Clement v. Clement

99 S.W. 138, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 574, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 567
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 22, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 99 S.W. 138 (Clement v. Clement) 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
Clement v. Clement, 99 S.W. 138, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 574, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 567 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

BAINEY, Chief Justice.

This is an action for conversion, brought by appellant as plaintiff, to recover of appellees H. A. Clement and B. F. Scott. The property alleged to have been converted was money, notes, deposits, business and good will of the Paris Exchange Bank, which *576 belonged to plaintiff’s mother, R. C. Clement, she having died, and plaintiff claiming one-fifth interest as an heir.

Defendants plead the general denial, two years limitation and res adjudicaba.

The court peremptorily instructed for defendants and verdict and judgment were accordingly so rendered, and plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The first error presented is, that the court erred in admitting in evidence the pleadings and judgment in the suit of H. A. Clement and Owen P. Hale v. Lucy I. Rush, et al., in the District Court. The contention is that R. F. Scott was not a party to that suit; that H. A. Clement was not a party in his individual capacity but in his fiduciary capacity, and that the matters in issue here could not have been determinated in that suit.

In 1903 Mrs. R. C. Clement died, leaving a will with H. A. Clement and Owen P. Hale as independent executors of her estate. By the provisions of said will her five children, H. A. Clement, R. M. Clement, Mrs. Lucy I. Rush, Mary E. Clement and W. R. Clement, were the legatees of the main portion of said estate. In December, 1903, H. A. Clement and Owen P. Hale, as executors, joined by R. M. Clement, instituted suit in the District Court against Lucy I. Rush, Mary E. Clement and W. R. Clement, seeking a settlement- and partition of said estate among the legatees, setting forth the assets subject to distribution and for their discharge.

In the answer and cross bill of Mrs. Rush and Miss Clement, they alleged that, the plaintiff, H. A. Clement, Lucy I. Rush, Mary E. Clement, R. M. Clement and W. R. Clement own jointly and as tenants in common the real estate, money, notes, judgments and other evidences of indebtedness that are set out in plaintiff’s petition; but they say that they are joint owners of largely more money, notes, judgments and other evidences of indebtedness and other personal property, than alleged in said petition and in the inventory filed in the County Court of the estate of Mrs. Clement. In their cross bill they allege various things and set up certain notes that belonged to said estate that had not been inventoried and accounted for.

In paragraph second of said cross bill they alleged that at the date of the death of Mrs. R. C. Clement, the said H. A. Clement was indebted to Mrs. R. C. Clement in the sum of about $35,000; that they can not state the exact amount, when due, whether evidenced by note or not, for the reason that for many years before the death of Mrs. Clement, H. A. Clement had been her agent and business manager: had control of her property and kept all her notes and accounts in his possession; and that said indebtedness has not been accounted for. They set up various acts of alleged mismanagement on the part of the executors. They prayed for the appointment of a receiver, and that H. A. Clement be -required to turn over the books of the Paris Exchange Bank, etc., and they also prayed that “on final hearing Lucy I. Rush, Mary E. Clement, W. R. Clement and R. M. Clement each have judgment against H. A. Clement for one-fifth of the amount due by H. A. Clement to R. C. Clement at the date of her death.”

In the answer of W. R. Clement in said cause, he alleges that he *577 admits that H. A. Clement, E. M. Clement, Lucy I. Bush, Mary E. Clement and himself are the onty heirs of E. C. Clement, and that they are each entitled to one-fifth of her estate, but denies that the whole of said estate is set out or referred to in plaintiff’s petition.

“And by way of special answer and cross bill, this defendant here now adopts and makes a part of his cross bill all allegations contained in the cross bill of his co-defendants, Lucy I. Bush and Mary E. Clement, and charges and maims the whole of said allegations of his said co-defendants his own allegations, without here copying the same. In addition to the allegations made by his said co-defendants Lucy I. Bush and Mary E. Clement, this defendant further alleges that the inventory referred to by the plaintiffs fails to show all the money on hand at the death of E. C. Clement in this, that this defendant verily believes and so alleges, that she had at her death the sum of $36,000 instead of only $19,767.67, as alleged by plaintiffs; that E. C. Clement is the widow of S. E. Clement, deceased, who died in 1895, leaving a large estate to his said widow, and that from the time of his death to the time of the death of said R. C. Clement, H. A. Clement acted as her agent, and was the active manager of all the estate of said R. C. Clement, and that he and his co-plaintiff colluded and conspired together to actually control her' estate; that said E. C. Clement was old and infirm and incapable of actively managing her estate, and that plaintiff taking advantage of her infirmity, exercised an undue influence over her, and H. A. Clement and R. M. Clement got possession of a great deal of valuable property belonging to her, and in a manner that is entirely hostile to the interests of this defendant, and his co-defendants, as will be more particularly hereinafter set out, which property H. A. Clement and Owen P. Hale have failed to inventory as a part of her estate.

“Defendants allege that H. A. Clement is in possession of valuable real estate rightfully belonging to the estate of E. C. Clement, situated on the southeast corner of the public square, in the city of Paris, Texas, on the west side of South Main Street, fronting on the public square 54 feet, and running south with South Main Street 90 feet, now occupied by the Paris Loan and Trust Company, and formerly occupied by the Paris Exchange Bank, together with bank fixtures and furniture, bank vault and safes, contained in the building on said lot. Also' the building situated thereon and now occupied by the Postal Telegraph and Cable Company, and Mohr Bros, saloon; said H. A. Clement is claiming to have purchased said property from said E. C. Clement, but this defendant alleges that if he did purchase the same, that he has never paid the purchase money therefor, and if he did pay the purchase money, he still holds the same for the estate and heirs> of R. C. Clement, and that he and his co-executor have never inventoried the same, nor accounted to the heirs therefor. The rental value of said property is reasonably worth the sum of $300 per month.”

“This defendant further alleges that at the time of the death of S. E. Clement in 1895,- Mrs. R. C. Clement became the owner of 498 shares of the capital stock of the Paris Exchange Bank, a private corporation created under the laws of Texas, with a valuable charter running for fifty 3rears and doing a. general banking business in the city of Paris; *578 that there was only two other shares of stock, one held by H. A. Clement and the other by R. M. Clement; that the shares of stock were of the face value of $100 each; that H. A. Clement was the cashier of said bank, and on the death of S. E.

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W. 138, 44 Tex. Civ. App. 574, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clement-v-clement-texapp-1906.