George Zegub/Gloria Zegub Manos and Charlene Zegub v. Gloria Zegub Manos Charlene Zegub, Independent of the Estate of Lewis Zegub Dean Zegub Lyle Zegub Mike Manos, III Kelly Schievelbein And Nancy Scherer, Administratrix of the Estate of Victoria Zegub/George Zegub

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 2000
Docket03-99-00234-CV
StatusPublished

This text of George Zegub/Gloria Zegub Manos and Charlene Zegub v. Gloria Zegub Manos Charlene Zegub, Independent of the Estate of Lewis Zegub Dean Zegub Lyle Zegub Mike Manos, III Kelly Schievelbein And Nancy Scherer, Administratrix of the Estate of Victoria Zegub/George Zegub (George Zegub/Gloria Zegub Manos and Charlene Zegub v. Gloria Zegub Manos Charlene Zegub, Independent of the Estate of Lewis Zegub Dean Zegub Lyle Zegub Mike Manos, III Kelly Schievelbein And Nancy Scherer, Administratrix of the Estate of Victoria Zegub/George Zegub) 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.

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George Zegub/Gloria Zegub Manos and Charlene Zegub v. Gloria Zegub Manos Charlene Zegub, Independent of the Estate of Lewis Zegub Dean Zegub Lyle Zegub Mike Manos, III Kelly Schievelbein And Nancy Scherer, Administratrix of the Estate of Victoria Zegub/George Zegub, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-99-00234-CV

George Zegub/Gloria Zegub Manos and Charlene Zegub, Appellants


v.



Gloria Zegub Manos; Charlene Zegub, as Independent Executrix of the Estate of Lewis

Zegub; Dean Zegub; Lyle Zegub; Mike Manos, III; Kelly Schievelbein;and Nancy

Scherer, Administratrix of the Estate of Victoria Zegub/George Zegub, Appellees



FROM THE PROBATE COURT NO. 1 OF TRAVIS COUNTY

NO. 58,222-A, HONORABLE GUY S. HERMAN, JUDGE PRESIDING

George Zegub, Jr. appeals the probate court's declaratory judgment resolving various issues in his mother's estate. (1) We will affirm.

Factual Background

George Zegub, Sr. ("George Sr.") and Victoria Joseph Zegub ("Victoria") were husband and wife and had three children: Lewis J. Zegub ("Lewis"), Gloria Zegub Manos ("Gloria") and George Zegub, Jr. ("George Jr.") (collectively "Zegub children"). George Sr. died intestate on October 22, 1976, survived by Victoria and the Zegub children. At the time of George Sr.'s death, the Zegub children had the following children: Lewis (Kelly Schievelbein); Gloria (Mike Manos, III); and George Jr. (Georgia Ford, Dini Nash, Dean Zegub, and Lyle E.M.Zegub) (collectively "Zegub grandchildren"). Because George Sr. died intestate, under section 45 of the Probate Code then in effect, Victoria would have retained her half of the community estate and George Sr.'s half would have passed in equal undivided one-third interests to the Zegub children. Act of March 17, 1955, 54th Leg., R.S., ch. 55, sec. 45, 1955 Tex. Gen. Laws 88, 103 (Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 45, since amended).

On December 1, 1976, the Zegub children, intending to "disclaim" their father's share of the community marital estate and pass their inherited interests to their mother, each signed a disclaimer (2) pursuant to section 37A of the Probate Code. See Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 37A (West Supp. 2000). The Zegub children believed the disclaimer was effective to give George Sr.'s one-half community share of the marital estate which they inherited in undivided one-third interests to Victoria. After the date of the disclaimer, all interested parties treated the disclaimer as having passed George Sr.'s property to Victoria. Victoria administered George Sr.'s estate which closed following approval of a final accounting by order dated March 28, 1978. The order awarded George Sr.'s entire estate to Victoria as his sole heir at law. George Sr. owned no separate property and all marital property owned by George Sr. and Victoria was community property.

