Richardson v. McCloskey

228 S.W. 323, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1254
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1920
DocketNo. 6329. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 323 (Richardson v. McCloskey) 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
Richardson v. McCloskey, 228 S.W. 323, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1254 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

* Dismissed for want of jurisdiction, June 15, 1921. *Page 324 J. This is an appeal from an interlocutory order appointing a receiver pendente lite in the case of Robert J. McCloskey et al. v, George Richardson et al., pending in the district court of Tom Green county. *Page 325

The suit was instituted April 25, 1919, and on January 9, 1920, plaintiffs filed a motion for the appointment of a receiver of the property of the estate of T. H. McCloskey, deceased.

In the second amended petition, filed May 6, 1920, plaintiffs alleged that by the terms of the will of T. H. McCloskey, deceased, they were granted a certain interest in such estate, and that George Richardson and James J. Neill were named and duly qualified as independent executors without bond. They further alleged that the estate consisted of lands and personal property, some of which was the separate property of T. H. McCloskey, deceased, and some the community property of himself and his wife, Laura McCloskey, deceased, and that James J. Neill was made sole residuary legatee under the will of Laura McCloskey, and was appointed independent executor of her estate, and qualified as such.

The suit is for an accounting from the executors of the estate of T. H. McCloskey, and a partition and distribution of the property belonging to the estate, and the petition includes additional allegations upon which the application for a receiver was based.

In the original petition plaintiffs did not pray for the appointment of a receiver, but asked for a construction of the will of T. H. McCloskey, and for a determination of their interest in the estate, for an accounting and Judgment for their interest and title to the estate, and for such sums of money as the court might hold they were entitled under the will. The sworn pleadings of the plaintiffs asking for a receiver were denied under oath by both defendants. The denial went to most, if not all, of the material allegations of the plaintiffs' pleadings, and, while certain facts were admitted, they were attempted to be excused by the sworn answers.

In the appointment of the receiver the court acted upon the sworn pleadings and the evidence introduced upon the trial of the motion.

The pleadings are voluminous, and we shall not attempt to set out all the averments, but shall only point out the material allegations touching the issues arising upon this appeal.

Plaintiffs alleged the execution of the will of T. H. McCloskey, dated October 16, 1910, and a codicil, dated December 9, 1914, and his death on December 26, 1914; that by the terms of the will, after the payment of the debts, he devised a life interest in his estate to his wife, Laura McCloskey, granting her the income, and providing that upon her death his interest in the estate should be disposed of by his executors, and when converted into cash certain legacies should be paid, and that the residue should be divided between his surviving sisters and brothers, who are the plaintiffs, share and share alike; that the will and codicil were probated at the April term, 1915, of the county court, upon the application of defendants, who were appointed by the court independent executors; that they thereafter qualified without bond, and since have been acting independent of the probate court, having taken charge and possession of the community estate of T. H. McCloskey and wife, which was alleged to be of the approximate value of $125,000, in which the estate of T. H. McCloskey, deceased, owned an undivided one-half interest. They alleged the sale by the executors of some of the personal property of the estate and the collection of rents, revenues, and profits, amounting to about $25,000, and the payment out of the estate by the executors of various sums, aggregating about $12,000.

The petition alleged the death of Laura McCloskey on October 28, 1917, and that she left a will, naming James J. Neill as independent executor, and making him residuary legatee, which was alleged to have been probated at the January term, 1918; that James J. Neill, as independent executor and as residuary legatee of Laura McCloskey, was claiming a large part of the proceeds of the personal estate belonging to the estate of T. H. McCloskey as the property of the estate of Laura McCloskey, and certain specified property which was claimed to be in part the separate property of T. H. McCloskey and in part the community property of T. H. McCloskey and wife, and that defendants were refusing to recognize plaintiffs' interests in such property, but deny the same, and were recognizing and asserting the claim thereto by James J. Neill, inconsistent with and in opposition to the trust estate in their hands.

Plaintiffs further alleged the exclusive possession and control of the estate by defendants, and that they have never been able to ascertain the amount of the rents and revenues collected by them, or the exact amounts paid out by them, and they prayed for an order requiring them to file an inventory and schedule and an itemized accounting. They also alleged negligent and illegal handling of the estate by the executors, and the use of the trust funds for their personal account and profit, without giving notes and securities therefor, and the lending of the trust funds to relatives and business concerns in which they had a private interest; that, without legal authority and in violation of their trust, they had pretended to make a partial division with the estate of Laura McCloskey shortly after her death, and paid to Neill a large amount of personal property; that Neill acted in this matter in the dual capacity of executor and residuary devisee, and that, after diligent investigation, plaintiffs have not been able to ascertain what properties were set aside in the pretended division to the estate of T. H. McCloskey; the failure of defendants to keep proper books or entries of such transaction, or to *Page 326 furnish plaintiffs with a list or schedule of any properties claimed to have been set apart to the estate; that even after the taking of the oral depositions of defendants and their bookkeepers, and after the filing of the answer and exhibit of defendants, they were unable to ascertain what, if any, assets were set apart to the estate of T. H. McCloskey in the pretended division. They alleged the appropriation of this property to James J. Neill, with the consent of George Richardson, the disputing and denial of plaintiffs' title thereto and interest therein, and the claiming of such property to the exclusion of plaintiffs. They further alleged a conversion and appropriation of the rents and profits of the estate, and refusal to account to plaintiffs for any portion of same, the exact amount of which they were unable to state, the sale of certain real estate belonging to the estate, and a conversion and appropriation by defendants to their own use of the proceeds, and a refusal to account. It was averred that the defendants were without legal authority to exercise the power to sell the real estate without the consent of plaintiffs, but that since the filing of the suit they had exercised this authority, and had asserted the right to continue to do so, and deny plaintiffs any right to participate in the management, control, or disposition of the estate, and especially to a partition and division of the property, although the legacies, taxes, and other expenses of the estate had been fully paid. It was alleged that, although the suit was filed in April, 1919, no attempt to file any showing or accounting of their management of the estate was made by the defendants until February, 1920, and that they then refused to account for all the properties in their hands.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 323, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-mccloskey-texapp-1920.