McCall v. Owens

68 S.W.2d 1089
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1934
DocketNo. 1460.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 68 S.W.2d 1089 (McCall v. Owens) 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
McCall v. Owens, 68 S.W.2d 1089 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinions

Mrs. Arabella F. Coates, deceased, left a written will in which D. A. McCall was named as independent executor without bond. After the will had been admitted to probate and said executor had duly qualified, he, as such executor, allowed and paid a claim in favor of his wife, Mrs. Sue McCall, in the sum of $5,000 alleged to be due Mrs. McCall for personal services rendered by her to Mrs. Coates during the last two years of the latter's lifetime. J. T. Owens, the residuary legatee under the will, and C. D. Owens and J. S. Owens, his assignees, brought this suit in the district court against D. A. *Page 1090 McCall and his wife, Sue McCall, and First National Bank of Waco, and alleged that more than one year had elapsed after the probate of said will and that said estate had been fully administered and was ready for partition and distribution among the devisees. The plaintiff prayed that said executor, D. A. McCall, be required to make an accounting of the funds and property that had come into his hands as such executor and for judgment against said executor for such funds and property so belonging to the estate. It was further alleged that the claim presented by Mrs. McCall and paid by said executor was fraudulent and fictitious and had been illegally paid, and that the said D. A. McCall and wife had used a part of the money received by them from said estate in the payment of said fictitious claim in the purchase of certain real property in the city of Waco. The plaintiffs prayed for title and possession of said land as a part of the assets of the estate. It was further alleged that said D. A. McCall was insolvent and that a part of the assets of said estate consisting of money and bonds was in the custody of the First National Bank for safe-keeping and that the plaintiffs were afraid that the said D. A. McCall would misappropriate said property unless the bank was restrained from delivering same to him. The plaintiffs prayed for judgment against the bank for the assets belonging to said estate and in the custody of the bank and for an injunction restraining the bank from delivering the same to the defendant McCall. The jury found that Mrs. McCall did not render any services to Mrs. Coates during the last two years of her lifetime and that Mrs. Coates was not indebted to Mrs. McCall in any sum. Judgment was accordingly entered in favor of the plaintiffs against D. A. McCall individually and as executor of said estate for the title and possession of the bonds and other personal property belonging to said estate and for the sum of $10,682.50, that being the balance of cash on hand and belonging to said estate, including the sum of $5,000 claimed to have been illegally paid to Mrs. McCall. Judgment was also entered in favor of the plaintiffs against D. A. McCall and wife for the title and possession of the real estate alleged to have been purchased with funds belonging to said estate, and judgment was rendered against the bank for the sum of $5,232.46, that being the amount of funds in possession of the bank and belonging to said estate. D. A. McCall and wife appealed.

Appellants' first contention is that the trial court erred in failing to sustain their plea in abatement. It appears that in November, 1930, after the will had been admitted to probate and the independent executor had qualified, he filed in the probate court of McLennan county an inheritance tax report, as provided in Revised Statutes, art. 7127. Thereafter in November, 1931, said executor filed in said probate court an application to recalculate the inheritance tax. Upon the trial of the case here under consideration, appellants sought to abate this suit on the ground that said application to recalculate the inheritance tax was still pending in the probate court and that by reason thereof said estate was in process of administration, in that court and consequently the probate court alone and not the district court had jurisdiction to determine the validity of Mrs. McCall's claim as well as the other matters here in controversy. The trial court overruled the plea in abatement, and the appellants assign this as error.

There are several reasons why we think there was no error in the ruling of the trial court. In the first place, there was no evidence introduced to show that the application to recalculate the inheritance tax, which was filed in the probate court in November, 1931, was still pending and undisposed of at the time of the hearing on the plea in abatement herein in April, 1932. The burden was upon the appellants to prove the essential facts alleged in the plea and upon their failure to do so the court properly overruled the plea in abatement. 1 Tex.Jur. 180. In the second place, the will authorized the executor to administer the estate independent of the probate court, and it was being so administered. The probate court did not have jurisdiction to administer the estate and consequently had no authority to determine the legality or illegality of Mrs. McCall's claim. The mere fact that Revised Statutes, art. 7131, authorized the county judge, upon the filing of a proper report, to determine the amount of inheritance tax due by the estate in such a case, did not confer upon the probate court general jurisdiction over the estate. The filing of such report conferred jurisdiction for only a limited purpose, that of determining the amount of such tax. The pendency before the county judge of the application to recalculate the inheritance tax, if it was so pending, did not deprive the district court of jurisdiction to try and determine the matters here in controversy. In the third place, the suit involved the rights of third parties who could not have been made parties to the probate proceedings, and the matters involved were such that the *Page 1091 probate court could not have given complete relief. Consequently, the district court had jurisdiction to try the cases. 14 Tex.Jur. 305; Fryckberg v. Scott (Tex.Civ.App.) 218 S.W. 21-24; Cannon v. McDaniel,46 Tex. 303; Phillips v. J. B. Watkins Land Mortgage Co., 90 Tex. 195,38 S.W. 270, 470; George v. Ryon, 94 Tex. 317, 60 S.W. 427; Lauraine v. Ashe, 109 Tex. 69, 191 S.W. 563, 565; Lauraine v. Masterson (Tex.Civ.App.) 193 S.W. 708.

The appellants, D. A. McCall and wife, Sue McCall, each proposed to testify as to the amount and character of personal services rendered by Mrs. McCall to Mrs. Coates during her lifetime, which alleged services constituted the basis of the $5,000 claim presented by Mrs. McCall against the estate. These witnesses would have testified, had they been permitted to do so, that for more than two years prior to Mrs. Coates' death they lived in the same house with Mrs. Coates and in an apartment adjoining the apartment occupied by Mrs. Coates; that Mrs. Coates lived alone and was old and in feeble health and without any servants to wait on her; that Mrs. McCall was called upon to assist and did assist Mrs. Coates many times each night in going to and returning from the bathroom, and was in almost constant attendance upon her during the last two years of her life; and that sometimes when Mrs. Coates was present and sometimes when she was away from home Mrs. McCall frequently made clothes, cleaned house, and prepared meals for Mrs. Coates; and that all of such services were performed with the expectation of receiving compensation therefor.

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68 S.W.2d 1089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccall-v-owens-texapp-1934.