Evans v. Graves

347 S.W.2d 267, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2371
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 5, 1961
DocketNo. 16214
StatusPublished

This text of 347 S.W.2d 267 (Evans v. Graves) 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
Evans v. Graves, 347 S.W.2d 267, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2371 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

BOYD, Justice.

This is an appeal by Felix Evans, Walter E. Smith, M. T. (Pete) Smith, and in-tervener Pansy Ruth Williams Lloyd, joined by her husband, William Richard Lloyd, from a summary judgment in favor of Frank R. Graves, administrator of the estate of Alice Johnson Robitaille, deceased, and Mrs. Ada Jackson, who claims to be the owner of a portion of said estate. The motion prayed that the intervention be dismissed. A11 the appellants other than the Lloyds will be referred to as appellants, and the Lloyds will b.e referred to as intervener.

Appellants contested the final account of the administrator and petition to ¡close the estate in the Probate Court, and .appealed to the District Court. Intervener was not then a party to the suit. The summary judgment granted by the District Court recited that “ * * * there & no [268]*268genuine issue as to any material fact between the parties hereto which is properly before this court in this proceeding, the same being an appeal from an order of the Probate Court in this cause approving the Administrator’s final account and ordering the estate closed, and the Court is of the further opinion that it conclusively appears without dispute that none of the contestants of such motion for summary judgment, * * * have any interest in the estate * * * which was administered by the said * * *, Frank R. Graves, and that they are not entitled to contest the final account filed herein or the order closing said estate, and that none of them, * * * could receive any benefit from any action of this Court in reviewing the probate order appealed from, and that they therefore have no standing to prosecute such appeal, * * It was decreed that the contestants “take nothing and recover nothing herein,” and that the final account be approved and the estate closed.

Alice Johnson Robitaille died June 2, 1953. On June 13, 1953, Frank R. Graves filed an application to be appointed administrator of her estate, alleging that she died intestate. He was appointed and qualified as administrator on June 29, 1953. On June 3, 1955, Charles H. Johnson filed an application to have produced in court for probate an instrument alleged to be the will of Alice Johnson Robitaille in which he claimed to be a devisee, and which will was in the possession of Graves. An instrument was produced by Graves, and on December 27, 1955, it was admitted to probate as the holographic will of the deceased. Graves was appointed and qualified as administrator with the will annexed.

On September 8, 1958, Graves filed a final account and asked that it be approved, the estate closed, and he and his bondsmen be discharged. On January 7, 1959, appellants filed their amended contest of the final account, praying that it be disapproved, that the administrator be removed, that a substitute administrator be appointed; that the administrator be ordered to deliver to the court all records and papers pertaining to the estate, that an auditor be appointed to audit the estate; and in the alternative that Graves be ordered to file a full and complete account, accompanied by proper vouchers. On March 3, 1959, the final account was approved and the estate was ordered closed. Appellants appealed. On October 14, 1959, Mrs. Lloyd intervened in the District Court; and appellants amended, alleging fraud on the part of the administrator in acquiring interests from some heirs and devisees of deceased. This appeal to the District Court resulted in the summary judgment from which the appeal to this court was prosecuted.

On December 27, 1955, Graves filed suit for construction of the will of deceased, and for a declaratory judgment decreeing the interests of the defendants, who are the appellants here, J. M. Thornton and wife, and Mrs. Ada Jackson, who claimed to have purchased the interests of some heirs and devisees.

The will of Alice Johnson Rob-itaille was construed by this court in Jackson v. Evans, 305 S.W.2d 236, error ref. n. r. e. It was there held that after certain bequests and devises to her husband and her stepson, Charles Herman Johnson, and a life estate in a 90-acre farm to Mr. and Mrs. Thornton, the property of the deceased was to be held in trust until her obligations had been fully satisfied, then “her estate and properties” would go to her “heirs.” The word “heirs” was held to mean the persons who would be entitled to succeed to the property had she died intestate. Appellants were her nephews, Evans by the whole blood and the Smiths by the half blood. Her husband, Fabian John Robitaille, survived. She had no children and no other relative. Those who would take by the law of descent and distribution would be her husband and appellants.

[269]*269After all the debts were paid, Robitaille would be entitled to all the personal property, all the community real estate, and one-half of the separate real estate. The only separate real estate deceased had left after satisfying the devises in her will was the 90-acre farm, with a life estate in the Thorntons. Appellants, therefore, would be entitled only to one-half of the farm, subject to the life estate.

We have concluded that appellants had no such interest in the estate as would warrant them in contesting the final account and the closing of the administration. The debts are paid, and their interest in the farm descended by law to them without any act of the administrator. The farm brought in no rent. No action by the probate court as to the final account could inure to their benefit or detract from their interest. The summary judgment as to the appellants is affirmed.

Intervener is the executrix of and sole beneficiary in the will of F. J. Robitaille, now deceased. She was not a party to the contest of the final account in the County Court, and was not a party to the suit to construe the will and decree the interests of the claimants under the will. Although in the District Court when the appeal from the County Court was tried, she in fact did not ask specifically for any adjudication as to the final account or the closing of the estate, but prayed that the púrported deeds from F. J. Robitaille to Mrs. Jackson be set aside; that it be decreed that she is the owner of a one-half interest- in lots 2 and 3 and one-fourth interest in lots 6, 7, and 8 of the Dickinson Subdivision, and a one-fourth interest in the farm, all free of any claim of Graves, Mrs. Jackson, or appellants; for judgment against Graves for one-half of the rents collected by him, less amounts paid on debts; for judgment against Graves for any amount appellants might recover against her; and for “such other and further relief to which she may show herself entitled either at law or in equity.”

In her reply to the amended motion for summary judgment intervener asked that if the causes of action she asserted should not be determined in this suit, the petition in intervention be not dismissed but that such causes of action be severed.

By affidavit in support of the motion for summary judgment Graves said that by deeds dated August 31, 19S4, and November 18, 1954, Mrs. Jackson acquired all the interest of F. J. Robitaille in the estate of deceased; and in her affidavit in support of said motion, Mrs. Jackson said she purchased from F. J. Robitaille his entire interest in said estate. Intervener alleged, what all parties appear to concede, that the deed of August 31, 1954, was a mortgage to secure money borrowed by Robitaille from Mrs.

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Related

Atkins v. Womble
300 S.W.2d 688 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1957)
Jackson v. Evans
305 S.W.2d 236 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1957)
Womble v. Atkins
331 S.W.2d 294 (Texas Supreme Court, 1960)
Womble v. Atkins
314 S.W.2d 150 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
347 S.W.2d 267, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-graves-texapp-1961.