Pace v. Eoff

48 S.W.2d 956
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedApril 21, 1932
DocketNo. 1292—5771
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 48 S.W.2d 956 (Pace v. Eoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pace v. Eoff, 48 S.W.2d 956 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

SHORT, P. J.

The facts in this case are few and uncon-fradieted. The sole legal question involved is whether a surviving widow of a deceased husband, whose estate is being administered by the probate court, the husband having died intestate, and whose estate is solvent, is entitled to have her allowance for a year’s support charged to the estate of herself and husband, or whether the amount of this allowance shall be charged to her part of the community estate of herself and husband in the distribution of the property remaining in the hands of the administrator after all debts and expenses of administration have been paid. The probate court, where the estate was being administered, while allowing a porr tion claimed for a year’s support, ordered that in the distribution it should be charged as a debt against that portion of the surviving widow’s community property left in the hands of the administrator, when the estate should be ready for distribution. In other words, the judgment of the • probate court decreed that the amount ordered paid the widow should be considered as an advancement to her out of her portion of the community estate of herself and husband, when said estate should be ready for distribution.

Upon appeal to the district court the order of the probate court was set aside and an order made that an allowance for the maintenance of the surviving widow for one year was fixed at the sum of $3,941.56, and the administrator was ordered to pay to the receiver of the widow’s estate, not as an advancement, but that the same should be charged against the community estate of the husband and wife, together with the costs of the administration and the debts chargeable against such community estate and that one-half of the remainder should be delivered to the survivor, or her legal representatives or - heirs. Ftom this judgment of the district court the administrator, who is shown to have been in possession of all the property, including the separate estate of the deceased husband and the community estate of the deceased and surviving wife, and who had contended that the estate being solvent and a part of the wife’s community estate being sufficient to maintain her for a year, and who had also contended that this community property of the wife became her separate estate by the death of her husband, appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals at Eastland, where that portion of the judgment of the district court was set aside, which made the community estate of the husband and wife responsible for the year’s allowance, and entered a judgment allowing the amount of the allowance decreed by the district court, but directed that this amount should be charged as an advancement to the widow out of her portion of the community estate of herself and her husband remaining in the hands of the administrator when the estate became ready for distribution. The Supreme Court granted the application of the receiver of the surviving widow because of the importance of the question involved. 25 S.W.(2d) 264.

The legal proposition of the administrator is to the effect that the allowance for a year’s support of the surviving widow should be charged against her interest in the community estate and that this interest in said estate is her separate property which it may be admitted, for purposes of this discussion, to be adequate to her maintenance for one year; while the legal proposition presented by the receiver of the surviving widow is to the effect that upon final distribution and partition of the community estate of the deceased and his surviving wife, said allowance, should not be charged against the interest of the surviving widow in the community estate left in the hands of the administrator for distribution after all debts shall have been paid, together with the costs of administration.

The proceeding in the probate court is one in rem and the record shows that the administrator inventoried, as a part of the estate of the deceased husband, all of the property belonging to the husband and his surviving wife [958]*958and took actual possession of this property, together with the separate estate of the deceased husband. The record also shows that he sold a part of the lands belonging to the community estate of the deceased husband and surviving wife and, of course, conveyed to the purchaser such title as belonged to both the deceased husband and the surviving wife. The record also shows that there was belonging to said community estate some money in the bank and that the whole of said community estate was inventoried at the valuation of $.45,844.75, the separate estate of the deceased being valued at $32,000. There is nothing in the record to show the amount of the debts of the community estate nor the costs of the administration, but it may be assumed that there would have been left out of the community estate of the deceased husband and his surviving wife, after these debts and costs have been paid, a sum one-half of which would be equal to the amount of the allowance, approximating $4,000, and according to the contention of the administrator, the widow would not be entitled to any portion of the community estate in'the Anal distribution thereof, should it appear that her one-half of the remainder in his hands did not exceed in value what she had already received by way of an allowance for a year’s support.

On the contrary, it is the contention of the receiver of the surviving widow that while her portion of the community estate, left in the hands of the administrator of the estate of the deceased husband, is liable for its proportionate share to pay the debts of the community estate and the cost of administration, yet the whole of the community estate is not only liable for such debts and such costs, but is also liable for the payment of the sum allowed her for a year’s support; the latter sum to have preference over all debts of the community estate, except funeral expenses and expenses of the last sickness of the intestate.

However, it is the further contention of the administrator that subject to the payment of the debts of the community estate, one-half of the community property belonging to the deceased husband and the surviving wife became, upon the death of the husband, the separate property of the surviving wife, and it being assumed that this so-called separate property is sufficient to maintain her for one year after the death of her husband, by virtue of the terms of the statute the surviving wife was not entitled to have any allowance made her for a year’s support.

The validity of this contention depends upon whether, under the law, where a person dies intestate, leaving community property of more valúe than the amount of the debts against said property, and where the probate court has taken charge of the community estate lawfully, and where the deceased husband left a surviving wife having no property, except her interest in the community estate, this interest in the community estate, pending its administration in the probate court, became the separate property of the wife within the meaning of the phrase as used in the Constitution and laws of the state. This becomes a material inquiry under the facts of this case, in view of article 3478, R. S.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.W.2d 956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pace-v-eoff-texcommnapp-1932.