In 1982, Victoria transferred real property located at 607 East 3rd Street to George Jr. The City of Austin subsequently condemned the property and George Jr. received $250,000. On October 26, 1983, Victoria signed a will which indicated that she wanted the inter vivos transfer to George Jr. to be taken into consideration when her estate was divided to insure that all Zegub children received an equal share of her estate. Victoria died testate (3) on May 28, 1991 survived by all the Zegub children and grandchildren. Her will was admitted to probate on June 7, 1991. The Zegub children entered a written settlement agreement ("Family Settlement Agreement") on December 13, 1991, which attempted to equitably divide Victoria's estate given the value of the inter vivos transfer to George Jr. compared to the value of Victoria's estate.

Despite the Family Settlement Agreement, George Jr. remained dissatisfied and eventually filed a partition suit in district court seeking to partition the tracts of land and to divide the proceeds among the Zegub children and Zegub grandchildren according to their interests. Charlene (4) and Gloria filed an adverse probate action in Victoria's pending probate seeking, among other matters, a reformation or recission of the disclaimer (5) and for reimbursement from George Jr. to Lewis' Estate and Gloria to equalize their respective shares of Victoria's estate, in light of the inter vivos transfer to George Jr. Gloria and Charlene also sought a transfer of George Jr.'s partition suit into the probate court, which the probate court granted.

In the declaratory judgment, the probate court found that the disclaimer did not transfer the Zegub children's interests in their father's estate to their mother. The probate court found that the disclaimer moved the Zegub children's interests "downstream" to the Zegub grandchildren, not "upstream" to Victoria. Because the disclaimer was valid despite the children's contrary intent, the probate court refused to set it aside. Although the Zegub grandchildren inherited George Sr.'s one-half community share of the marital estate, Victoria held and used the personal property and the income from the real property until her death in 1991. The probate court characterized Victoria's possession of the personal property and rental proceeds of the Zegub grandchildren as a resulting trust which terminated upon each grandchild reaching majority. According to the probate court, Victoria had a fiduciary obligation to turn over a proportionate share of the personal property and the rental proceeds to each of the grandchildren as he or she reached eighteen. Victoria failed to do so. None of the Zegub grandchildren received their inheritance or requested their property from Victoria before her death and none filed suit for conversion within four years of reaching majority.

Two of George Jr.'s children, Dean and Lyle, filed the first suits for damages in November 1996. The probate court stated that these lawsuits tolled the statute of limitations as to Dean and Lyle on their claims for income from the rental properties, but only for the four years immediately preceding the filing dates. The probate court concluded that the Zegub grandchildren's claims for tortious conversion of personal property were barred by the statute of limitations.

The probate court further found that the Zegub children entered the Family Settlement Agreement based on the erroneous belief that Victoria owned one-hundred percent of the real and personal property, rather than one-half. Accordingly, the probate court set aside the agreement due to mutual mistake of the parties, and set aside the transfers of property made pursuant to it. The probate court determined because George Jr. received real property which far exceeded the total value of Victoria's estate and because Victoria's will clearly indicated her intent that her children share equally in her estate, George Jr. was not entitled to take under the will. However, because Victoria operated under a unilateral mistake in believing that her estate would be valued at least at twice the value of the property transferred to George Jr., the probate court did not order George to reimburse the estate. The probate court made various awards of attorney's fees as a result of the declaratory judgment. Only George Jr. appeals, raising six issues.



Discussion

We note at the outset that George Jr. failed to secure a reporter's record for our review. See Tex. R. App. P. 35.3(b)(2)-(3). Accordingly, we are bound to assume that the missing evidence supports the trial court's ruling. In re Spiegel

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George Zegub/Gloria Zegub Manos and Charlene Zegub v. Gloria Zegub Manos Charlene Zegub, Independent of the Estate of Lewis Zegub Dean Zegub Lyle Zegub Mike Manos, III Kelly Schievelbein And Nancy Scherer, Administratrix of the Estate of Victoria Zegub/George Zegub, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-zegubgloria-zegub-manos-and-charlene-zegub-v-gloria-zegub-manos-texapp-2000.