Legler v. Legler

189 S.W.2d 505, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 777
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 11, 1945
DocketNo. 9507; Motion Nos. 10193, 10192.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 189 S.W.2d 505 (Legler v. Legler) 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
Legler v. Legler, 189 S.W.2d 505, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 777 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinions

Appeal is from the judgment of the district court, approving, upon appeal to that court from the probate court, the final account of Louis Legler as guardian of the person and estate of Augusta Legler, a person of unsound mind. The record shows the following:

Louis Legler was the brother of his ward, Augusta Legler. Their father, Anton Legler, died testate in 1924. Their mother had died intestate prior to that time. In his will, duly probated, and of which Louis, appellee here, was appointed independent executor, Anton undertook to distribute amongst his eleven children both his community estate and that of his deceased wife; and made Louis trustee of the share devised to Augusta, directing him, among other things to "invest her share as he sees proper and pay her the interest * * *"

In 1925 Josef Legler, husband of Augusta, who had abandoned her about ten years prior thereto, made application to be appointed guardian of the person and estate of Augusta, then insane. This application was contested by Louis Legler, the contest sustained, and Louis was appointed guardian of her person and estate on October 5, 1925. See Legler v. Legler, Tex. Civ. App. 37 S.W.2d 284. He qualified as such, took possession of her estate, consisting of interest bearing notes aggregating $4670, one-half of which passed to her under the will of her father, of which Louis became independent trustee, and the other half, or $2335, by inheritance from her mother. The probate court assumed jurisdiction in the guardianship proceedings only over the one-half inherited by Augusta from her mother. Thus Louis had control and management of her estate, one-half as trustee under the will, independent of the probate court; and one-half as guardian subject to the orders of the probate court, and the statutes relating to guardianships.

Louis rented a small house for his ward near his own home where she lived until 1942, when she was placed in the State Hospital, at Austin, Texas, and remained there until her death on May 5, 1944. Thereupon Edna A. and Frank Legler, children of Augusta, filed an application in the probate court to require Louis Legler, as guardian, to make an accounting and final settlement with them of the estate of their deceased mother. Louis thereupon filed a final account, showing payment to appellants of $1,800, claiming commissions to himself in the sum of $229.25, and showing a balance due appellants of $209.50. Appellants excepted to this account on numerous grounds, but chiefly on the grounds that Louis had not, during his entire guardianship of some 18 years, made any annual reports and had not invested the funds of his ward as required by law, nor expended the income therefrom as required by law; and prayed that he be required to pay to them the principal of the estate with interest thereon at 10% compounded annually. The probate court approved the account as filed, including commissions, and allowed Louis, as guardian, $125 as attorney's fees and $75 as court costs, to be paid out of Augusta's estate.

Upon appeal, the district court, after a full hearing in which the original account was corrected and restated more in detail, but not substantially changed, approved the account as restated, refused to allow the guardian any commissions, but did allow the attorney's fees and costs as proper charges against the estate. From this judgment the contestants have appealed. Appellee has cross assigned as error the refusal of the court to allow him the commissions claimed.

Appellants present fourteen points of error, several of which include the same *Page 509 general contentions and may be considered together. The first is that the court should have disapproved the account because the guardian made no segregation of that portion of the ward's estate held by him as guardian from that portion held by him as trustee under his father's will; but treated both such portions as one, commingled them with his own individual funds, made and collected investments in his own name, and handled same as if they were his own without in any manner separately identifying either of said funds.

The record affirmatively shows such facts to be true. The entire estate of Augusta Legler when taken over by Louis consisted of notes. In reality it was but one estate, one-half of which he controlled as independent trustee, and onehalf as guardian, subject to the jurisdiction of the probate court. The two interests were already commingled and for all practical purposes constituted but a single estate of which the ward was the sole beneficiary. While the guardian did not segregate the two nor return any annual accounts relating to the guardianship, as the law requires, he did keep an accurate set of books showing all investments, income and expenditures of the ward's estate, and detailed same by years in his final account. It was not shown that failure to segregate the two portions of the estate and report to the probate court as to the portion controlled as guardian, resulted in any loss to the estate, or in anywise interfered with prudent management or investment of the ward's funds. Consequently we are of the opinion that mere failure to segregate the two portions and handle them as two separate estates, when in reality they constituted but one estate, would not warrant the court in disapproving the final account on that ground.

It is also urged that the court should have disapproved the account because the guardian did not invest the ward's funds as provided in Art. 4180, R.C.S.; nor file annual accounts as guardian as required by Art. 4297, R.C.S. The record shows that at no time did the guardian seek the approval of the probate court in investing his ward's funds either before or after such investments were made. His failure to do so does not, however, render such investments void. While Art. 4180, R.C.S., specifies the character of securities in which a ward's funds may be invested; Art. 4181 provides for security for such money loaned; and Arts. 4182-4185 provide that such trust funds cannot be invested in real estate, except under order of the probate court; it is also true that Art. 4165 provides: "It is the duty of the guardian of the estate to take care of and manage such estate as a prudent man would manage his own property. He shall account for all rents, profits and revenues as the estate would have produced by such prudent management."

A guardian may invest his ward's funds in the securities prescribed in Art. 4180 without an order of the probate court. Attaway v. Ellis, Tex. Civ. App. 173 S.W.2d 367; 21 Tex.Jur. Sec. 48, p. 272. In a case where the guardian, without any order from the probate court placed his ward's funds as an interest bearing deposit in a bank, which subsequently failed, the court in Shaw v. Dalston, Tex. Civ. App. 18 S.W.2d 215, 220, writ ref., laid down the following rule as determining the liability of the guardian:

"Such care, prudence, and judgment as a prudent man would exercise in the transaction of his own business furnish the standard to govern a guardian in the custody and management of the ward's money, including lending it at interest. The guardian may, however, procure an order from the probate court to lend the money at interest, although he is not in duty bound to do so. Article 4190. The effect of the order of the probate court authorizing the lending of the money at interest is merely to protect the guardian from personal responsibility for the loan. Article 4190, Rev.St. 1925; 28 C.J. § 234, p. 1140; 21 Cyc. p.

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189 S.W.2d 505, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/legler-v-legler-texapp-1945.