Mitchell v. Mitchell

298 S.W.2d 236, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 859, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2336
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 1957
Docket5043
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 298 S.W.2d 236 (Mitchell v. Mitchell) 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
Mitchell v. Mitchell, 298 S.W.2d 236, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 859, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2336 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Aurelia Mitchell died on March 18, 1940, leaving.a will by which she created a trust for children of hers and descendants of her children. The income from this trust was payable to her children, excepting a daughter, and to the children of the excepted daughter during the lives of these people and afterward to their descendants until 21 years after the death of the survivor of the group to whom the income was first payable. When the term of the trust ended, the psoperty in trust was to be divided among the descendants of the group first entitled to income. For convenience, we shall refer to beneficiaries who have become entitled to income as life income beneficiaries and to the rest of the beneficiaries as remaindermen. The trust estate included Aurelia Mitchell’s one half community interest in a 400 acre tract of land in the M. G. White League in Liberty County, together with oil and gas leases on this interest made by her, and it is the trustees’ disposition of oil arid gas 'royalties from this land although not under these leases, which caused this suit to *238 be brought. The parts of' the will material to the issues between the parties are quoted and discussed in the opinions of the Court of Civil Appeals and of the Supreme Court reported sub nomine Mitchell v. Mitchell at Tex.Civ.App., 235 S.W.2d 744 et seq., and 151 Tex. 1, 244 S.W.2d 803 et seq. The appeal now pending is a second appeal in that case, although new parties have been added and some new issues have been made since the Supreme Court’s mandate was returned to the trial court.

The trial court, after the mandate had been returned, rendered a judgment which, among other things, purported to construe the will of Aurelia Mitchell and in consequence declared proceeds from the sale of oil, gas and other minerals belonging to the estate to be corpus of the trust and not income. Because of the nature of the litigation the proceeds just referred to included oil and gas royalties paid under mineral leases. This part of the judgment was amended. This judgment provided further, in substance, that issues arising on an accounting of the trustees and between them and others liable to them in consequence of their accounting were severed and docketed separately, and by the amendment mentioned provided still further, in substance, that in the part of the suit thus severed the trustees might litigate the question (if it had not been decided by the Supreme Court) whether income payable included the oil and gas royalties paid to the trustees under the Sun Oil Company lease. This "lease existed, and oil and gas was being produced therefrom, at Aurelia Mitchell’s death and at the trial of which the judgment now on appeal was rendered. The aforesaid judgment, rendered after return of mandate, also appointed the American National Bank an additional trustee.

When the aforesaid judgment after mandate was rendered, the plaintiffs were the remainderman not entitled to income, although in the petition the plaintiffs were described as a class in terms broader than the class actually existing. The defendants were the trustees, Leon and Vick Mitchell, sons of Aurelia Mitchell and original income beneficiaries. After the rendition of the judgment after mandate, these trustees made all beneficiaries of the trust parties to the suit, both the life income beneficiaries (including the survivors of the original group) who were not parties to the suit before that time and all others, and answers were filed by most of these people. Of the pleadings filed by the parties it is enough to say that the questions discussed in this opinion are supported by the pleadings; but specifically, these issues are raised by the pleadings of the appellants Mary Prophet and Agnes King and their husbands, Agnes and Mary being daughters of testatrix and among the original life income beneficiaries; and said issues are also raised by the pleadings of Cornelius Mitchell and his group of appellants, who include at least two of the original life income beneficiaries, children of testatrix, one being the said Cornelius.

The cause was tried to the court without a jury. The judgment rendered decreed another severance in the cause, leaving certain issues undecided. This judgment also fixed the amount of the trustees’ indebtedness to the trust, mostly as reimbursement for sums paid as income out of oil and gas royalties from the 400 acre tract referred to above but also in smaller part for payments not accounted for. Still further, the judgment determined the sums of money which each of the income beneficiaries had received from the trustees and awarded the trustees a recovery of these sums from the beneficiaries for the benefit of the trust, with some limitations, not necessary to be repeated, on the methods of enforcement as against certain minors. The trustees were also adjudged the right to withhold income from these beneficiaries, excepting said minors, both to reimburse the trust and trustees Leon and Vick Mitchell. Still further, the judgment decreed that proceeds of oil, gas and other minerals were corpus of the trust estate and not income, and this provision is to *239 be construed as including oil and gas royalties. We omit other provisions of the judgment.

From this judgment the trustees and some of the life income beneficiaries and descendants of another of these beneficiaries have appealed. Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and filed by the trial court, and a transcript of the evidence has also been filed.

We make the following holdings, which will adjudicate the appeal.

I.

The questions concerning the effect to be given the Supreme Court’s judgment, by way of res judicata or otherwise.

This suit, as filed, was No. 13,751 in the trial court. Finding 11 of the trial court’s original findings reads: “None of the beneficiaries under the will of Aurelia Mitchell who was then entitled to share in the distribution of income from the Aurelia Mitchell Trust estate was a party to Cause No. 13,751, Raymond Mitchell, et al. v. Leon Mitchell, et al., in the District Court of Liberty County, Texas, except Raymond Mitchell, Leon Mitchell and Vick Mitchell.”

This finding is certainly correct in fact as regards named parties, for the only persons named as parties were the three mentioned in the finding.

Furthermore, the finding is correct in law. Raymond Mitchell brought the suit as a member of and for a class. In his petition he described this class as “all of the grandchildren and great grandchildren of Aurelia Mitchell, deceased, adults and minors, representing such of the minors who have no legal guardian of their estates as their next friend, and in behalf of all of the yet unknown grandchildren and great grandchildren of Aurelia Mitchell, deceased, who may be beneficiaries under the terms and provisions of her last will and testament. This suit is brought by the plaintiff under Rule 42, Rules of Civil Procedure in behalf of a class of persons so numerous as to make it impracticable to bring all of them before the Court, the living grandchildren and great grandchildren of Aurelia Mitchell now numbering approximately 200 persons.”

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Related

Moore v. Vines
474 S.W.2d 437 (Texas Supreme Court, 1971)
Mitchell v. Mitchell
303 S.W.2d 352 (Texas Supreme Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
298 S.W.2d 236, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 859, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-mitchell-texapp-1957.