Dickson v. Klett

211 S.W.2d 381, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1218
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 29, 1948
DocketNo. 11969.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 211 S.W.2d 381 (Dickson v. Klett) 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
Dickson v. Klett, 211 S.W.2d 381, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1218 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

This is a plea of privilege case. It was filed in Lavaca County against a resident of Lubbock County. In his affidavit controverting defendant’s plea of privilege, plaintiff contended that his suit was maintainable where it was brought under Subdivisions 5 and 29a of R.C.S. Article 1995, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 1995, subds. 5, 29a. But the court, trying the controversy without a jury, sustained the plea and ordered the case transferred to Lubbock, the county of defendant’s residence. No conclusions of fact or law were requested.

Raymond Dickson, who is hereafter called plaintiff, was a beneficiary 'under the *383 will of Julia C. Green, deceased, and brought this suit on his own behalf and on that of all other beneficiaries of said will against E. L. Klett, both as an individual and in his capacities as temporary administrator of the estate of Julia C. Green and independent executor of William D. Green, deceased, and plaintiff joined Miriam Green, widow of the said William D. Green, as a defendant to his said suit. E. L. Klett held his said representative capacities under letters from the county court of Lavaca County wherein the wills of- Julia C. Green and William D. Green were probated. — In the course of the proceeding, the plaintiff, with the approval of the court entered of record, dismissed his suit against E. L. Klett in his individual capacity and against Mrs. Miriam Green, widow of William D. Green, and proceeded to judgment in the controversy only against E. L. Klett in Mr. Klett’s representative capacities.

It is the position of plaintiff that his petition and controverting affidavit discloses that his suit was on a promissory note for the principle sum of $20,000.00, executed by the aforesaid William D. Green on August 20, 1943, which, according to its written terms, was payable to said Julia C. Green on demand, at Shiner in Lavaca County, Texas, and that the petition further discloses that it was brought to recover such additional amount which it alleged could be made certain upon an accounting between the estates of the aforesaid Julia C. Green and William D. Green.

The petition is a lengthy one and since the parties disagree as to the nature of the suit which it discloses it is deemed necessary to set forth a more detailed statement of its allegations and prayer than would ordinarily be required. The allegations are in substance:

That Julia C. Green and William Green were husband and wife and were the parents of one child who was the aforementioned William D. Green; that William Green, the father of William D. Green and husband of Julia C. Green, died testate in the year 1927 leaving an estate consisting entirely of the community property of himself and the said Julia C. Green which was of the appraised value of $930,000.00 consisting of various kinds of property including lands located in various parts of the state; that Julia C. Green declined to act as independent executrix of her said husband’s will, and that William D. Green qualified as independent exectutor of the aforesaid estate of William Green and that his mother, Julia C. Green, appointed him her agent and attorney-in-fact with most comprehensive powers over her property-including the property which she had inherited from her parents which was around 1000 acres with a value of $50,000.00'; that the said William D. Green managed the Green properties until he died in 1945; that during the term of said management he commingled the income from the various Green properties, and from the sale of some of said properties, and during said term there was no accounting between the said William D. Green and his mother.

That’ upon the death of William D. Green, defendant qualified as William D. Green’s independent executor and continued to manage said properties until the death of Julia C. Green on May 30, 1946, during which period he rendered no accounting and upon the death of Julia C. Green defendant actively sought and obtained the appointment as temporary administrator of her estate and that he has all the records, books, accounts, etc., in his possession and will not permit same to be examined to determine the state of accounts between said estates.

That from the inheritance income tax return filed with the comptroller, plaintiff found that defendant reported that William D. Green left an estate of the net worth of approximately $840,000.00 at.d in said return showed the $20,000.00 promissory note as a liability of said estate and also showed a liability on open account to the William Green estate of approximately $20,000.00. That on August 23, 1946, defendant, as temporary administrator of the estate of Julia C. Green, filed an exhibit in the probate court in which he stated the total value of the entire estate left by Julia C. Green was only $209,943.88 and that such estate included 920 acres of land of .the approximate value of $50,000.00 which she had inherited from her parents and which constituted no part of the community estate *384 owned by her and her husband at his death in 1927. That in exhibiting the $20,000.00 promissory note aforesaid as a liability of the William D. Green estate, defendant did not show same as an asset of the Julia C. Green estate, and when plaintiff requested defendant to collect same, defendant declined to do so, and replied that “others interested in the estate” had not agreed for him to recognize the promissory note as a liability of the estate of William D. Green.

In addition to the items which the plaintiff alleged that he discovered in which Julia C. Green had an interest and which her temporary administrator refused to recognize her interest, plaintiff alleged upon information and belief that there are other properties, claims and credits known to defendant which would constitute assets of the estate of Julia C. Green but which have not been inventoried or listed as such and defendant has refused and refuses to produce or disclose to plaintiff the books, records, and accounts in his possession relating either to the estate of Julia C. Green or William Green (in which Julia C. Green owned a one-half interest) or William D. Green which plaintiff believes and so alleges discloses obligations to the estate of Julia C. Green. Plaintiff alleged that defendant had disclosed that unless he was required to do so, he would not bring into the estate of Julia C. Green all of the estate’s belongings thereto “thus, while this suit for an accounting and other relief should be brought by the temporary administrator of Julia C. Green, such suit manifestly will not and cannot be brought by the said Klett whose loyalty in the premises is not the undivided loyalty of the administrator to the' estate but is a loyalty primarily to the cause and interest of Miriam Green. Under these circumstances, the said Klett in his capacity as administrator of the estate of Julia C. Green is brought in as a defendant and joined with the other defendants herein from' whom an accounting is required in law; * * * The prayer in the petition was for:

“(a) There be an accounting as to all sums and assets in the hands of Klett, either individually or as Independent Executor of the Estate of William Dickson Green, or in the hands of defendant, Miriam Green, which belong to the Estate of Julia C. Green, deceased, or in which said estate has an interest;
“(b) The indebtedness of the Estate of William Dickson Green to the Estate of Julia C.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W.2d 381, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickson-v-klett-texapp-1948.