Patillo v. Allison

51 S.W.2d 1041, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 650
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1932
DocketNo. 1245.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 51 S.W.2d 1041 (Patillo v. Allison) 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
Patillo v. Allison, 51 S.W.2d 1041, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 650 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, C. J.

This suit was instituted by Addie Lueile Burrows and husband, Arthur Burrows, ap-pellees herein, against Bennie Shaw Allison, James Edward Allison, and Aliene Grace Allison, minors, also, appellees herein, for the partition of a certain tract of land consisting of five acres, situated in Dallas county, Tex. Appellant, M. T. Patillo, intervened, claiming by'purchase from Mrs. Burrows one acre out of her share of said tract. A brief statement of the circumstances out of which the claims of the respective parties in and to this tract of land arose is deemed proper. Mrs. Burrows, formerly Mrs. Allison, is the mother of the minors James Edward Allison and Aliene Grace Allison, and stepmother of the minor Bennie Shaw Allison, he being the son of- her deceased husband. She, for herself and as next friend for said minors, recovered a judgment in the district court of Dallas county, Fourteenth judicial district, against the Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company for the sum of $10,500, of which sum $7,500 was by the terms of said judgment apportioned to her and $1,000 apportioned to each of said minors. The aggregate sum so apportioned to *1042 said three minors was deposited in the registry of the court, as provided by article 1994 of our Revised Statutes. On November 12, 1927, shortly after said money was so cle- ■ posited, she applied to the court for an order dii-eeting the investment thereof. Her application is not in the record. The recitations in the order of court entered on said day, however, show that she made such application and that the court heard evidence and found that the money belonging to said minors should be invested in the tract of .land involved herein asa part of the purchase price, as recited in a conveyance thereof by J. E. Maybery to Addie Bucile Allison, Bennie Shaw Allison, James Edward Allison, and Aliene Grace Allison. The court in said ordér directed that the said sum of $3,000 belonging to said minors be paid by the clerk of the court to said grantor, J. E. Maybery, that he be required to receipt therefor upon the records of the court, and that such receipt be a full discharge of the clerk from further liability for said money. The deed from said Maybery to Mrs. Allison and said minors was introduced in evidence, but is not found in the statement of facts herein. It, however, appears to be conceded by all parties that the purchase price paid to said Maybery for said tract of land was $7,000, that $4,000 thereof -was paid out of the money received by Mrs. Allison as her share of said judgment, and the remaining $3,000 out of the money deposited in the registry of the court for said minors, and that Mrs. Allison and said minors were named as grantees therein without any recital indicating their respective interests in said land. 'Mrs. Allison thereafter conveyed to appellant one acre of land off of the west end of said tract. After said conveyance and prior to the institution of this suit, Mrs. Allison married her coappellee, Arthur Burrows. Bennie Shaw Allison answered by a duly appointed and qualified guardian of his estate. The court appointed a guardian ad litem to represent the other two minors. Both said guardian and guardian ad litem, by proper pleadings, assailed the action of the court in ordering the moneys belonging to said minors invested in said tract of land, and charged in that connection that Mrs. Allison fraudulently represented to the court that she was the guardian of said minors and thereby induced the court to order the moneys belonging to them invested in said land, and that the court would not have made such order had he known that she was not in fact such guardian. They further charged that on account of such alleged fraud Mrs. Allison became a constructive trustee of such funds, and that the land so acquired in part therewith became charged with a lien to secure the same, and that the intervener acquired his purported interest therein with knowledge or notice of such facts. They asked that Mrs. Allison be required to return said money into the registry of the court, with legal interest thereon, or, in the alternative, that they have judgment against her therefor and a foreclosure of their equitable lien on said tract as a whole to secure the same. "

The case was tried by the court without a jury. The court awarded to appellant title to the one acre of land claimed by him off the west side of the tract, and described the same by metes and bounds. The court further awarded to said minors, Bennie Shaw Allison, James Edward Allison, and Aliene Grace Allison, a judgment against said Addie Lueile Burrows and her present husband, Arthur Burrows, in the sum of $4,116.67, being the original sum of $3,000 paid out of the registry of the court as a part of the purchase price of said tract of land, with legal interest thereon from the date of such payment to the time of trial, together with interest on such judgment until finally paid at the rate of 6 percent. per annum, and further awarded a foreclosure "of a lien on the entire tract to secure the payment of the same. The court further provided in said judgment that the four acres remaining after the sale to the appellant be sold first and the proceeds applied in satisfaction of the recovery so awarded' to said minors, and the remainder of such proceeds, if any, paid to Mrs. Burrows, but further-provided that, in event the proceeds from the sale of said four acres should not be sufficient to discharge in full the judgment in favor of said minors, the one-acre tract awarded to appellant be then sold and the proceeds applied to the satisfaction of said judgment, and the remainder, if any, paid to him. Appellant presented a motion for new trial, which the court overruled. He thereupon perfected this appeal.

Opinion.

Appellant presents eighteen separate assignments of error assailing the judgment rendex-ed in this ease. He contends therein that the action of the court in ordei-ing the funds of the minors then in its registry invested in said tract of land was a valid exercise of authority conferred by statute, and constituted a judicial determination that the interests of the minors would be protected and served by such investment, and that the trial court erred in holding that such investment was without lawful authority. He further contends in that connection that there is no testimony to support an implied finding that Mrs., Allison perpetrated any fraud upon the court in procuring such order of that the court was in any way misled in making the same.

The court in making said order of investment acted under the authority of article 1994, Revised Civil Statutes of 1925. Said article provides that minors who have no legal guai-d-ian may sue by next friend, but further provides that, when the minors so represented *1043 shall recover a judgment for money or other personal property not exceeding $500 in value, the court may by order entered of record authorize such next friend, or any othér person, to take charge of such money or property for the use and benefit of such minors, upon execution of a bond payable and conditioned as therein prescribed. Such conditions require the makers of such bond to pay such money, with legal interest thereon, to the party entitled to receive the same when ordered by the court to do so. Said article further provides that the person who takes such money or property shall receive such compensation as the court may allow, and shall make such disposition thereof or return the same into court as the court may order.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W.2d 1041, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patillo-v-allison-texapp-1932.