Gill v. Baird

32 S.W.2d 941
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 21, 1930
DocketNo. 2000.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 32 S.W.2d 941 (Gill v. Baird) 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
Gill v. Baird, 32 S.W.2d 941 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

This is a suit between the heirs of L. E. and Mattie Baird, both deceased, for partition of certain real estate left by said L. E. and Mattie Baird. The plaintiffs Lila Baird, a feme sole, Robbie Jones, joined by her husband, M. R. Jones, Lela Holt, joined by her husband, J. T. M. Holt, and Winnie Ivy, joined by her husband, N. D. Ivy, filed their petition in the district court of Angelina county on October 21, 1929, against Bertie Gill, a feme sole, and Laura Dunham and her husband, F. L. Dun-ham, all said parties being children and heirs at law of L. E. and Mattie Baird.

Plaintiffs alleged that L. E. and Mattie Baird died possessed of certain real and personal property. That on February 12, 1929, said heirs, plaintiffs and defendants herein, executed a deed of partition by which they partitioned all of the property and estate of said L. E. and Mattie Baird, deceased, among said heirs, except certain described real estate, same being certain lots in the town of Huntington, Tex., and alleged the value of , said unpartitioned property was $3,000. They further alleged that each of said heirs, plaintiffs and defendants, owned an undivided one-sixth interest in and to said property, and that there were no debts owing by said estate. That, if the court should determine that the lots in question be found not susceptible to partition, then in that event they be sold to the highest bidder and the proceeds equally *943 divided among said heirs. They further alleged that both L. IS. and Mattie Baird died intestate, and that no administration was taken out on the estates of either, and that plaintiffs and defendants were the sole and only surviving heirs, and that all and each of them were of lawful age, and prayed that said property, twenty-four lots, be partitioned among said heirs, or, in the event said lots could not be partitioned, then that same be sold and the proceeds equally divided among them, and that the costs of suit be taxed equally against them.

The defendants answered by general demurrer, general denial, and a plea of not guilty. They admitted that the parties plaintiff and defendant were the heirs and only heirs of L. E. and Mattie Baird, but denied that L. E. Baird died intestate, and alleged that he left a will wherein he willed to his wife all his property, both real and personal. They admitted that L. E. and Mattie Baird left an estate consisting of both real and personal property, and that on February 12, 1929, the heirs executed the partition deed pleaded by plaintiffs, but alleged an oral agreement of partition made b^ said heirs at the same time to partition the property here in question, and that under the terms of said oral agreement and partition it was agreed and understood that, whereas the plaintiffs were obtaining and receiving property of more value in the partition deed than defendants Bertie Gill and Laura Dunham, when said lots should be partitioned, said Bertie Gill and Laura Dun-ham should receive more in value out of said lots than plaintiffs, so that, when added to the land awarded to them in the partition deed, they would receive an equal share of the entire estate left by L. E. and Mattie Baird as the plaintiffs had received and were receiving in this partition.

Defendants further answered that the recitation in the partition deed of February 12, 1929, that said heirs were the owners and held the lots sought to be partitioned jointly, and that each of said heirs had and held a one-sixth interest therein, was placed in said deed by mistake, and that they relied upon the promise of plaintiffs to carry out the oral partition agreed upon prior to and contemporaneous with the execution of the partition deed.

Defendant Bertie Gill specially answered and alleged that, at 'the time the partition deed was executed, and the oral partition pleaded by defendants was made, it was agreed in said oral agreement and partition that, in the division of the lots in question; she was to have and should receive as her additional portion of her father and mother’s estate the homestead upon which she and her mother resided at the time of her mother’s death, and of which she was in possession as her homestead at the time of the trial, the said homestead being situated upon some of the lots sought to be partitioned. Defendants prayed that said property be partitioned in accordance with the oral partition agreement pleaded by them, and that the Homestead be awarded to Bertie Gill. ■ By cross-action defendant Bertie Gill sued plaintiffs, alleging that she had been in possession of the L. E. and Mattie Baird homestead ever since the death of her father; that she had no other home, and asked that same be set aside to her in the partition of said property, and that in the partition said cross-plaintiffs be awarded a sufficiency of said property to make the portion received by them out of the whole estate equal to that received by the plaintiffs..

By supplemental petition plaintiffs demurred generally to defendants’ answer and cross-action, and specially excepted to the ■ homestead right claimed by defendant Bertie Gill, and denied generally and specially all the allegations contained in the defendants’ answer and cross-action.

Defendants, by supplemental answer, alleged that if, as a matter of law, Bertie Gill was not entitled to have the homestead set apart to her in the partition of the property in question, then she was so entitled in equity, for in that she was living in and occupying said home or homestead as a homestead at the time of her mother’s death, and she had no other home, and asked that same be award- . ed to her.

The court sustained plaintiffs’ special exception to defendant Bertie Gill’s plea of homestead, to which the defendants excepted. The defendants then moved to dismiss their cross-action, which motion was granted, and the cross-action dismissed.

Defendants then filed a motion for a continuance which was denied, and the case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, in answer to which they found that the property was not susceptible of partition. Judgment was entered finding the property not susceptible of partition and ordering same sold at public auction for cash and the proceeds divided among the parties equally, one-sixth each, and that all costs of suit incurred to the rendition of judgment be taxed against plaintiffs and defendants in proportion to their respective interests, except that any additional costs incurred by reason of the filing óf the defendants’ answer and their contest urged against a partition of property be taxed against them. Motion for a new trial was overruled, to which action of the court defendants excepted, gave notice of appeal, and the case is duly before us for review.

Appellants’ first proposition asserts fundamental error in the court’s overruling their general demurrer to the plaintiffs’ petition because said petition did not allege that no administration on the estate of L. E. and Mattie Baird was pending, and that none was necessary,, or that the time within which an administration on said estate might be taken *944 out had elapsed, the insistence being that, in the absence of such allegation, followed by proof, the court was without jurisdiction to hear and determine the matter, and hence their general demurrer should have been sustained.

We think the assignment should be overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W.2d 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gill-v-baird-texapp-1930.