Hall v. Davison

176 S.W. 642, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 536
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 7, 1915
DocketNo. 6799.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 176 S.W. 642 (Hall v. Davison) 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
Hall v. Davison, 176 S.W. 642, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 536 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

On May 18, 1909, Mary J. Davison, the surviving wife of William Dajvi-son, deceased, filed in the county court of Newton county application to probate the will of the deceased. The will was presented with the application, and by its terms made certain bequests to the children 'and wife of the deceased, and appointed the wife, appellee here, sole executrix of his estate without bond. On June 18, 1910, John R. Davison and Mary A. Hall filed a contest, and on the same day H. S. Hall, one of the appellants, filed his application to be ap *643 pointed temporary administrator and was so appointed. On July !*, 1910, Hall and the contestants of the will filed their application to continue the cause for the term, and on July 9th an order was entered continuing Hall as temporary administrator until the decision of the contest.

On July 9, 1910, a special judge was duly elected and qualified. A motion was made to vacate and set aside the order made the salme day on the ground that it was entered on an ex parte hearing before the county judge at his residence, where he was confined by sickness, and at a time when court was not in session, which motion was granted. There was a trial, and the will offered by appellee as the last will of William Davi-son, deceased, was probated, and letters testamentary granted to appellee.

On July 8, 1911, Henry S. Hall, individually and as temporary administrator, complaining of appellee individually and as independent executrix of the estate of William Davison, deceased, and as temporary administratrix, filed his petition for certi-orari, which was granted, and he gave the required bond. Defendant (appellee) filed motion to dismiss the certiorari. On MArch 21, 1914, appellant Henry S. Hall filed an amended petition, and on March 24, 1914, appellee filed a motion to strike out the amended petition and dismiss the cause on the additional grounds that all persons adversely interested were not made parties, and that the pleading stated a new cause of action shown to be barred by limitation. On March 25th both motions presented by appellee were sustained and the certiorari dismissed. Thereafter appellant asked leave to file a second amended petition, and permission to do so was denied. From the judgment of dismissal Hall and John R. Davison, who joined him in the contest, have appealed.

Appellant in his petition for certiorari alleged, in substance, that on April -, 1910, William Davison died, and there was filed in the county court what purported to be a written will; that plaintiffs contested the validity of the will by written contest filed in said county court, and on the 18th of June plaintiff secured appointment of himself as temporary administrator, and he qualified in the terms of the law, and that thereafter, on the- day of June, 1910, the defendant filed her application to be appointed temporary administratrix, and to remove plaintiff, which was heard June 21, 1910, and denied; that thereafter her attorneys removed her application from the file for the purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the court, and thereafter, without appealing from the order and decree of the county court refusing to appoint her temporary administratrix, they filed another motion to remove plaintiff, which was pending at the July term of the county court; that said second motion was not heard, because of illness of the county judge, and a continuance was granted until the next term on said mattter, and entered of record; that thereupon plaintiff’s attorneys, who lived in Galveston, departed, and during their absence defendant, through her attorneys, procured an attorney from Orange county, and on the 9th of July, 1910, they proceeded to go through the form of electing said attorney special judge, and he assumed the bench and set aside the order of continuance entered by the regular county judge, and without ainy notice to plaintiffs or their attorneys proceeded to probate said will; that said attorney was not a resident of Newton county, and that as soon as he, acting as such special judge, concluded the hearing of this probate matter, he ait once adjourned court for the entire term, and left for Orange, being at said county seat of Newton county less than four hours; that there was a large volume of other civil, criminal, and probate business to be transacted, but that said adjournment was for the purpose of denying to plaintiff a hearing upon said matter when they became informed of said illegal acts; that all of said acts were a violation of the law, and said attorney acting as special judge, was disqualified, and an attack was made upon the action of the special judge in pretending to set aside the orders, judgments, and decrees of the regular judge for such probate matter; that the effort of Mary J. Davison to remove plaintiff by her second motion was res adjudicata, and that there ha'd been no appeal from said order; that the said Mary J. Davison was usurping the power of the temporary administrator. It was prayed that a writ of cer-tiorari be granted, and that upon hearing hereof the action of the said special judge be set aside, and that the action of the county judge in deciding said contest against contestants, and in admitting said will to probate, be reviewed, and that the order admitting said will to probate be set aside, and the probate of said will be tried anew, and that the motion of the said Mary J. Davi-son to remove plaintiff, and for her appointment as temporary administratrix pending the contest, be set aside, and the matter heard and tried anew, and that upon such trial in this court that the will be not admitted to probate, and that plaintiff have judgment on his contest thereof.

[1] The motion to dismiss was in the nature of general demurrers to the petition for certiorari, and we think they were properly sustained. It might be gathered from the petition that the purpose of the appeal was to obtain a review by the district court of the action of the county court in admitting the will to probate, as well as in removing the applicant as temporary administrator, and appointing the executrix in his stead. But a petition, to be sufficient to bring into *644 review tlie action oí the county court in admitting the will to prohate, should state the facts upon which it is relied to show that the purported will was void, or otherwise not entitled to probate; and the petition was wholly insufficient in this regard.

In Jirou v. Jirou, 136 S. W. 496, it is held that:

“The petition for certiorari, to be sufficient, must allege facts which, if true, would require the rendition of a different judgment upon the merits of the case from the order appealed from.”

Article 734, Revised Statutes 1911, provides:

“All applications for the writ of certiorari to the county court shall be made to the district court, or judge thereof. It * * * shall distinctly set forth the error in the proceeding sought to he revised.”

Article 740 provides:

“The cause shall be tried de novo in the district court, hut the issues shall he confined to the grounds of error specified in. the application for the writ.”

The italics are ours.

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.W. 642, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-davison-texapp-1915.