Carmichael v. Williams

268 S.W. 502
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 26, 1924
DocketNo. 8575.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 502 (Carmichael v. Williams) 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
Carmichael v. Williams, 268 S.W. 502 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinions

This is a suit brought by John Carmichael, Louis Carmichael, Archie Lovett, and Lawrence Lovett in July, 1922, against Maggie Williams and her husband, C. W. Williams, and Robert Adams and Frank McNally for title and possession to lot 9 and the north half of lot 8 in block 15 in the town of Harrisburg, Harris county, Tex. After making formal allegations usual in suits of trespass to try title, the plaintiffs alleged that Maggie Williams, joined by her husband, C. W. Williams, pro forma, and Robert Adams are claiming the property sued for under an administrator's sale had in the estate of Isabella Carmichael, deceased. They alleged that said sale was and is void, and that no title passed thereby, and that, as they are the sole heirs of Isabella Carmichael, deceased, they are the owners of said property.

The foregoing allegations were followed by other allegations attacking certain decrees and orders entered in the probate court in 1917 and 1918 in the estate of Isabella Carmichael, as well as the sale of the land in controversy purporting to be a sale by virtue of an order of the court in said estate and the approval of such sale by said probate court. They alleged, among other things, that defendants procured the appointment of the plaintiff Louis Carmichael as administrator in an unlawful manner on the 23d day of December, 1918, in that such appointment was made by the probate court without notice of any character of the parties interested in said estate, and that soon thereafter defendants, with intent and purpose of obtaining title and possession of the property involved in this suit, procured the removal of said administrator and the appointment of George E. Snell, the father of the defendant Mrs. Maggie Williams, as such administrator and the sale of the property by him as such administrator. They alleged that said sale was void, in that Snell was never *Page 503 legally appointed as such administrator, but that, if it be conceded that such appointment was legal, still the sale of the property by him was void, in that the order under which he sold was void because it authorized the sale to be made either at public or private sale and did not direct the manner in which it should be sold; that it was also void because of a fraudulent collusion between said administrator and Mrs. Maggie Williams, who was the purchaser at said sale; that said administrator exercised no diligence in the sale of the property, but that he sold the same within two days after the issuance of the order of sale at a grossly inadequate price, and that as a fact no consideration whatever was paid for the property. They pray that, though it should be held that such sale was not void by reason of such fraud and collusion, the equitable rights of plaintiffs be established as a resulting trust because of such fraud.

They alleged that defendant Adams was asserting some claim to the property, the nature of which was unknown to them, and that defendant McNally was constable and was attempting to execute a writ of possession and to place defendants in possession of the property, and prayed for judgment for title to and possession of the property, and in the alternative to have their equitable rights established to the property, and an injunction restraining McNally from executing said writ of possession.

Defendants answered by general demurrer and numerous special exceptions, whereby they excepted to all parts and paragraphs of plaintiffs' petition which attack the probate proceedings in the estate of Mrs. Isabella Carmichael, in that such attack is a collateral attack upon the orders and judgments of the probate court of Harris county, a court of competent jurisdiction in probate matters such as were adjudicated by said court in the estate of Isabella Carmichael. They also made general denial, and specially alleged, substantially, that Louis Carmichael, one of the plaintiffs in the suit, was regularly appointed as administrator of the estate of Isabella Carmichael, and that the defendant Maggie Williams presented to said administrator her claim of $310 against said estate, which said claim was by said administrator rejected and disallowed, and that thereafter, in manner and form as required by law, she procured judgment in a court of competent jurisdiction upon her said claim; that said judgment was certified to and approved by the judge of the probate court of Harris county, Tex.; that thereafter the said Louis Carmichael had refused to further act as administrator of said estate, and was removed as such administrator by the probate court, and that thereafter George Snell was regularly appointed in his stead that plaintiff Maggie Williams acted in good faith in her efforts to collect her said claim, and, after procuring her said judgment and after the approval of same, she and the said George Snell, administrator, made diligent efforts for a long time to find a purchaser for the property at a fair price before asking for an order of sale, but that plaintiffs in various ways hindered and discouraged prospective purchasers from buying said property.

The trial was before a jury on the 11th day of July, 1923. After the parties offered their evidence the court instructed the jury to return its verdict awarding to the plaintiffs an undivided one-half interest in the property sued for and to the defendants Maggie Williams and husband, C. W. Williams, the other one-half thereof. Thereupon, and upon the undisputed evidence, judgment was rendered awarding to the plaintiffs an undivided one-half interest in said property and to the defendants Williams the other undivided one-half interest therein; and it was further ordered that the injunction theretofore issued against constable McNally be made perpetual, and that, it being made apparent to the court that the property in controversy is incapable of partition in kind, said property should upon the application of the defendants be sold for the purpose of partition. All the costs of the suit were adjudged against the plaintiffs.

From the judgement so rendered the plaintiffs have appealed.

It was agreed and shown that Archie Carmichael, father and grandfather of the plaintiffs, purchased and became the owner of the property involved in the suit on the 23d day of August, 1886, and that he was the common source of title.

The judgment of the court was based upon the theory that the undisputed evidence showed that at the time of the purchase of the property by Archie Carmichael, Mrs. Isabella Carmichael, under whom appellees claim, was his wife, and that the property in controversy was the community property of the husband and wife at the time of its purchase and at the time of the death of the husband, who died leaving surviving him his said wife, and that the wife owned an undivided one-half interest therein, and that such interest passed to plaintiff Maggie Williams by the sale made in the probate proceedings in the estate of Isabella Carmichael.

Appellants contend: (1) That, since it was agreed that Archie Carmichael was the common source of title, it was incumbent up on defendant to show that title passed from such common source to them before they could recover, and that no such showing was made; (2) that no presumption that the property was community property because it was purchased during the marriage relations of Archie Carmichael and Isabella Carmichael *Page 504

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Bluebook (online)
268 S.W. 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carmichael-v-williams-texapp-1924.