Jones v. Wynne

129 S.W.2d 279, 133 Tex. 436
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1939
DocketNo. 7277.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 129 S.W.2d 279 (Jones v. Wynne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Wynne, 129 S.W.2d 279, 133 Tex. 436 (Tex. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Taylor

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals; Section B.

The children and heirs at law of Helen M. Jones, deceased, filed in the district court a petition in which G. A. Wynne and J. B. Jones, the surviving husband of Mrs. Jones and father of her children, were named as defendants. Plaintiffs sought by the petition to review by certiorari in the district court the action of the probate court in approving the claim of Wynne, which was allowed by Jones as administrator against the estate of Mrs. Jones for the amount of three notes signed by her aggregating $16,386.00. The district court sustained a general demurrer to the petition and dismissed the writ of certiorari as having been improvidently granted. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment. 104 S. W. (2d) 141. Application for writ of error was granted upon the application of the children of Mrs. Jones, who will be designated here as plaintiffs. Wynne and Jones, defendants in error, will be designated as defendants when referred to collectively.

Two questions are presented: (a) whether the district court is authorized to review by certiorari the action of the probate court in approving the claim in question; and (b) whether, in event the remedy by certiorari does, not lie, plaintiffs’ petition filed in the district court states a good cause of action as an original suit in that court.

The questions will be considered in the order stated.

Plaintiffs contend that the district court has jurisdiction to review by certiorari the action 'of the probate court in approving the claim in question under the provisions of Article 932 R. C. S. 1925. The article reads:

“Art. 932. Any person interested in the estate of a decedent or ward may have the proceedings of the county court therein revised and corrected at any time within two years after such proceedings were had, and not afterwards. Persons non compos mentis, infants and femes coverts shall have two years after the removal of their respective disabilities within which to apply for such revision and correction.”

The foregoing article is not incorporated in either of the titles of the statutes which deal exclusively with probate proceedings and make provision for review of such proceedings *439 exclusively, but is found in the title (27) which deals with the general subject of certiorari to the county and justice courts. It will be noted that it does not purport to provide a method of review for any special action of the probate court.

Defendants contend that the Legislature in providing in Article 3525 R. C. S. 1925 for review by direct appeal of the special action of the court in approving or disapproving a claim, intended to make such method of appeal the exclusive remedy. That article reads:

“Art. 3525. The action of the court in approving or disapproving a claim shall have the force and effect of a final judgment, and when the claimants, or any person interested in the estate, shall be dissatisfied with such action, he may appeal therefrom to the district court, as from other judgments of the county court rendered in probate matters.”

The same respective contentions were made by the parties in Dunaway v. Ester, 119 S. W. (2d) 421, now pending in this Court. (See this volume, p. 309, 129 S. W. (2d) 286.) The Court of Civil Appeals in that case concluded that the district court was authorized to review by certiorari the action of the probate court in approving the claim against the decedent’s estate there involved, citing as the leading authority in support of its holding the majority opinion in Puckett v. McCall, 30 Texas 457. Plaintiffs in the present case also cite this opinion as the leading authority in support of their similar contention.

We think it would profit little toward deciding the question under consideration to discuss the Puckett case, even if it sustained the proposition to which it is cited, which we need not decide. It arose prior to the adoption of the Constitution of 1876. It appears to have been settled by the decisons under the Constitution of .1845 and the statutes enacted pursuant thereto, that while orders generally of the probate court could be revised by both direct appeal and certiorari, as well as by bill of review, the special action of the court in approving a claim was not “such an order or decree or proceeding in the county court as could be appealed from or revised upon certiorari by the district court.” It appears to have been the most generally accepted view that such could be set aside only by an original proceeding commenced in the district court for that purpose. Heffner, Adm. v. Brander et al., 23 Texas 631; Neill v. Hodge, 5 Texas 487; Taliaferro v. Hubbel, 6 Texas 166; Jones v. Underwood, 11 Texas 116; Moore v. Hillebrant, 14 *440 Texas 312, 65 Am. Dec. 118; Eccles v. Daniels, 16 Texas 136; Hillebrant v. Burton, 17 Texas 138; Lott v. Cloud, 23 Texas 254; Moseley v. Gray, 23 Texas 496; Giddings v. Steel, 28 Texas 732, 91 Am. Dec. 336; Howard v. Johnson, 69 Texas 655, 7 S. W. 522.

However that may be, the Constitution of 1876 and the statutes passed pursuant thereto have made changes with respect to the probate procedure. Const, of 1876, Art. V, secs. 8 and 16. Such statutes having been four times codified and subdivided into titles more or less complete within themselves, dealing with, among other subjects, that of the review of the proceedings of the probate court in transacting “all of the business appertaining to the estates of deceased persons, minors,” etc. Title 54 of the present (1925) codification deals with the subject of “estates of decedents” and title 69 with that of “guardian and ward.” It is pertinent, we think, to point out in the present codification the identity in content and meaning of the corresponding statutes in the two titles which provide the methods of review of the proceedings relating to the two subjects respectively, especially since such identity appears to have obtained in all of the revisions of the statutes, including the first in 1879, and since this Court in De Cordova v. Rogers, 97 Texas 60, 75 S. W. 16, which construes the statutes bearing upon the proper method to review the action of the probate court in approving the guardianship claims there in question, is deemed controlling here. It is cited by the Court of Civil Appeals in the present case and is relied upon by defendants, as the leading authority in support of its holding that the district court was not authorized to review by certiorari the action of the probate court in approving Wynne’s claim against the estate of Mrs. Jones.

The identity of the corresponding statutes in the present codification will now be shown by a brief summarization of those deemed pertinent.

Article 3698 relating to proceedings had with respect to estates of decedents, provides that any person who may consider himself aggrieved by any decision, order, decree' or judgment of the county court, shall have the right to review same by direct appeal therefrom to the district court upon complying with the provisions stipulated.

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129 S.W.2d 279, 133 Tex. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-wynne-tex-1939.