Porter v. Porter

282 S.W. 816, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 380
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 1926
DocketNo. 7532.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 282 S.W. 816 (Porter v. Porter) 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
Porter v. Porter, 282 S.W. 816, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 380 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

This appeal is from an interlocutory order overruling a plea of privilege.

The suit was brought by C. M. Porter and others against W. A. Porter and Vernon Porter. All the parties, except three spouses joined pro forma as such, are children or grandchildren of L. T. Porter and wife, deceased. The obvious purpose of all the plaintiffs, as well as of the defendant W. A. Porter, is to require the remaining defendant, Vernon Porter, to account for and disgorge certain real and personal property in which the plaintiffs and defendant W. A. Porter claim an equal proportionate interest with Vernon Porter, alleged to have possession of all the property and the legal title to most of the real estate involved. Defendant W. A. Porter resides in San Patricio county, and defendant Vernon Porter in Jim Wells county, where all the property involved is situated. The other parties reside in various other counties. 'The suit,'however, was brought in San Patricio county, of which plaintiff C. M. Porter and defendant W. A. Porter are residents.

The defendant Vernon Porter filed a plea of privilege to be sued in Jim Wells county, where he resides, and where all the property involved is situated. The plea embraced all the elements required by the provisions of article 2007, R. S. 1925, and an additional allegation that W. A. Porter was fraudulently made a party defendant by plaintiffs for the purpose of conferring jurisdiction upon the district court of San Patricio county, and that the action, although brought in the form of a partition suit, was in fact an action for an accounting. To this plea the plaintiffs filed a controverting affidavit,- contending that the suit was one for partition, that the demand for an accounting was but an incident to the main clause for partition, and that as W. A. Porter, one of the defendants, was a resident of San Patricio county, the ac.tion was maintainable there by virtue of the provisions of subdivision 13, art. 1830, R. S. 1911 (article 1995, R. S. 1925), as follows:

“Art. 1995. No person who is an inhabitant of this state shall be sued out of the county in which he has his domicile except in. the following cases: * * *
“(13) Partition. — Suits for the partition of land or other property may be brought in the county where such land or other property, or a part thereof, may be, or in the county in which one or-more of the defendants reside, or in the county of the residence of any defendant who-may assert an adverse claim to or interest in such property, or seeks to recover the title to *817 the same. Nothing herein shall he construed to fix venue of a suit to recover-the title to land.”

A hearing was had upon the plea of privilege which was overruled, and Yernon Porter appealed.

It was alleged in the petition of the plaintiffs below that in 1907 or 1908, L. T. Porter and wife moved to Sandia, in Jim Wells county, and lived there with their son, Vernon, until they died, intestate, in 1922 and 1917, respectively; that they owned several lots in the town of Sandia, on which they had their home as well as a business establishment; that the father was 72 years old when he went to live with Yernon, was so infirm that he could not attend to his own business affairs, and that his infirmities gradually progressed until his death; that from 1907 the father and Vernon were engaged as partners in the general merchandise business at San-dia, and that Vernon “actively attended to business affairs of the concern and to the exclusion of the plaintiffs and also the defendant W. A. Porter, and had control and management of the business of the affairs of his father and the property of his parent’s estate.” It was further alleged:

“That during the time that said partnership business, which was owned one-half by L. T. Porter and one-half by Vernon Porter, was being conducted, various persons became indebted to the firm; with a great many of these settlements were had by the conveying or assigning to the firm, real or personal property; such property was taken in the name of Vernon Porter, although in truth and in fact it belonged to the partnership and was traded in by Vernon Porter and the proceeds thereof ultimately invested by him in the 500 acres of land hereinafter described in the improvement there'of and in the purchase of personal property. Those debtors of the firm with whom settlements were not had were obligated to the firm on open account. As to the number of such accounts and the respective amounts thereof, and as to what portion of them have been collected, these plaintiffs are unable to state, because all the books and papers relative to the partnership affairs and in respect to the properties of the estates of Mr. and Mrs. Porter are in the hands of the defendant Vernon Porter, and the facts in relation thereto are exclusively in his knowledge, and no statement thereof has ever been made.
“That upon the termination of the partnership affairs the business was sold, plaintiffs say upon information and belief, for a cash consideration of the sum of $6,000, and in regard to which the defendant Vernon Porter has rendered no accounting.
“That after the partnership .was terminated and before that time, the defendant Vernon Porter has collected rents from the above-mentioned business property and no accounting thereof, and such rentals, the amounts for the reason stated and because the defendant Vernon Porter has assumed the management and control thereof since the death of L. T. Porter, these plaintiffs are unable to state, which said rentals after the death of L. T. Porter became the property of his estate, and which plaintiffs and defendants are entitled to share in proportion as stated, and of which the defendant Vernon Porter should be held accountable.
“That the defendant Vernon Porter is chargeable with advancements to him by the said L. T. Porter and ID. P. Porter; one advancement consisted of a block of ground in the town of Sandia, being all of block No. 19, with the improvements thereon, all of the probable value of $1,500. These plaintiffs say that the gift of this property was in the nature of an advancement, and the defendant Vernon Porter should be held accountable therefor, or its value in the partition of the property of the estates.
“That the household and personal effects of L. T. Porter and E. P. Porter, now also in the hands of the defendant Vernon Porter, are property belonging tp their estate, belonging jointly to plaintiffs and defendants, and subject to partition in this suit.”

It was further alleged that by reason of the facts stated, the estates.of the deceased parents “own an interest” in four specifically described tracts of land, aggregating 500 acres, the legal title to which was alleged to be in Vernon Porter, “in proportion to the funds of said estates that went into the purchase and the improvements thereof,” subject to certain indebtedness existing against it, and “such interest is owned by the plaintiffs and defendants in the proportion” therein specifically set out. In the alternative, the plaintiffs alleged “that the funds of the estates of L. T. and E. P.

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 816, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-porter-texapp-1926.