Jones v. Eastham

36 S.W.2d 538
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1931
DocketNo. 9492.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 36 S.W.2d 538 (Jones v. Eastham) 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
Jones v. Eastham, 36 S.W.2d 538 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

LANE, J.

The statement of the case made below is substantially the same as made in appellees’ brief and is, we think, sufficient for the purpose of disposing of the issues presented on this appeal.

On November 10, 1915, Luther Eastham, Jr., filed his application for guardianship of the estate of his brother, W. A. Eastham, alleging that said brother was a person of unsound mind, and on the 30th day of November, 1915, and without a complaint in lunacy having first been filed against the said W. A. Eastham, and without the said W. A. Eastham having first been tried in lunacy and found in such statutory proceeding to be a person of unsound mind, the probate court of Walker county appointed Luther Eastham, Jr., guardian of the estate of W. A. Eastham, and directed letters of guardianship be issued to him upon his giving bond in the sum of $200,000, and the court appointed appraisers. The bond required by the purported order of the court, at the time the court attempted to appoint Luther Eastham, Jr., guardian of the estate of W. A. Eastham, was given by Luther Eastham, Jr., as principal, and by B. D. Eastham, L. O. Eastham, H. G. Eastham, and W. L. Dean, as sureties. Luther Eastham, Jr., purported to act under this bond as guardian of the estate of W. A. Eastham until the 15th day of September, 1918, when a new bond was filed by Luther Eastham, Jr., with the American Surety Company of New York as surety.

Luther Eastham, Jr., filed his application to resign as guardian in November, 1926, and on the 13th day of November was permitted to resign as guardian of said estate.

During all the years that Luther Eastham, Jr., purported to act as guarclian of the estate of W. A. Eastham, he filed annual accounts purporting to show the condition of the estate of W. A. Eastham, truthfully reflecting his handling thereof, and each of the said annual accounts so filed were approved by the probate court of Walker county, in so far as said court had jurisdiction and authority to approve same.

But during all said years no complaint in lunacy had ever been filed against W. A. East-ham, and he had never been adjudged a person of unsound mind, and on the 11th day of May, 1927, the appellant in this cause, Mrs. Helen M. Jones, made affidavit “that W. A. Eastham, a citizen of Walker County, Texas, but temporarily in Dallas County, Texas, is a lunatic, or non compos mentis, and that the welfare of himself and others* requires that he be placed under restraint; tjiat said W. A. Eastham has been mentally deranged for a number of years, and has been continually confined in an institution for the mentally afflicted, and has at all times been treated for mental afflictions by physicians ; that recently he has been confined in the Timberlong Sanitarium at Dallas, Texas, and is without guardian of his person and estate.”

On May 13, 1927, Helen M. Jones made application to be appointed guardian of the estate of W. A. Eastham, the very day upon which W. A. Eastham was first lawfully tried and found to be a person of unsound mind.

G. A. Wynne also filed application for letters of guardianship upon the estate of W. *539 A. Eastward, non compos mentis, and Mrs. Byrd E. Wooters filed, as intervener, an application that sfie be appointed guardian of said estate. Mrs. Wooters prevailed in said contest for letters of guardianship and was appointed guardian, and since her appointment has continued to act as the duly qualified and legal guardian of the estate of W. A. Eastham, non compos ¡méntis, and is the only person who has ever served as the lawful guardian of said estate, save and except that G. A. Wynne did serve as temporary guardian pending said contest.

There was an appeal from the order of the probate court, appointing Mrs. Byrd E. Woo-ters guardian of the person and estate of W. A. Eastham, to the district court of Walker county, and upon the judgment of the probate court being affirmed by said court, there was an appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals for the First Supreme Judicial District of Texas, at Galveston, which court in all things affirmed the judgment of the probate and district courts of Walker county. 7 S.W.(2d) 940. •

Mrs. Wooters promptly qualified as guardian of the person and estate of W. A. East-ham, non compos mentis, and gave a bond as such guardian in the sum of $225,000, which was duly approved by th^ probate court on the 15th day of July, 1927, from which time Mrs. Wooters has continued to act as guardian of the person and estate of her brother, W. A. Eastham, non compos mentis.

At the time Luther Eastham, Jr., filed his application to resign as guardian (under his void appointment), and at the time the contest arose between Mrs. Helen M. Jones and Mrs. Byrd E. Wooters as to which one should he the successor of Luther Eastham, Jr., as guardian of the estate of their brother, W. A. Eastham, no one interested in said suit seems to have thought of the illegality of the action of the probate court of Walker county in appointing Luther Eastham, Jr., guardian of the person and estate of W. A. Eastham before complaint in lunacy had ever been filed against the said W. A. Eastham; and this fact seems to have first been considered in the district court of Walker county in cause No. 5223, which court, in disposing of the contest for letters of guardianship, found “from the evidence that W. A. Eastham has never been adjudged by a court of competent jurisdiction to be a non compos mentis, and the court is of the opinion that the county court of Walker County, as well as this court, is without authority of law to appoint a guardian for the said W. A. Easthaim, unless and until he is adjudged by a court of competent jurisdiction to he a non compos mentis.”

“It is therefore, ordered adjudged, and decreed by the court that the order of the county court of Walker County attempting to appoint Tom Ball, Jr., guardian of the estate of W. A. Eastham is without authority of law and is void, and it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that no guardian should he appointed by either this court or by the county court of Walker county, unless and until the said W. A. Eastham is adjudged to be non compos mentis. ⅜ * *»

This order was entered in a contest for letters of guardianship wherein the appellant was contesting with her sister, Mrs. Byrd E. Wooters, her right to be appointed the successor of Luther Eastham, Jr., as guardian of the person and estate of W. A. Eastham; this judgment of the district court of Walker county was never appealed from.

In this same guardianship proceeding, appellant, on January 19, 1929, filed her petition for bill of review. Just what judgment or order of the probate court the appellant desired to have reviewed by the court is not specifically stated by her in her petition, nor is it stated by what right she filed, and expects to maintain, this action, save and except that it is alleged by her that she “is a sister of the said W. A. Eastham, non compos men-tis, and is a devisee named in the last will and testament of the said W. A. Eastham, which was executed prior to the time W. A. Eastham was adjudged non compos mentis, and has a vested interest in the estate-of the said W. A. Eastham, subject only to said will being lawfully revoked.”

W. A. Eastham was living at the time she filed her so-called “application for bill of review and restatement of the account of Luther Eastham, Jr.,” and is still living, and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W.2d 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-eastham-texapp-1931.