Moore v. Woodson

116 S.W. 608, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 588, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 608 (Moore v. Woodson) 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
Moore v. Woodson, 116 S.W. 608, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 588, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 673 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This suit was brought by W. M. Woodson and others, heirs of J. J. W°°dson, deceased, against H. W. Moore and G. W. Woodson, administrators of the estate of J. J. Woodson, and the sureties upon their bond as administrators, to recover a balance of $381.79 claimed to be due plaintiffs by said administrators, with ten percent per month thereon as statutory damages. The defendant Moore, by his ' answer, denied his liability for more than $71.84 of the amount claimed by plaintiffs, which amount he tendered into court and asked that he be not required to pay any addiditional portion of the amount claimed by plaintiffs, an„d that his co-defendant, G. W. Woodson, be enjoined from seeking to collect as an heir of J. J. Woodson any part of a judgment for $3,000 recovered against the said Woodson and Moore as administrators of said estate, in favor of the estate for damages for the wrongful sale by said ad *589 ministrators of certain bonds belonging to said estate for less than their reasonable value.

The defendant G. W. Woodson answered plaintiff’s suit by general demurrer and general denial and, as against his codefendant Moore, he alleged that by the order of the Probate Court of Houston County approving the final account of himself and his co-defendant and ordering a distribution of said estate, he was adjudged to be entitled to receive as an heir of said estate the sum of $829.94 to be paid by said administrators ; that he had received no part of said sum and that his codefendant Moore was liable to him for one-half of said amount, for which he prays judgment.

The cause was tried without a jury and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs against both defendants and the sureties on their bond for the sum of $309.95, with damages at ten percent per month from October 30, 1907, and against defendant Moore and said sureties for the further sum of $71.84, with damages at ten percent per month from date of the judgment. It was further adjudged that in case either of said defendants should pay more than his one-half of the total amount due by them as administrators to the plaintiffs herein, as shown by the judgment of the probate court fixing the amount due by them to said plaintiffs, that such defendant should recover and have judgment against his codefendant for the excess so paid by him, for which he should have his execution. • It was further adjudged that the defendant G. W. Woodson was entitled as an heir of J. J. Woodson, deceased, to receive from said estate the sum of $829.9-4, which amount had been adjudged to him by the final decree in said estate before mentioned, and that he was entitled to recover of his coadministrator, Moore, one-half of said amount, or the sum of $414.97, and it was therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the said G. W. Woodson do have and recover of the defendant, H. W. Moore, and the sureties before mentioned, the said sum of $414.97, with legal interest from the date of the judgment. Prom this judgment the defendant H. W. Moore prosecutes this appeal.

The evidence in the record shows that H. W. Moore and G. W. Woodson were duly appointed administrators of the estate of J. J. Woodson, deceased, and as such took charge of and administered said estate under the direction of the Probate Court of Houston County. The other defendants named in the petition were sureties upon the bond of said administrators, and against whom judgment was rendered as such sureties upon said bond. W. M. Woodson and the other plaintiffs in this suit are the heirs of J. J. Woodson, and the defendant G. W. Woodson is also an heir, and as such is entitled to one-fifth of the estate. Among the assets of said estate were certain railroad bonds which were sold by the administrators under an order of the Probate Court to A. L. Keen, son-in-law of the defendant G. W. Woodson, at a price much less than their real value. The heirs of ,T. J. Woodson, other than the defendant G. W. Woodson, brought suit against the administrators to recover for said estate the difference between the amount received by the administrators for said bonds and their reasonable value. This suit resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiffs for $3,076.30. The judgment in said cause was affirmed by *590 this court upon appeal of the administrators, and upon return of the mandate to the District Court of Houston County was certified to the Probate Court for observance. Thereafter the administrators filed their final account in the Probate Court and asked for an order approving same, distributing the balance of the estate in their hands, and closing said administration. Upon this application the Probate Court entered an order fixing the interest of each of the heirs in the balance of said estate then in the hands of the administrators and ordering the administrators to pay to the heirs the several amounts to which they were adjudged entitled. The recitals of this order show that in fixing the several amounts to which the heirs were entitled the judgment for $3,076.30, before mentioned, was considered as an asset of said estate. The interest of the heirs of J. J. Woodson, other than G. W. Woodson, in the balance of the estate in the hands of the administrators as fixed by their order was $1,819.80, which amount was ordered paid to them by the administrators. The interest of G. W. Woodson, as an heir of J. J. Woodson, in said balance of the estate, was adjudged to be $829.94, which amount the “administrators” were directed “to pay over and deliver” to him. This order or decree ad-, justed the equities between the various heirs and confirms agreement previously made between them as to property theretofore delivered to them by the administrators. It also contained the following: “And it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that this judgment shall not affect, in any manner, any claim, demand, equity, or right which either administrator may have against the other, as such, in or concerning any matter or transaction growing out of or resulting from the administration of said estate, nor shall it affect any claim, demand, equities or right which the said H. W. Moore may have against the said G. W. Woodson as 'an heir of this estate, and this judgment shall not be a bar thereto, and any such claim, demand, equity or right may be prosecuted or defended in any suit whatever. Nor shall anything in this judgment be construed so as to preclude or bar any of the said four sets of heirs from enforcing in any court of competent jurisdiction the collection and payment of their said shares or any part thereof against the .said administrators or their sureties in the event they should'not pay the same as hereinbefore directed.”

The amount claimed and recovered in this suit. is the unpaid balance of the $1,819.80 which was ordered paid them by the Probate Court in the final decree above mentioned. One-half of said $1,819.80, less the $71.84 tendered by appellant upon trial, had been paid plaintiffs by him prior to the institution of this suit.

. Prom the conclusions of fact and law filed by the trial court it appears that the judgment in favor of G. W. Woodson against the appellant Moore for $414.97 is based upon his conclusion of law that the judgment of the Probate Court fixing the interest of G. W. Woodson in said estate at $829.94 and ordering same paid to him by the administrators, “is final .and conclusive of all matters between H. W. Moore and G. W. Woodson, and is res adjudicaba,

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 608, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 588, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-woodson-texapp-1909.