic'e.

The appeal is from a judgment of the district court of the 58th Judicial District, Jefferson County, rendered on.a juiy.’s verdict, denying probate to a will of A. H. Caljahan, deceased. Appellant, Mrs. A. H. Callahan, who will be referred-to- as proponent, is the widow of the deced.ent, and is named in the will as independent executrix. Appellees, Mrs. Eloise Stover and her husband, R. J. Stover, will be referred to as contestants. Mrs! Stover is a daughter of the decedent by a marriage that preceded decedent’s marriage to the proponent. The Only ground on which" proponent’s application- fbr probate and for ■ letters testamentary was coiitested - was that the tenderedwill had been revoked by a later1 written will ‘which ‘contestants were unable to produce in court! The issue'of revocation wassubmitted to the jury, and was answered favorably to the contestants.

Mrs. Stover contested proponent’s application in the. county court, and participated in the hearing had thereon. She was not joined by her husband in any of the proceedings until after the case had been filed in the district court. By its order or decree made and entered on September 25, 1951, the county court of Jefferson County admitted the will to probate. Mrs. Stover gave notice of appeal, and on October 9, 1951, filed her appeal bond, duly approved, with the county clerk. The appeal, however, was not filed in the district court until January 12, 1952, on which date the original papers, together with the appeal bond and a certified copy of the order or judgment of the county court admitting the will to probate, were delivered to and filed ■with the clerk of the district court.

■ Proponent filed and presented in the district court a motion to dismiss the áppeal, the grounds therefor being that the transcript from the county court had not been, filed in the .district court within the time prescribed by law, .and that the district court was therefore without jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. The motion, which was neither filed nor presented in the district court until after the jury had returned its verdict, was overruled; and such ruling of the trial court is now assigned as error.

Fully realizing that our holding' is at variance with the holdings of our courts before our present Rules of Civil Procedure were in effect, we have concluded that the motion should have been granted and the appeal dismissed.

The right to appeal to a district court from decisions, orders, decrees or judgments of a county court in matters of probate pertaining to the estates of decedents is conferred by article 3698, Rev.Civ.Stat, which, in pertinent part, is as follows: “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 *633 with the provisions of this chapter; * ⅜.”

After Article 3698 had been enacted, the procedural statutes with which it contemplated there • should he ■ compliance in order to appeal to the district court were repealed by the legislative enactment which conferred on and relinquished to the Supreme Court full rule-making power in civil judicial proceedings, Acts 1939, 46th Leg., p.' 201, sec. 1, Art. 1731a, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St.; and procedural rules have been adopted and promulgated in their stead by the Supreme 'Court. Therefore, Article 3698 must now be construed as if it provided, for appeals upon compliance with the applicable rules of civil procedure, and these rules must be looked to in order to determine whether or not an appeal to the district court has been properly taken in this kind of case.

The civil district courts of Jefferson •County are now governed by the rules of practice and procedure prescribed by Rule 330, Texas Rules of 'Civil Procedure. This rule, in material part, is as follows:

“The following rules of practice and procedure shall govern and be followed in all civil actions in district courts (of the classification which includes •those in Jefferson County).
“(a) Appealed 'Gases.
■“In cases appealed to said district (courts from inferior courts, the appeal, including transcript, shall be filed in the ■district court within thirty (30) days •after the rendition of the judgment or order appealed from, and the appellee shall enter his appearance on the dock■et or answer to said appeal on or before ten o’clock a. m. of the Monday next after the expiration' of twenty (20) days from the date the appeal is ■filed in the district court.”

Before the foregoing rule became effective on September 1, 1941, district courts of classifications comparable to those now specified in the rule were governed by the rules of practice and procedure prescribed by Art. 2092, Rev.Civ.Stat, subdivision 13 of which was identical with Rule 330(a), as above quoted. The question of a district court’s jurisdiction under that statute to entertain an appeal from a probate order of a county court where -the appeal was not filed in the district court within thirty days after rendition of the order appealed from was before the Supreme Court in the case of Stewart v. Moore, 291 S.W. 886, 891. The Commission of Appeals (Section B)-, in an opinion which was expressly approved by the Supreme Court, there held that the district court had erred in dismissing the appeal, as for want of jurisdiction, merely because there had been a tardy filing of the appeal in the district court. The following quotation from the opinion in that' case sufficiently reflects the factual background of the appeal, and contains the essence of' the'court’s discussion of the question that Was before it:

“It' is apparent from the record in this cause that the plaintiffs in error filed their appeal bond, duly approved, within the time prescribed by law. This admitted fact divested the county court of Tarrant county of all jurisdiction over the case. 'When the county court was thus deprived of its jurisdiction eo instanter, the district court was invested with jurisdiction over the case. Within the time prescribed by law, which‘is 30 days, the duty alone rested upon the clerk of the county court to transmit the original papers, together with a certified copy of the order of the county court from which the appeal was taken, to the clerk of the district court, whose duty it was to file the papers and docket the cause. The law presumes, until the contrary is shown, that every official will discharge the duties imposed upon him as such by the law. In the absence of affirmative proof that an official does not intend to perform his duty, none rested upon the parties- to compel him to do so by making an application for a mandamus under proper authority. After an official has in fact failed to. perform his duty, .there then rested upon any -one interested in the subject-matter a, duty *634 to proceed by the proper legal methods to compel the derelict official to do what the law required of him in the premises.

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263 S.W.2d 630, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callahan-v-stover-texapp-1953.