Michael M. Roach v. Patricia Sue Rowley as Temporary Administratrix
This text of Michael M. Roach v. Patricia Sue Rowley as Temporary Administratrix (Michael M. Roach v. Patricia Sue Rowley as Temporary Administratrix) 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.
Opinion
Opinion issued February 19, 2004
In The
Court of Appeals
For The
First District of Texas
NO. 01-03-00057-CV
MICHAEL M. ROACH, Appellant
V.
PATRICIA SUE ROWLEY, Appellee
On Appeal from Probate Court No. 1
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 321379
O P I N I O N
Appellant, Michael M. Roach, appeals an order denying his objection to a temporary administrator’s final accounting. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Michael Wayne Garson died on March 25, 2001, leaving his father, Robert Garson (Garson), as his only heir. Garson filed an application for letters of independent administration in which he stated that Michael Wayne Garson had died intestate. Michael Gullo filed an opposition to Garson’s application, asserting that, at the time of the decedent’s death, he had a valid, unrevoked, written will. Garson filed an application for the appointment of a temporary administrator pending the contest of the estate, and the probate court appointed appellee, Patricia Sue Rowley, an attorney with the firm of Benson & Anderson, as temporary administrator. Roach, a devisee under the will, filed a petition in intervention.
Between November 13, 2001 and October 7, 2002, Rowley filed nine applications for interim payment of her fees and expenses. The probate court approved each of these applications, and the sums requested were paid to Benson & Anderson. Roach asserts that a total of $24,993.57 was paid to Rowley and that this amount was over 20% of the fair market value of the estate. Rowley does not contest these assertions. Roach did not file an objection to any of the applications for interim payment. Rowley filed an amended account for final settlement on November 25, 2002, and, on December 13, Roach filed his objection to the final accounting in which he objected only to the fees paid to Rowley. On December 19, the probate court signed an order denying Roach’s objection and an order approving the amended final accounting. The court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law in response to Roach’s timely request.
On appeal, Roach challenges the court’s conclusions of law as follows:
14.Devisee does not have standing to object to Temporary Administratrix’s Final Accounting in the presence of a serving personal representative.
15.Devisee waived his objection to all nine fee orders.
Roach also challenges the court’s “ruling that the five percent (5%) calculation for [the temporary administrator]’s fee was unreasonably low” and the court’s award to the temporary administrator of the entire amount of fees requested. We consider only Roach’s first two issues regarding standing and waiver.
DISCUSSION
Standing
Roach first complains that the probate court improperly concluded that Roach did not have standing to object to the final accounting. We review a trial court’s conclusions of law de novo. Nelkin v. Panzer, 833 S.W.2d 267, 268 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1992, writ dism’d w.o.j.).
At the time Roach filed his objection to the final accounting, the heir and devisees had reached a family settlement agreement, the probate court had signed an order approving the agreement, and Gullo, one of the devisees, had been appointed as personal representative of the estate of Michael Wayne Garson. Rowley argued in the trial court and argues on appeal that the personal representative of the estate of a decedent is the only person entitled to sue for the recovery of property belonging to the estate unless the personal representative has refused to enforce a debt due the estate, citing Frazier v. Wynn, 472 S.W.2d 750, 752 (Tex. 1971). In Frazier, the supreme court stated that, before heirs at law could maintain a suit for the recovery of property belonging to an estate, they must allege and prove that no administration is pending and that none is necessary. Id. at 752. The court applied this rule to the plaintiff’s suit to recover damages for breach of a lease held by the decedent. Id. Although there had been no administration of the estate, there was a necessity for administration, and the heir was not entitled to maintain the suit. Id. at 752-53.
In the present case, Roach was not filing a lawsuit to recover property belonging to the estate. He was merely objecting, as an interested party, to the final accounting. Section 10 of the Probate Code provides:
Any person interested in an estate may, at any time before any issue in any proceeding is decided upon by the court, file opposition thereto in writing and shall be entitled to process for witnesses and evidence, and to be heard upon such opposition, as in other suits.
Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 10 (Vernon 2003). Rowley argues, without citing authority, that the probate court’s conclusion of law that Roach did not have standing to object to the final accounting is “a clear exception to [Roach]’s claim of standing” under section 10. We consider the language of section 10 to be clear and to permit the filing of an objection by any interested party to any issue in any proceeding before the probate court.
We find no cases specifically holding that an interested party may file an objection to a final accounting even though the estate has a personal representative. However, the facts in Burke v. Satterfield, 525 S.W.2d 950 (Tex. 1975), involve such an objection.
In Burke, a devisee objected to the final accounting filed by the independent executor. Id. at 952. The trial court dismissed the objections for lack of jurisdiction on the grounds that a probate court’s control over independent administration of estates is strictly limited to situations set out in the probate code. Id. The court of appeals reversed, and the supreme court affirmed the court of appeals’ judgment as modified and remanded the cause to the probate court for further proceedings. Id.
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