John v. Elick, Susan Elick Grube, Nancy Elick Basham and Jamie J. Elick v. Sharon Beaty Long and Rhae Beaty Hall

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 17, 1996
Docket03-95-00350-CV
StatusPublished

This text of John v. Elick, Susan Elick Grube, Nancy Elick Basham and Jamie J. Elick v. Sharon Beaty Long and Rhae Beaty Hall (John v. Elick, Susan Elick Grube, Nancy Elick Basham and Jamie J. Elick v. Sharon Beaty Long and Rhae Beaty Hall) 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
John v. Elick, Susan Elick Grube, Nancy Elick Basham and Jamie J. Elick v. Sharon Beaty Long and Rhae Beaty Hall, (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

elick

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-95-00350-CV



John V. Elick, Susan Elick Grube, Nancy Elick Basham,

and Jamie J. Elick, Appellants



v.



Sharon Beaty Long and Rhae Beaty Hall, Appellees



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY, 26TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 88-474-C, HONORABLE WILLIAM S. LOTT, JUDGE PRESIDING



Appellants, John V. Elick, Susan Elick Grube, Nancy Elick Basham, and Jamie J. Elick ("the Elicks") appeal from an interlocutory decree establishing percentage ownership interests in a parcel of land located in Williamson County, Texas, and from a judgment partitioning the land. The Elicks also appeal the trial court's disposition of funds held jointly with appellees Sharon Beaty Long and Rhae Beaty Hall ("the Beatys"). In multiple points of error, appellants contend that the trial court erred in its calculation of present ownership of the property and in finding that no mortgages, liens, or encumbrances had attached to the property. Appellants also contend that the trial court erred in its judgment partitioning the property in accordance with the commissioners' report and offsetting appellants' share of rents and revenues by $13,398 expended for repairs. We will dismiss the portion of the appeal from the trial court's interlocutory decree and affirm its judgment of partition.

BACKGROUND

This dispute concerns the partition of 338.7 acres of land in Williamson County, Texas. In 1949 L. L. Hill's will devised the property to his son, Lonnie D. Hill, subject to the condition that Lonnie pay $10,000 to L. L. Hill's other children (or their descendants) within five years of his death. Lonnie paid the $10,000 with community funds. He and his wife, Ella Elick Hill, lived on the property until their deaths.

Lonnie Hill died in 1971. His will gave his wife a life estate in the property and divided the remainder interest equally among his eight nieces and nephews or their descendants. Ella Elick Hill occupied the property until her death in 1987. Before her death, she had acquired two and five-eighths of the eight remainder interests. Five of the remainder interests are held in equal shares by Sharon Beaty Long and Rhae Beaty Hall. Charles Volney Hill, Jr. holds the other three-eighths remainder interest. In her will Ella Elick Hill conveyed all her interest in the property to her nieces and nephews, who by partition deed conveyed that interest to the Elicks, the appellants in this case. The present conflict pits Lonnie's nieces and nephews and their descendants (the Beatys) against Ella's nieces and nephews and their descendants (the Elicks) regarding their respective ownership interests in and partition of the Williamson County property.

The parties submitted the matter to the court on stipulated facts. By partial summary judgment the trial court declared the property free of liens, mortgages, or encumbrances and declared the following ownership interests in the property: Beatys 62.5%, Elicks 32.8125%, Hill 4.6875%. The trial court then ordered a partition and appointed three commissioners to file a written report. When it was filed, the Elicks objected to the commissioners' report. After a hearing, the court approved the commissioners' partition of the property, partitioned the accumulated rents and revenues, offsetting $13,398 used to repair the residence awarded to the Elicks against their share of the accumulated funds. The Elicks bring this appeal.

The first issue is to determine the undivided interests in this land owned by each of the families. Central to the determination of this question is whether any portion of the land was held as community property due to the $10,000 payment Lonnie made to his siblings during marriage. In her role as independent executor of Lonnie's estate, Ella filed a sworn inventory listing 70.93% of the Williamson County land as Lonnie's separate property and 29.07% as community property. The Elicks contend that because this characterization was proper, the inventory filed in Ella's estate correctly included one-half of this community interest (14.54%) plus the remainder interests that she had acquired before her death (32.8125%) as Ella's ownership in the property. The Beatys insist that the land Lonnie Hill inherited from his father was his separate property. From the district court, they sought a construction of L. L. Hill's will and reformation of the inventories filed in both Lonnie and Ella's estates in order to declare the true ownership in the property. Under the Beatys' characterization of the property, the Elicks would own only the remainder interests Ella purchased from members of Lonnie's family after his death.

The second issue concerns the existence of a lien against the property. The Elicks, in the alternative, argue that if none of the land was held as community property, at least the property was burdened with a lien to reimburse the community estate the $10,000, plus interest, used to pay Lonnie's siblings. Third, the Elicks dispute the trial court's ruling that $13,398 expended to repair the residence located on the property and awarded to them by the commissioners should be charged against their share of accumulated rents and revenues. Finally, the Elicks argue that the evidence does not support the trial court's finding that the commissioners' division of the land resulted in shares equal in value to the parties' respective interests in the property.



DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS

We will address points of error one, two and three together as they all complain that the trial court's interlocutory judgment erroneously rejected Ella Elick Hill's community interest in the property. The trial court rendered its order determining ownership interests on January 7, 1991; no timely appeal was taken. In a partition case, the decree of the trial court determining ownership interests and questions of law affecting the title, ordering partition, and appointing commissioners, although called interlocutory, is a final judgment for the purposes of appeal. Marmion v. Wells, 246 S.W.2d 704, 705 (Tex. Civ. App.--San Antonio 1952, writ ref'd); Ellis v. First City National Bank, 864 S.W.2d 555, 557 (Tex. App.--Tyler 1993, no writ). Matters decided in the first decree cannot be reviewed in an appeal from the second decree finalizing the partition. Ellis, 864 S.W.2d at 557. Because appellants failed to appeal the trial court's interlocutory decree in a timely manner, we dismiss their appeal from that decree and overrule appellants' points of error one, two and three.

Even if appellants had timely appealed the decree determining ownership interests, we find their complaints to be without merit. The ownership dispute between the parties is really a dispute over the construction of L. L.

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John v. Elick, Susan Elick Grube, Nancy Elick Basham and Jamie J. Elick v. Sharon Beaty Long and Rhae Beaty Hall, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-v-elick-susan-elick-grube-nancy-elick-basham--texapp-1996.