Hovel v. Kaufman

266 S.W. 858
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1924
DocketNo. 7226. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 266 S.W. 858 (Hovel v. Kaufman) 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
Hovel v. Kaufman, 266 S.W. 858 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This suit, in the form of an action in trespass to try title, was brought by appellant, Mary Louise Hovel, widow of J. C. Hovel, deceased, to recover of L. Kaufman and another, appellees herein, the title and possession of certain real property situated in the city of San Antonio. The Hovels purchased the property from Julia Swart, shown to have been the common source of the title of all the parties. Subsequently the title to the property got in litigation, involving vendor’s, mechanic’s, and tax liens, as well as other claims, and resulting in the entry of a final judgment in the Forty-Fifth district court of Bexar county, and the placing of the property in the custody of a receiver appointed by that court. Said judgment was agreed to by ¿11 the parties at interest, including the Hovels, was not set aside or appealed from or reversed, and therefore became final. By its express terms the title of the property was divested out of the Hovels as well as the other parties and vested in the receiver, who, subsequently and in pursuance of the provisions of the judgment, sold and conveyed the property to ap-pellees herein, and such sales were confirmed by the orders of said district court. It is under this title that appellees assert their claim to the property in controversy.

No question is made of the regularity of the proceedings in the district court or of the validity of the receiver’s sale and conveyance thereunder to appellees, except as that sale, may be defeated by the fact that, after the- entry of the agreed judgment and appointment of the receiver and the latter’s assumption of title and custody of the property ¡under said judgment, but before the sale and conveyance of the property to ap-pellees by the receiver, J. C. Hovel, husband of appellant, was adjudged of unsound mind, and a guardian of his estate had qualified, and at the time of the sale was acting as such, under an appointment by the probate court of Bexar county.

One of the questions raised here, then, is whether or not the receiver appointed by the district court was authorized under the law, as applied to the facts we have stated, to sell and convey the property under the judgment theretofore rendered, notwithstanding the intervention of the lunacy and guardianship proceedings in the probate court between the time of the entry of said judgment and the date of sale thereunder.

Some years after the sale of the property by the receiver to appellees J. O. Hovel died, and his widow, Mary Louise, succeeding to his estate, brought the action in the Fifty-Seventh district court of Bexar county. Upon the trial appellant, as plaintiff, introduced evidence of the facts we have hereinabove recited; that is to say, she introduced evidence of common source of title of the proceedings in the former suit in the district court, and .of the receiver’s sale and conveyance of title into appellees, which evidence, it will be conceded, if given full and exclusive effect, showed the title to the property to be in appellees.

But appellant at the same time introduced evidence of the proceedings in the probate court, showing the adjudication of J. C. Hovel’s insanity, the appointment and qualification of a guardian of his estate, his -subsequent death, and the passing of his interest in the property involved into appellant herein. Having done this, she rested her case, whereupon, and without offering any testimony, appellees moved for an instructed *860 verdict, which was granted, and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants. This appeal resulted.

Now it is contended by appellant that “the power to sell the property of an insane person, for whose estate the court has duly appointed a guardian, and which guardian has actually qualified and is acting, is exclusively vested in the county court, and an attempted sale thereof by the district court is void, in the absence of equities existing which make' the power of sale of the probate court inadequate. to grant full and complete relief”; that the sale in this case by the receiver for the district court, occurring after the qualification of the guardian appointed by the probate court, was void, because, for one reason, the equities of the parties were not such that the power of the probate court was inadequate to grant and administer full and | complete relief. While these contentions i may not be unsound in every particular, we must overrule them as a whole.

The general rule’seems to be that, under the provisions of .our Constitution (article 6, § 16), as construed by the courts, • the probate courts have, the exclusive power to administer upon estates of persons of unsound mind; that, where a probate court has once obtained jurisdiction in a particular case, or of a particular estate, the district court may not interfere with that jurisdiction, or with the control or administration of such estate, unless, indeed, the rights and equities of persons asserting claims upon the estate are of such nature that the power of the probate court is inadequate to grant appropriate relief, in which contingency the district court, in the exercise of its equity powers, may interfere and grant such relief. Cannon v. McDaniel, 46 Tex. 303.

And it is provided in articles 4230 and 2004, R. S., that when a claim against such estate is established by judgment, or recovery of money is had against the guardian, such judgment shall in the one case be filed with the clerk of the probate court and entered upon the claim docket along with other claims, and in the other case shall be certified to the probate court for enforcement. So. in article 4234, R. S., it is provided that any .creditor of the ward or estate whose “claim has been approved by the court, or established by judgment,” may file and prosecute such claim in the probate court.

Now appellant takes the position that by virtue of those provisions of the statutes “the proper procedure for the various judgment creditors * ’ * * would have been to obtain certified copies of such judgment and file the same in the county court * * * in accordance with article 4230, * * * and to obtain an order of sale * * * in the county court, and to have the guardian in that cause sell the property in accordance with such order of sale, as provided for in article 4234, * * * or, should such judgment creditors have so preferred, any one or more of same could havé filed a motion in the district court * * * to have the judgment * * * revised and reformed so as to permit the same to be certified to the county court for observance in accordance with article 2004 of our Revised Statutes. * * * In view of the fact that neither of these procedures was followed,” appellant further contends “the attempted sales involved in this cause were and are void, and no title passed by virtue of said receiver’s deeds and the purported confirmations thereof.” We are of the opinion that there is no merit in these contentions.

In the first place, for reasons equally applicable to article 4234, our Supreme Court has held that articles 4230 and 2004 apply only. to claims and judgments which have accrued or been rendered against guardians as such. Simmons v. Arnim, 110 Tex. 309, 220 S. W. 66. Under that holding, the soundness of which cannot be questioned, the procedures provided for in the statutes cited are inapplicable here, because the judgment in controversy was not rendered against, the guardian, nor the estate of a ward, neither of which existed at the time the judgment was rendered.

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Bluebook (online)
266 S.W. 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hovel-v-kaufman-texapp-1924.