Plummer v. Plummer
This text of 154 S.W. 597 (Plummer v. Plummer) 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.
Opinion
(after stating the facts as above).
By undertaking to look after the proper and necessary support of the minor children for the time being, the court in legal effect makes the children wards of the court, and the trust estate created to provide the means of the support is to be administered by the trustee appointed for the purpose under the *599 supervision and protection of the court. The minor children do not acquire by such order any vested interest in the property itself. And it is by reason of the subject-matter that the jurisdiction of the court is a continuing one to provide for the wards and their support, and as a consequence the power exists in the proper proceeding to alter or modify the former order for support. The order creating the trust in the property for the support of the minors not being final in the sense that it could not be changed or modified as causes calling for its change exists; and the court having the power, in a proper application, to modify or alter the trust order as changed conditions of the parties truly exist, then, legally speaking, the instant judgment could only operate to defer possession and use of the property to appellants so long as the present causes requiring the court to administer the trust in the interest of the minors may exist. By direct application to the court made in the divorce order, and by proper notice to the defendants, the appellants, as succeeding to the rights of their father in the property, •could establish the existing changes, if any, calling for a modification or abolition of the trust for the support of the minors, and then the order granting the modification or abolition operates to relieve or remove the deferred possession of the instant judgment. So if the court had the power to create the trust in the property, the décree in the instant case could not be said to be void or erroneous. It has been decided in this state that where a divorce has been granted the ■court has authority, in cases where the circumstances require it, to place the separate property of the husband in the hands of a trustee for the support and education of the minor children of the marriage, provided the title of the owner is not divested. Fitts v. Fitts, 14 Tex. 448; Rice v. Rice, 21 Tex. 58; Pape v. Pape, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 99, 35 S. W. 479; Bemus v. Bemus, 133 S. W. 503. As the court had the power to make provisions for the support of the minor children in the divorce decree, and in view of the power of the court to subsequently modify ■or alter the order, the entire order should not be held void, we think, because the time the court fixed for the running of the trust in the future might, in that particular respect, be said to be unreasonable and erroneous in the proper attack on such order.
As no further questions are presented, the .judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
154 S.W. 597, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plummer-v-plummer-texapp-1913.