Ogden v. Shropshire & Adkins

37 S.W.2d 249
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
DocketNo. 7521.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 37 S.W.2d 249 (Ogden v. Shropshire & Adkins) 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
Ogden v. Shropshire & Adkins, 37 S.W.2d 249 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

McClendon, c. j.

Appellees, a firm of lawyers, sued E. D. Ogden in his capacity as independent executor of the will of E. W. Henderson, deceased (joining therein as parties defendant the residuary legatees under the Henderson will), to recover six items of attorney’s fees, aggregating, $6,775; for services rendered by appellees to the executor. The trial was to a jury upon special issues, and the verdict and judgment were in favor of appellees upon each of the items in the following amounts, the first column representing the amount sued for and the second the amount of the verdict and judgment:

1. Removal suit in county court. $2,500.00 $750.00

2. Removal suit in the district court...;. 2,500.00 750.00

3. J. H. Ogden et ux. v. estate'.. 1,000.00 500.00

4. Mrs. Mears v. estate 200.00 100.00

5. Luke Williams v. estate . 75.00 50.00

6. General advice. 500.00 350.00

$6,775.00 $2,500.00-

Two of the residuary legatees (Margery and Elizabeth Goodwin, who own one-half of the residuary estate) have appealed; the other residuary legatee (Lucy M. Wooten, who owns the remaining one-half of the residuary estate) has riot appealed.

The fourth and fifth items are not attacked. The first two items covering services in two removal suits brought by the residuary legatees, one in the county and the other in the district court, are assailed by the residuary legatees on the ground that the services rendered were personal to the exeutor and not in the interest of the estate. The third item is-assailed by the residuary legatees on the ground that the services were not rendered in good faith for the estate, but in the interest of the executor in seeking to force an unreasonable compromise of the suit, which was in favor of his brother and his brother’s wife, for personal injuries to the latter; and further because the executor was disqualified to represent the estate in said cause, on the ground that he was adversely interested and had made himself a party to the"plaintiffs’ cause by signing their cost bond. The sixth item is assailed by appellants on the grounds: (a) That the evidence will not support a judgment for any amount thereon; and (b) because the amount awarded is excessive.

Since the first three items are more or less interrelated as to their pertinent facts, we will make a brief statement of the evidence as it relates to these items, without attempting to segregate it.

Henderson, a widower since 1917, advanced in years and childless, had accumulated an estate in excess of $100',000. -He died August 30, 1920. His will, a very lengthy document, was executed May 9, 1925, with an added codicil executed November 13, 1925. E. L. *251 Ogden, an old business friend and acquaintance, was named independent executor of the will without bond, and was given very wide discretionary powers, including the employment of attorneys and the settlement of claims against the estate. Hon. IP. N. Newman, who had been Henderson’s attorney for a number of years, was engaged by the executor to probate the will and represent the estate generally. The will was probated in October, 1028, and Ogden then qualified as executor. Among the claims against the estate was a suit by J. H. Ogden (a brother of the executor.) and his wife for personal injuries to the latter sfistained in an automobile accident on the 8th day of August, 1926; Mrs. Ogden being a guest of Henderson in the latter’s automobile when the accident occurred. This suit was not filed until August 7, 1928, just one day before the claim would have been barred by limitation, and twenty-three days before - the death of Henderson. Whether Newman had been consulted by Henderson in regard to the suit does not appear, but in all probability he had, as he appears to have been Henderson’s general legal adviser.

With reference to Judge Newman’s employment in the J. H. Ogden suit, the executor testified:

‘•Mr. Newman was my attorney. I told him to go ahead and handle it just like he wanted to. As I was the executor, and the plaintiff was my brother, I thought the matter should be handled in his discretion.”

Judge Newman and Lane (member of a Dallas firm of lawyers representing some of the residuary legatees) made an investigation of the law and facts in the J. H. Ogden suit, and reached the following conclusions: That the suit ought to be contested, both from the viewpoint of liability and amount; that the injury sustained would not warrant a settlement, even conceding liability, in excess of $5,000; and that it was to the best interest of the estate that the cause be tried at the January, 1929, term of court. They prepared and filed on January 4, 1929, an answer raising several questions of law by demurrer, and various issues of fact by special pleas in avoidance. This answer was withdrawn, Judge Newman withdrew from the case, and the executor signed as surety the cost bond of the plaintiffs in January, 1929. The circumstances surrounding these withdrawals were, however, excluded from the picture presented by the statement of facts. The attitude of the executor towards this suit appears to have been the initial cause of strained relations between Lane and the executor, and a great deal of correspondence ensued between them. A large part of this correspondence was excluded, and is only preserved by bills of exception; however, it sufficiently appears from the statement of facts that the executor wrote Lane, stating unequivocally that he had settled the Ogden suit for $7,500; that Lane demanded that he plead limitation to the Mears claim, and he replied that he would not do so, because he knew Mr. Henderson, if living, would not file a plea of limitation ; that Lane charged the executor with mismanagement in converting interest-bearing securities to the amount of some $80,000, and depositing the proceeds in noninterest-bearing account in a bank in which the executor was a stockholder and director; and that the executor was using an automobile belonging to the estate for his own private purposes.

The Mears claim arose out of the following facts: Mrs. Mears had acted as housekeeper for Henderson for forty-one months, terminating some three years prior to Henderson’s death. She claimed an indebtedness of $4,100 against the estate for her services. Lane, who had made some investigation of the facts, contended that Henderson had settled with Mrs. Mears by giving her a check for $100 marked “payment in full,” and that he had during her employment paid her $15 per month by checks, and had furnished her her board; and further that, if there were any liability, it had accrued at the time her employment ceased, more than two years prior to Henderson’s death, and was therefore barred by the two-year statute of limitation.

The Luke Williams suit arose out of a claim by the plaintiff, who had been chauffeur for Henderson for a number of years, that one of two automobiles belonging to Henderson had been given to him by Henderson.

Subsequently to the January, 1929, term of the district court, the executor made a compromise agreement with his brother by which the damage suit was settled at $7,500, conditioned upon the approval by the district court, and the money was deposited in bank subject to such court approval. The executor’s letter to Lane, notifying him of the settlement, did not inform him of the conditional clause.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W.2d 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogden-v-shropshire-adkins-texapp-1931.