Pryor v. Krause

168 S.W. 498, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1182
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1914
DocketNos. 192, 310.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 168 S.W. 498 (Pryor v. Krause) 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
Pryor v. Krause, 168 S.W. 498, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1182 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

HARPER, C. J.

Annie P. Krause, by her first amended original petition, filed February 14,1912, sued Thos. D. Pryor and John P. Pryor in their individual capacities, and also in their representative capacities, as independent executors and trustees under will of Fannie D. Porter, deceased, C. W. Fas-sett, receiver of the estate of said deceased, Porter, Frederick Pryor, Thomas Aubrey Pryor, Frances Pryor, Francis D. Pryor, and John P. Pryor, Jr., in trespass to try title to certain premises in the city of El Paso.

The original petition is not shown in the record, but from recital in foregoing amendment it appears to have been filed September 26, 1910. By reason of this omission from the record we are not accurately and definitely advised as to the capacities in which the defendants were originally sued, but we gather from other portions of the record that said Thos. D. Pryor and John P. Pryor in their representative capacities were not sued originally.

Mrs. Fannie D. Porter died November 24, 1896, and her will, hereinafter copied in part,; was regularly admitted to probate, and plaintiff, Annie P. Krause, and defendants John P. Pryor and Thos. D. Pryor qualified as executors and trustees of the estate as therein provided, and entered upon the discharge of their duties as such. The receiver Fassett answered by plea of not guilty.

The other defendants in the cause were grandchildren of Fannie D. Porter, and disclaimers were filed by Francis D. Pryor on February 7, 1911, and by John P. Pryor, Jr., on February 8, 1912, in which title was expressly admitted to be in plaintiff. Frederick Pryor, Thomas Aubrey Pryor, and Frances Pryor being minors, a guardian ad litem for them was appointed, who answered in their behalf, as hereinafter indicated.

On January 7, 1911, John P. Pryor filed a disclaimer expressly admitting the truth of the facts alleged by plaintiff with reference to the title to the premises in controversy, and on February 12, 1912, he entered his appearance in the cause in-his representative capacity, and as such, and in behalf of the estate of the decedent, disclaimed any interest in the premises. At the time this appearance and disclaimer were made, the amended petition, complaining of him in his representative capacity, had not been filed, but the first supplemental petition filed February 8, 1912, hereinafter noted, had been filed, in which judgment against him in such capacity was asked.

On January 19, 1912, Thos. D. Pryor filed his first amended answer, which he termed a plea “in limine,” for the purpose of showing that there was a defect of necessary parties defendant. The pleading is confusing, but we gather the following material allegations: That in cause No. 8056, pending in the Thirty-Fourth district court of El Paso county, wherein Thos. D. Pryor, individually and as executor and trustee of estate of Fannie D. Porter, was plaintiff, and Annie P. Krause, and John P. Pryor, individually, and as such trustees of said estate, together with other persons, were parties defendant, upon the petition of said Thos. D. Pryor, C. W. Fassett was appointed receiver of the estate of said decedent, including the property here in controversy, and that Fassett qualified as such; that on September 15, 1910, he had filed in said cause his amended petition, making Frank Davis Pryor, John P. Pryor, Jr., Frederick Pryor, Thomas Aubrey Pryor, and Frances Pryor, children of John P. Pryor and grandchildren of deceased, as additional parties defendant; that the amended petition was divided into two counts, and was a bill in equity; that he had alleged all of the facts conected with the will and estate of Fannie D.’ Porter, and claimed an accounting both as heir at law and as joint executor and administrator and as tenant for life under the will; that in the first count it was claimed that the will was invalid, as violating the rule against perpetuities, but that *500 question is still undetermined by the court in which said cause is pending; that by the second count in the petition the validity of the will was assumed and an accounting claimed as an executor and trustee and as a life tenant or beneficiary; a copy of the Porter will was attached to the pleading and made a part thereof, and its due execution and probate averred; that he and Annie P. Krause and John P. Pryor had qualified as executors and trustees thereunder, and had afterwards filed an inventory and appraisement of the estate, which included the premises sued for; that the premises so sued for by plaintiff are held by said parties as executors and trustees, and by Fassett as receiver under the appointment aforesaid, and that Fassett, by reason of such appointment, represented all of the beneficiaries under the will, and Annie P. Krause, John P. Pryor, and Thos. D. Pryor as executors and trustees ; that the defendants in said cause on November 30, 1910, filed a motion to vacate the receivership and set forth divers and sundry grounds by which they attempted to make an accounting for and on behalf of the said Annie P. Krause and John P. Pryor as independent executors as aforesaid, and, a supplemental motion to vacate the receivership having been filed by said defendants, the court, on December 18, 1910, in said cause No. 8056, discharged the receiver Fassett; that by reason thereof Fasset is without authority to further appear in this cause in behalf of the heirs at law, beneficiaries, and executors and trustees under the Porter will, and that the court had lost jurisdiction over the person and subject-matter of the suit, so far as the authority of the receiver was concerned; that he (Thos. D. Pryor) and John P. Pryor had never been made parties to the suit in their capacities as executors, trustees, and beneficiaries under the Porter will, and, as shown by the terms of the will, he would not in such capacity be authorized to interpose all of the defenses-’ and claims which should be urged; that by reason of the premises there is a defect and nonjoinder of necessary parties defendant; that Annie P. Krause and John P. Pryor and such of the grandchildren of Mrs. Porter as were of age, as shown by the pleadings, disclaimers, and orders of court, were acting together and against his ihterest and the interest of the minor heirs. Wherefore he presented his plea “in limine,” and prayed that the suit be dismissed for want of proper parties defendant, and, if not dismissed, that the proper and necessary parties defendant be brought before the court, and further proceedings stayed until this was done.

The answer then, without waiving the plea “in limine,” contained a plea of not guilty and special matters of defense not necessary to state in detail.

On February 8, 1912, plaintiff filed first supplemental petition claiming that there was no necessity to make further parties to the suit, but, if so, she asked judgment against John P. Pryor and Thos. D. Pryor in their representative capacity, as well as their individual capacity, and against all of the defendants in whatever capacity they might assert claim to the property.

On February 15, 1912, the minors Frederick Pryor, Thomas Aubrey Pryor, and Frances Pryor, by their guardian ad litem, filed an amended answer, in which they adopted the plea “in limine” of Thos. D. Pry- or ; also pleaded “not guilty” and special matters of defense not necessary to state in detail.

On February 12, 1912, the court entered an order sustaining the plea “in limine” to the extent that Thos. D. Pryor and John P. Pryor, in their representative capacities as executors and trustees of estate and will of Fannie D.

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Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 498, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pryor-v-krause-texapp-1914.