Lomax v. Comstock

110 S.W. 762, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 340, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 585
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 110 S.W. 762 (Lomax v. Comstock) 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
Lomax v. Comstock, 110 S.W. 762, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 340, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 585 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

JAMES, Chief Justice.

Mrs. Melissa T. Comstock filed her petition with the District Judge for, and obtained, a writ of certiorari to reverse and annul a certain order' of the County Court, directing the sale by the guardian of plaintiff of certain real estate, and an order of confirmation of the sale, and to cancel and annul the guardian’s deed of the property, to which said orders relate, to Mrs. Alice M. Lomax, the appellant, and to require the defendant, the Rio Grande Valley Bank & Trust Company, in whose hands were the five pur *343 chase money notes, to surrender same to Mrs. Lomax and her husband, and to require Mrs. Lomax and her husband to accept from plaintiff the cash payment of $947 which she paid to the guardian in the sale, and to require the Bio Grande Valley Bank & Trust Company to pay over the sum of $151.83 in its hands upon said amount, and to require Mrs. Lomax and her husband to account for the use of the real estate since November 13, 1905, and the rents and revenues of the same.

The petition is exceedingly lengthy. It appears therefrom that Mrs. Comstock had been adjudged insane, and on May 4, 1903, Joe Dunne become the guardian of her estate; that on September 27, 1905, he filed an application for an order of sale of the property in question comprising about 12 acres of land situated on the left hand side of the county road and between the county road and the G., H. & S. A. Railroad about two and one-half miles from the city of El Paso in El Paso County, Texas, known as the Comstock place. That on September 27, 1905, notice of the application was issued by the clerk requiring the posting thereof for twenty days, which notice was returned and filed on October 13, 1905, with the return of the sheriff thereon showing posting thereof on September 28, 1905, which was only fifteen days after the posting. That on November 6, 1905, the court made an order of sale of said property, and the next day, November 7, the guardian filed a report of sale in which was stated that he had sold same to Mrs. Alice M. Lomax, at private sale, for $4735.08; one-fifth in cash and balance in equal notes, and that the purchaser had complied with the terms of the sale. That on November 13, the sale was confirmed, and on same day the guardian executed a deed to Mrs. Lomax, she complying with the terms of the sale. That on January 10, 1906, Joe Dunne was removed as guardian and the Bio Grande Valley Bank & Trust Co. was appointed to succeed him, and that the latter received in cash from Dunne $437.27 and also said five notes, and that said company as such guardian has now said notes and a balance of $151.83 in cash of said money received from Dunne. That on May 16, 1906, the County Court entered an order reciting that plaintiff had become restored to her right mind.

The petition asks that the probate proceedings in regard to this sale to Mrs. Lomax be revised, and the sale annulled upon the following grounds:

1st. That no sufficient reason for selling the property was given in the application.

2d. No showing was made, in connection with the application, of the condition of the estate.

3d. No necessity existed for the sale.

4th. The sale of one acre of the land would have been sufficient, if necessity for any sale existed.

5th. Only 15 days elapsed between the posting of the notice of the application for sale and the return and filing thereof.

6tli. The property was improved property and was not sold upon the terms required by statute for the sale of such property.

7th. The notice of application for sale was addressed to all persons interested in. the estate of Mrs. M. T. Comstock, whereas the guardianship was upon the estate of Melissa Comstock and title to 6-7 of *344 the property stood in the name of Melissa Comstock and 1-7 in the name of M. T. Comstock.

8th. The property was the homestead of plaintiff.

9th. The price at which the property was sold was inadequate.

Another ground was that the guardian fraudulently made no effort to sell the property in open market for its reasonable value, but recklessly and in disregard of the interest of petitioner, who was then his ward, sold the property to Mrs. Lomax in pursuance of a previous agreement between himself and John Lomax acting for his wife, Mrs. Alice M. Lomax. That Mrs. Alice Lomax, acting through her husband, John Lomax, was a party to the procuring of the order authorizing the sale for $400 an acre, and said application was filed and said order was procured by the guardian at the instigation of and under the contract with said John Lomax and Mrs. Alice M. Lomax, and the order confirming the sale was obtained at their instigation and request.

The court directed the jury to' find against the validity of the sale.

In regard to the last of the above grounds, the undisputed testimony shows that in September an oral arrangement was entered into between Mrs. Lomax and her husband with Dunne, the guardian, to take the property at $400 an acre, one-fifth cash and the balance in notes, substantially as the sale was afterwards carried out through the orders of the court; and that $100 earnest money was paid to Dunne on this understanding. The order of sale entered on November 6, 1905, provided that the property should be sold at the rate of $400 per acre and for not less than one-fifth in cash. The report of the sale to Mrs. Lomax was filed next day and was confirmed on the 13 th.

Before discussing the sufficiency of the several grounds alleged for the revision and correction of the orders relating to this sale, we shall state that there was testimony showing that the property brought its full value at this sale, as conditions then existed. Unless, therefore, there was some fact established by undisputed proof which would require the sale to be annulled as a matter of law, and which would not be rendered immaterial by proof of full value received from the sale, the court erred in withdrawing the case from the jury.

The proceedings of the County Court in probate matters are not to be lightly treated and set aside, otherwise confidence in such proceedings would not exist. The orders of that court are adjudications, and for errors or irregularities in the proceedings probate sales should not be set aside through a certiorari, unless it appears that some injury or injustice has been done the estate thereby. The fact, if it be a fact, that full value of the property was obtained by the sale in question, would overcome a number, if not all, of the irregularities and errors alleged in this petition. Kendrick v. Wheeler, 85 Texas, 253; Fitzwilliams v. Davie, 18 Texas Civ. App., 85.

The case before us presents one of a sale of property to a third person, where the purchaser is required to look only to the application for sale and its exhibits, and to the order of sale. McNally v. Haynes, 59 Texas, 583. If no necessity for the sale is exhibited by the application and order of sale, it would seem that he would be affected by it. *345 This matter involves the first, second and third of the above enumerated grounds. The application filed September 27, 1905, includes the statement that taxes for past year are due and unpaid.

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Bluebook (online)
110 S.W. 762, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 340, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lomax-v-comstock-texapp-1908.