Lovenberg v. Mellen

144 S.W. 317, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 144 S.W. 317 (Lovenberg v. Mellen) 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
Lovenberg v. Mellen, 144 S.W. 317, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 83 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

On November 28, 1906, the defendant in error, Frances R. Mellen, filed suit in the court below against B. P. Cooper, her stepfather and the independent executor of the will of her deceased mother, Eliza Cooper. In the petition filed by the attorneys for said defendant in error it is alleged, in substance, that the property in controversy, which was all of the property then remaining of the estate of said Eliza Cooper, was her separate property, and that by the terms of said will of Eliza Cooper, a copy of which was attached to the petition, the said B. P. Cooper was directed under certain contingencies, which the petition alleged had arisen, to set apart one-half the income of said estate to plaintiff. The defendant Cooper is charged with having failed to comply with the terms of the will, and the prayer of the petition is that a receiver be appointed to take possession of the property; that said Cooper be enjoined from incumbering or disposing of said property; that the will be construed and the trust claimed by piaintiff be established and the said Cooper be required to account to plaintiff; and that she have judgment against him for one-half of the income of said estate. On February 5, 1907, Ellen Henry intervened in the suit and claimed title to the property. B. P. Cooper died on October 13, 1907. ■ No citation appears to have been issued to him, and no answer was filed by him in this suit.

On December 12, 1908, plaintiff in error, who is administrator de bonis non of the estate of said B. P. Cooper, filed a motion to dismiss the suit on the ground that its prosecution had been abandoned by the plaintiff. An answer to this motion was filed by plaintiff and on the hearing of the motion on February 26, 1909, the motion to dismiss was overruled. On April . 28, 1909, plaintiff in error filed his original answer containing general and special exceptions, general denial, and pleas of limitation. He further pleaded in reconvention and asserted title to the property generally and by limitation in the estate of B. P. Cooper, and prayed that the cloud cast.upon the title by’plaintiff’s claim be removed and that title and possession be decreed to be ip. said estate.

On November 25, 1910, plaintiff, Frances Mellen, filed the following motion: “Now comes the plaintiff in the above numbered and entitled cause and shows to the court that her action to construe the alleged will of Eliza Cooper, deceased, and for an accounting, etc., was filed under a misapprehension of her rights and of her title to the properties, and because her rights in the premises are unaffected and not controlled by the said will in her petition mentioned and unaffected and not controlled by the estate of her deceased mother, Eliza Cooper, she elects to dismiss her suit herein, and to take a nonsuit, without prejudice to her rights in the premises.”

This motion was granted and thereafter, after numerous amended and supplemental pleadings, the nature of which it is unnecessary to here state, had been filed by both parties,- and the intervention of Ellen Henry *318 had. been dismissed, the cause proceeded to trial on the plea in reconvention of plaintiff in error. The trial was by the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment in favor of defendant in error.

The record discloses the following facts: The property in controversy is lot 7, and 22 feet off the east side of lot 6, in block 497, in the city of Galveston. This property was conveyed to Thomas Westrope, the father of defendant in error, on November 27, 1851. Thomas Westrope married Eliza Keough the mother of defendant in error, June 4, 1857, and died intestate in the year 1860, leaving surviving his widow, Eliza, and defendant in error, his only child.

The estate of said Thomas E. Westrope was administered in the county court of Galveston county by Edward Keough, who was appointed administrator of the estate by said court on November 30, 1860. Upon the inventory of the estate filed by the administrator, the property in controversy was returned as belonging to the separate estate of Thomas E. Westrope.

In partition proceedings in said court, instituted for the purpose of partitioning the estate among those entitled to receive it, the following decree was entered on March 31, 1864: “In the Matter of the Estate of Thos. E. Westrope, deceased. Petition of Mrs. E. Westrope for Partition and Distribution. And now at this term of the court it appearing that notice of the filing of this petition has been duly acknowledged by Edward Keough, administrator of said estate, and Oscar Parish having been appointed guardian ad litem of Prances Westrope, minor heir of said Thomas E. Westrope, to represent the interests of said minor. And it further appearing to the court that the said intestate died seised and possessed of certain real and personal estate in his own right, and also of certain real and personal estate being of the community of marriage of the said Thomas and the said Eliza Westrope, which are fully set forth in the inventories filed by the said administrator. That said petitioner, Eliza Westrope, and said Prances Westrope, minor, are the only persons entitled to distribution of the said estate; that, of the clear residue of the property belonging to the community of marriage of the said Thomas and Eliza, the said Eliza is entitled to one moiety thereof, and the said Prances to the other moiety thereof; and that of the separate estate of the said Thomas E. West-rope, he having departed this life intestate, leaving one child, the said Prances, the said Eliza is entitled to have and receive one-third part of the said personal estate, not to include slaves, in full title, and to one-third part of the lands and slaves, to hold for the term of her natural life, with remainder over to said Prances, and the said Prances to the other two-thirds. It is therefore considered and ordered that the following named persons, to wit, James P. Nash, Dennis Neil,. Wright S. Andrews, George W. Grove, and John L. Darragh, be and they are hereby appointed commissioners to make partition and distribution of the estate of said Thomas E. Westrope between the said Eliza Westrope and the said Prances Westrope in accordance with this decree. And that said writ of partition do issue accompanied with a copy of this decree.”

The commissioners appointed by this decree partitioned the estate as directed in the decree and their report of said partition was approved by the court by an order or decree made on April 2, 1864. This order of confirmation and the report of the commissioners are as follows:

“April 2, 1864.
“In the Matter of the Estate of Thos. E. Westrope, Deceased. Report of the Commissioners of Partition and Distribution. Upon examining the report of the commissioners of partition and distribution duly verified and this day filed, the court being fully satisfied that the partition and distribution made by the commissioners is a just, fair, equitable and impartial one, and the widow being in court, the administrator and the guardian ad litem of the minor Prances, and all assenting to and expressed themselves as satisfied with the same: It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the said partition and distribution be and the same is in all things fully approved and confirmed by the court. And it is ordered that the report, together with commission of partition, be recorded in the minutes hereof following this decree and made a part thereof.
“Report of Commissioners.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
144 S.W. 317, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovenberg-v-mellen-texapp-1912.