Guardianship of Price v. Murfee

408 S.W.2d 756, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2590
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1966
Docket7645
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 408 S.W.2d 756 (Guardianship of Price v. Murfee) 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
Guardianship of Price v. Murfee, 408 S.W.2d 756, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2590 (Tex. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

CHAPMAN, Justice.

It appears from the voluminous record before us that L. M. Price, deceased, and his wife, Bertie Noland Price, accumulated an estate of the total value of approximately five million dollars located principally in the North Plains of Texas, but partly in New Mexico and Oklahoma, consisting of land, cattle, oil and gas, banking, an insurance business and investments.

L. M. Price died in 19S5, leaving surviving him his wife, Bertie Noland Price (the sole beneficiary under his will) and two children, a son, W. N. Price, and a daughter, Kathryn Price Murfee.

W. N. Price died on October 4, 1964. Surviving him as children were W. L. Price, Jeanne P. Whittenburg, Lela Price Coyle and Patricia Price Roberson.

*757 On October 19, 1964, Kathryn Price Mur-fee, the only surviving child of L. M. Price and Bertie Noland Price, filed an application for Temporary Guardianship of the person and estate of her mother, then eighty-six years of age, alleging her to have been “ * * • * bedridden and under the continuous care of medical doctors and nurses for a number of years and she is both physically and mentally incompetent to manage and handle her property, financial affairs and estate and that she is a person of unsound mind.”

Mrs. Murfee was appointed Temporary Guardian of her mother on that same day. Apparently a suit then was filed by the children of W. N. Price contesting the permanent appointment of Mrs. Murfee as guardian of the person and estate of her mother and later withdrawn. The order of January 4, 1965-, appointing her so states. The order of the probate court found the ward, as a matter of law, to be a person of unsound mind and that it would be to the benefit and interest of such ward and her estate that Mrs. Murfee be appointed as guardian and “ * * * that the rights of persons and property will be protected by such appointment.” The proper oath was taken and a bond of $100,000 was duly executed to bind the faithful discharge of the guardian’s duties.

Subsequent to the dates above mentioned applications were filed in the probate court by the guardian for approval of professional fees incurred in the employment of accountants and attorneys and a contest thereto filed by the children of W. N. Price above named in their capacity as grandchildren of Bertie Noland Price, “ * * * a person of unsound mind” challenging the jurisdiction of the probate court to approve such fees. The record does not reveal a contest to the first application of March 1, 1965, for approval of the guardian to pay the professional fees but only a contest to the application of September 29, 1965.

An order was entered by the probate court on November 1, 1965, allowing the payment of such professional fees with the exception of $1,000. The grandchildren named gave notice of appeal to the district court of the order just recited and mechanically perfected such appeal. In the district court a Plea in Abatement and Motion to Dismiss were filed by the guardian under the contention that such grandchildren “ * * * have no right to maintain this suit in that no one of them is legally such an interested aggrieved person within the meaning of Section 28 of the Probate Code, V.A.C.S. of Texas, as to be permitted to contest the application of Kathryn Price Murfee, guardian of the person and estate of Bertie Noland Price, for approval and authority to pay statements for professional services rendered on behalf of such guardianship estate for the period of February 1, 1965, through September 15, 1965.” Also a motion for request for commission to take deposition of the guardian was filed, contested on many grounds, and the contest sustained by the district court.

On January 4, 1966, the district court sustained the guardian’s Plea in Abatement and Motion to Dismiss. Appeal is perfected to this court on points contending error of the trial court in not dismissing the guardian’s application for authority to pay the professional fees because of lack of jurisdiction of the county court of Randall County sitting in probate to entertain such motion and error of the trial court in sustaining the guardian’s Plea in Abatement and Motion to Dismiss. One point of error is also asserted for refusal of the trial court to admit testimony of a money claim by appellants against the ward. We shall first discuss the third point of error urged in the court’s sustaining of the guardian’s Plea In Abatement and Motion to Dismiss.

The objections to allowance of professional fees was filed by the parties named in their capacity as grandchildren of the ward and they admit by brief that the crux of their third point is the question as to whether they had such interest in the ward’s estate and were persons aggrieved under the Probate Code of Texas so as to allow them *758 to appear or to appeal. No point is made of alleged error in considering questions in the district court not considered in the probate court, so that question is not before us.

All emphases shown hereafter are ours unless otherwise indicated.

Section 28 of the Probate Code (successor to Article 4318, V.A.T.S.) above referred to provides, inter alia: “Any person who may consider himself aggrieved by any decision, order, decree, or judgment of the court shall have the right to appeal therefrom to the district court of the county.”

Appellants by brief admit the case of Craycroft v. Craycroft, Tex.Civ.App., 250 S.W.2d 458 is the only appellate authority construing Section 28, from which we have just quoted, since the probate code was adopted, and seeks to distinguish it on its facts from the instant case. There are some distinguishing facts, but it is worthy to note that the court said: “The primary question and, we think, the crux of this appeal, is that Wm. R. Craycroft is not legally such an ‘interested’ aggrieved party in the person and estate of his mother as to confer jurisdiction on the trial court on his petition to terminate the guardianship, alleging * * * in effect that his only interest in the matter is the natural inherent personal feeling of a son, with only a prospective inheritable interest in his mother’s estate.” The court then held:

“Only a person legally interested in an estate in which guardianship is pending may have any decision, order or judgment rendered by the probate court or the judge thereof, revised, corrected, or set aside. Such interest as the son bears to the ward does not qualify him as an ‘interested’ person as authorized by law to intervene in the probate court. Jones v. Eastham, Tex.Civ.App., 36 S.W.2d 538, writ refused. Obviously he has * * * no present legal rights in and to his mother’s property involved as would be affected by said guardianship proceedings.”

Jones v. Eastham cited in the Craycroft case and decided under former Article 4328, the predecessor article to Section 31 of the Probate Code, involved the question of whether a sister of the ward was such an aggrieved person as to entitle her to maintain a bill of review in the guardianship. The court said: “We hold that it is conclusively shown by the record that Mrs. Jones was not a party who could have been aggrieved at the judgment entered by the probate court in this suit,” citing cases.

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408 S.W.2d 756, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardianship-of-price-v-murfee-texapp-1966.