Gatesville Redi-Mix, Inc. v. Jones

787 S.W.2d 443, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 394, 1990 WL 17411
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 1990
Docket10-88-202-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 787 S.W.2d 443 (Gatesville Redi-Mix, Inc. v. Jones) 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
Gatesville Redi-Mix, Inc. v. Jones, 787 S.W.2d 443, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 394, 1990 WL 17411 (Tex. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

Nona Maude Jones died on January 10, 1974. She left a will in which she appointed her son, Kermit R. Jones, independent executor of the will without bond. The will provided that her debts should be paid out of her estate by the executor “without delay,” that a bequest of $1,000.00 should be paid to a named church, and that “all other property both real and personal that I may die seized and possessed of shall pass to and vest in fee simple in my four children, to-wit: W. Mat Jones, Kermit R. Jones, Dean B. Jones and Edith Floyd, share and share alike.” She then directed in the will “that no action be had in the county court in the settling of my estate other than the probating and recording of this my will and the return of an Inventory, Appraisement and List of Claims of my estate.” The will was admitted to probate on February 5, 1974. The probate court ordered that letters testamentary be issued to Kermit R. Jones as independent executor of the will and that he file a full and complete inventory and appraisement and list of claims of the estate. The inventory, appraisement and list of claims filed by the independent executor were approved by the probate court on April 25, 1974. The inventory of the estate reflected $19,369.55 in cash on deposit in a bank and a savings and loan association, $29,221.32 in United States Savings Bonds, 729.437 shares in Investment Company of America with a value of $9,678.33, 140 acres of land valued at $56,000.00 and household goods valued at $100.00. The claims against the estate listed $1,545.73 owed to a funeral home for the funeral services, $30.00 owed for a *444 grave marker, $2,500.00 due to an attorney for attorney’s fees incurred for the administration of the estate, and $40.50 owed for court costs, showing a total for all of the claims to be $4,116.23. At the time of trial of the case now before us the probate file also included a receipt from the Internal Revenue Service for the payment of estate taxes in the amount of $6,973.63, and an inheritance tax receipt for the amount of $82.02 paid to the State Comptroller of Public Accounts. The inheritance tax receipt was filed in the probate record in October 1974, and the estate tax receipt was filed in the record in July 1975.

On March 17, 1971, Nona Maude Jones leased the surface of three acres of the real estate owned by her at the time of her death to appellant Gatesville Redi-Mix, Inc. This lease had a primary term of five years terminating on March 17, 1976, with the lessee granted the option to extend the lease under the same terms and conditions for a period of ten years beginning March 17, 1976. The rental under the lease was $300.00 per year. Thereafter, on September 17, 1981, Kermit R. Jones, acting as independent executor of the estate of Nona Maude Jones, executed a lease with appellant on the same three acres. This lease had a primary term of five years beginning on March 17, 1986, with the lessee granted an option to extend the lease for ten years beginning March 17, 1991. This lease called for a rent of $1,000.00 per year.

Kermit R. Jones, the independent executor, died in March 1985. Following his death, his brother, Dean Jones, a devisee in the will of Nona Maude Jones, assumed informal administration of the affairs of the Jones Estate and held himself out as the “executor” and “administrator,” although he was never officially appointed by the probate court as a representative of the estate.

Although Kermit R. Jones had previously advised Dean Jones of the existence of the original lease from Nona Maude Jones to appellant, Dean Jones and the other devisees had no knowledge of the replacement lease until after Kermit’s death. In 1986, appellant sent Dean Jones a check for the first rent due under the new lease. Dean Jones, acting for appellees, refused the check and took the position that the lease was invalid. Appellees also refused all later lease payments tendered by appellant. Appellant filed this suit in September 1986, pleading for a judgment declaring that the lease executed by Kermit R. Jones as independent executor was valid. Appel-lees, the surviving heirs under the will of Nona Maude Jones, claimed in their answer that the lease was void because Kermit R. Jones did not have authority to execute it as independent executor of the estate. They filed a counterclaim for the recovery of reasonable compensation for the use and occupancy of the three acres by appellant from March 17, 1986 through the time of trial in April 1988, for the reasonable cost of restoring the three acres to their condition prior to the use and occupancy by appellant, and for attorney’s fees.

The case was tried to a jury. At the close of appellant’s proof, appellees moved for an instructed verdict on appellant’s cause of action. The court granted this motion by withdrawing appellant’s action from the jury. The case proceeded before the jury on appellees’ counterclaim. The jury found that $12,500.00 was reasonable compensation for the use and occupancy of the three acres by appellant from March 1986 through April 1988, and that $5,000.00 would reasonably compensate appellees for the cost of restoring the three acres. Additionally, the jury found that $5,000.00 was a reasonable attorney’s fee for the trial of appellees’ case and also made findings regarding reasonable attorney’s fees in the event of appeals of the case.

Judgment was rendered on the verdict awarding appellees the amount of damages and the amount of attorney’s fees found by the jury. The judgment also recited that the court had granted appellees’ motion for instructed verdict “for the reason that the court determined as a matter of law that the lease dated September 17, 1981 is void,” and judgment was rendered that appellant take nothing.

This appeal resulted on two points of error. Appellant first asserts that the trial *445 court erred in holding that the independent executor did not have authority to execute the lease in question. Second, appellant contends that the trial court should not have awarded attorney’s fees to appellees because the award was improperly based on the testimony of a witness not designated as an expert in response to interrogatories. We overrule these contentions and we affirm the judgment.

The record in the case shows that at the time of the execution of the lease in question in September 1981, the will of Nona Maude Jones had been properly admitted to probate and Kermit R. Jones had been properly appointed independent executor of the estate, that no final accounting had been filed in the probate records, and that the estate had not been closed although it had been in probate for over seven years. The record also contains the complete probate file discussed above that included the inventory, appraisement and list of claims, the order approving the inventory, ap-praisement and list of claims, and the receipts for payment of the estate and inheritance taxes.

It is the general rule in this state that an independent executor may, without order of the probate court, do any act which an ordinary executor or administrator could do with or under an order of the probate court. Rowland v. Moore, 141 Tex. 469, 174 S.W.2d 248, 250 (Tex.1943); Lang v. Shell Petroleum Corporation, 138 Tex. 399, 159 S.W.2d 478, 482 (1942).

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787 S.W.2d 443, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 394, 1990 WL 17411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gatesville-redi-mix-inc-v-jones-texapp-1990.