Parks v. Knox

61 Tex. Civ. App. 493
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 61 Tex. Civ. App. 493 (Parks v. Knox) 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
Parks v. Knox, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 493 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

HODGES, Associate Justice.

— Appellants brought this suit in the ordinary form of an action of trespass to try title, seeking the recovery of 320 acres of the B. J. Smith survey, situated in Cherokee County. They are the children of W. S. and Mary A. Parks, both deceased, and claim title by inheritance from their parents. The appellees, defendants in the court below, pleaded not guilty, and specially set up their title as purchasers under a sale made by the executors of the will of W. S. Parks, the father of appellants, to J. M. Beard and E. F. Ezell. From the agreed statement we make the following findings as to the facts: W. S. Parks, the common source of title, was married twice, and the appellants are the children of his second marriage. His first wife, Minerva, died in Cherokee County in 1864, leaving surviving her W. S. Parks, her husband, and three children, Thomas M., Mary E., and James. At the time of her death Minerva Parks and W. S. Parks owned community property consisting of both land and personalty. A portion of the land was situated in the State of Missouri. W. S. Parks subsequently married a second wife, Mary A., who became the mother of appellants, Ed. and Boxanna Parks. The land involved in this suit is the community property of the second marriage, and now belongs' to the appellants unless a con[497]*497veyance executed by the executor and executrix of the estate of W. Si Parks had the effect of passing title to Beard and Ezell, under whom the appellees claim. W. S. Parks died in 1876, leaving a will in which he appointed his wife, Mary, and his business partner, John A. Boyd, executrix and executor, and directed an independent administration of his estate. Specific portions were devised to his second wife and to the children of the former marriage, but the land involved in this suit was not disposed of. It appears that there had never been any partition between Parks and his first set of children of the community property of himself and his first wife. Most, if not all, of the land they so owned was still held by Parks at the time of his death, and in disposing of his estate by his will he seems to have made no distinction between this property and that which he thereafter acquired. The will was probated in 1876. During that year the children of the first marriage, presumably having declined to take under the will, instituted a suit in the District Court of Cherokee County against Mary Parks and John A. Boyd as the executors of the will of W. S. Parks. The purpose of that suit, as disclosed by the petition, was to recover the community interest which the plaintiffs in the action claimed by inheritance from their deceased mother, Minerva Parks. At the March term of the District Court, in 1878, an agreement was made, which formed the basis of a decree of partition entered as a final determination of the suit. The appellants in this suit, though not made parties to that suit by the pleadings, appear as parties to the agreement and the decree. During the progress of the trial John A. Boyd was appointed their guardian ad litem, and signed the agreement as such. The agreement provided for an entire division of all the property owned or claimed by Parks, both in his own right and as belonging to the first and last communities. The terms of this judgment more fully appear hereafter.

At the time of his death W. S. Parks was indebted to John M. Beard in the sum of $747. He was also indebted jointly with his partner, Boyd, to John MeCrummen in the sum of $1,000. The Beard debt was reduced to judgment in 1879. During the same year Mary A. Parks and John A. Boyd, purporting to act as the representatives of the estate of W. S. Parks, executed a deed conveying the land in controversy to John M. Beard and E. F. Ezell. The consideration recited in this conveyance was $240 to be credited on the judgment recovered by Ezell against the estate of W. S. Parks. The claim which the appellants now assert to the land is based upon the insufficiency of this conveyance to transfer any title to Beard and Ezell. They contend that by the agreed judgment, to which we have referred, the executors had made a distribution of the property belonging to the estate of W. S. Parks, had thereby surrendered their dominion as executors, were without power to then dispose of this property for the payment of debts, and for that reason that this conveyance did not vest any title in the purchasers.

Upon a trial before the court a judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants in. the suit. The principal attack upon the judgment is based upon the contention that it is not supported by the evidence.

[498]*498The appellants rely upon the proposition that when the representatives of the estate of the decedent, empowered to act independently of the Probate Court, make a distribution of any portion of the estate and deliver possession thereof to the heirs or devisees, such representatives lose all control or dominion over that portion and can not thereafter administer it for the benefit of creditors. The following authorities to which we are referred we think sustain the proposition of law upon which the appellants rely. McDonough v. Cross, 40 Texas, 271; Allen v. Von Rosenberg, 16 S. W., 1099; Henderson v. Lindley, 75 Texas, 185, 12 S. W., 979; Fisk v. Norvell, 9 Texas, 14, 58 Am. Dec., 128. As proof of the fact that a distribution had been made by the executors of the will of W. S. Parks, and that possession of this property had been surrendered by them to the distributees, the appellants rely upon the agreed judgment which was rendered in the suit between the children of the first marriage and the executors of the will of W. S. Parks. The question is, does this decree, by its terms, purport to make a final distribution of the estate of W. S: Parks? The agreement upon which the judgment was based is as follows: “It is agreed in .the above-entitled cause by the parties thereto that a decree by consent be entered as follows, to wit: First. Thomas M. Parks shall have the lot of land now occupied by him as a homestead in the town of Rusk. Second. James Parks shall have 160 acres, the_ Judge Hill tract. Third. Mary E. Bothwell, formerly Mary E. Parks, shall have 100 acres of land known as the Z. Gibbs league, being the same tract mentioned in W. S. Parks’ will. Fourth. The said Thomas, James and Mary E. shall have the tract of land known and described as one-fourth league of the Jordan league. Fifth. Mary A., widow of W. S. Parks, deceased, Roxanna Parks, and Edwin B. Parks, minor children of W. S. Parks, deceased, and Mary A. Parks, shall have,” etc. Then follows description of several tracts of land, including that which is here in controversy, and also all of the personal property on hand. The agreement then proceeds: “The property to be set aside in this decree to the said Thomas M., James and Mary E. to be in full satisfaction of their claims upon the estate of W. S. Parks, deceased, and the estate of said W. S. and Minerva Parks, deceased, save and except the interest in the Missouri property.” This agreement is signed by the attorneys for the different parties and by John A. Boyd as special guardian for Roxanna and E. B. Parks, minors. The judgment entered upon that agreement is as follows:

"It is therefore adjudged, considered and decreed by the court that the following described land be and the same is set apart and partitioned to Thomas M. Parks: (Then follows the description). And all of the right, title and interest which the estate of W. S. Parks, deceased, and upon which the other plaintiffs and defendants herein, or either of them, have in and to said before described lot of land, together with the improvements thereon, are vested in the said Thomas M.

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61 Tex. Civ. App. 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-knox-texapp-1910.