Cunningham v. Parker

219 S.W.2d 698, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1691
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 1949
DocketNo. 15014
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 219 S.W.2d 698 (Cunningham v. Parker) 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
Cunningham v. Parker, 219 S.W.2d 698, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1691 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

The appellants herein, to wit, Joe Preston Cunningham, John Bedford Cunningham .and Walter Henry Swain, sued the estate, .the surviving wife and children of their former guardian, L. C. Parker, deceased, in a district court of Wichita County, Texas, for moneys wrongfully appropriated by •the said L. C. Parker while acting as guardian of appellants, and to set aside a deed from the deceased guardian to his children as in fraud of appellants’ rights'as creditors of said deceased guardian’s estate.-

The undisputed evidence relates that L. C. Parker-was appointed guardian of the estates of appellants Joe Preston Cunningham and John Bedford Cunnigham on or about April 7, 1919 and that he was removed as guardian of said estates on or about March 17, 1927; that said guardianship proceedings were then pending in the County Court of Roberts County, Texas; that no final account was ever filed by the said Parker; that there was a settlement made and entered into by and between his successor as guardian and his bondsmen, which will hereinafter be referred to.

That the said L. C. Parker was appointed guardian of the ■estate of -appellant Walter Henry Swain on or about March 9, 1921 and that he continued to act as such guardian until he was removed by the court on or about August 31, 1927, that such guardianship proceedings were at that time pending in the County Court of Donley County, Texas, and that he never filed a final account in said estate upon his removal but that his bondsmen did maké a settlement to his successor.

Appellants alleged in addition to the above undisputed facts that the said L. C. Parker as guardian of their estates misappropriated revenue belonging to their estates and applied the same for his own purposes and benefit’ as follows:

“(a) Proceeds from wheat crop harvested from the plaintiffs’ land situated in Roberts County, Texas in.the year 1919, a sum of at least $34,500.00.;

“(b) Rent derived from the plaintiffs’ •property situated in Port Arthur, Jefferson County, Texas for the year 1919- through 1927 ipclusive in the sum of at least $3,-000.00;

“(c) Sale of oil and gas lease to J. E. Parker covering 315 acres out of Section No. 13, H & GN RR Co. Survey No. 13, Abstract Ño. 146-Wichita County, Texas . in the year 1921 for the sum of $3,150.00;

“(d) Sale of oil and gas lease to Mrs. A. M. Armstrong covering 25 acres out of Section No. 13 H & GN RR Co. Survey No. 13, Abstract No. 146, Wichita County, [700]*700Texas in the year 1921 for the sum of $12,500.00;

“(e) Sale of right-of-way to Wichita County, Texas 3.7 acres out ov Block B, Tarrant County School Land in Wichita County, Texas in the year 1921 for the sum of $2,500.00;

“(f) Royalties from sale of oil produced on Section No. 13, H & GN RR Co-. Survey No. 13, Abstract No. 146, Wichita County, Texas for the years 1919 through 1927 inclusive, $20,000.00.”

Appellants further alleged that the said L. C. Parker as their guardian fraudulently and secretly leased for oil and gas certain lands owned by them for the sum of $3,150 to one J. E. Parker, when in truth and in fact said lease was worth $100,000, with the understanding that the said J. E. Parker would deliver one-half the proceeds from said lease to the said L. C. Parker. They further sued for ten per cent interest annually on the amount Parker did not invest and on the amount he converted to his own use and benefit.

Appellants further alleged that the said L. C. Parker conveyed to his children without consideration some 900 acres of land situated in Wichita County, Texas for the purpose of defrauding his creditors, especially appellants herein, to whom he was indebted. In their first trial amendment they denied having owed the sum of $2,-315 to L. C. Parker for care, custody and control of appellants and for commissions paid him in the sum of $1,020.76. In the second trial amendment they sued for collection of money received by L. C. Parker from James E. Parker for one-half the profit made by James E. Parker on his sale of parts of or all of the 315 acre lease above enumerated in the sum of $21,225 and the collection o'f money, notes and interest on sale of a farm unaccounted for by L. C. Parker in the sum of $10,000.

The court’s charge to the jury consists of 57 pages of the transcript; we will discuss the issues that are in point here. Suffice it to say, however, that all of the ultimate issues submitted relative to limitation were answered by the jury against appellants and in favor of appellees. The trial court’s judgment includes 56 pages of the transcript and it is only necessary to state here at this time that said judgment was rendered against appellants and for appellees, to which action of the court appellants perfected this appeal, assigning as error ten points. They are briefly:

(1) Trial court erred in admitting in evidence defendants’ exhibits known as 24 and 25 as “Kinney Audit.”

(2) “ * * * One of the attorneys for appellees was guilty of grossly improper conduct during his examination of the witness James E. Parker.”

(3) Court erred in admitting in evidence copy of the chattel mortgage register of Roberts County, Texas pertaining to the claim of the White House Lumber Company.

(4) Trial court erred in submitting to the jury twelve special issues.

(5) The jury’s answers to such twelve issues were wholly without support in the evidence.

(6) The court erred in submitting ten issues inquiring as to whether by the exercise of reasonable diligence appellants could and should have known of the misappropriation of such funds and property by L. C. Parker more than four years prior to July 29, 1947.

(7) That the jury’s answers to such ten special issues were wholly without support in the evidence.

(8) The court erred in submitting special issue No. 41 inquiring as to what length of time after appellants became twenty-one by the exercise of reasonable diligence- they could and should have known of the misappropriation of funds by L. C. Parker.

(9) That such answer of the jury was speculative and without support in the evidence.

(10) The jury’s answers to eight issues were without support in the evidence.

Appellees’ counterpoint A is that the judgment of the trial court was correct because the undisputed evidence shows appellants’ cause of action was barred by limitation as plead by appellees. .Counterpoint B is that the trial court’s judgment is correct in that the undisputed evidence reveals that appellants’ suit is a collateral attack upon an accounting by the County Court; and [701]*701filed many other counterpoints which are not necessary to discuss at this time.

In the same year 1927 that L. C. Parker was removed as guardian of the respective estates, Ethel Swain Parker was appointed guardian of the estate of appellant Walter Henry Swain, and Beulah Frances May was appointed guardian of appellants Cunning-hams, and in said year both guardianships were moved to Wichita County and remained in said county until appellants became twenty-one years of age.

On or about March 22, 1928 the guardian of appellant Swain filed a petition in probate court to recover from the bondsmen of L. C. Parker the amount which he as former guardian owed appellant Walter Henry Swain; the guardian alleged in her petition that the books and accounts of L. C.

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W.2d 698, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-parker-texapp-1949.