Robinson v. Diggs

125 S.W.2d 348
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
DocketNo. 4986.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 348 (Robinson v. Diggs) 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
Robinson v. Diggs, 125 S.W.2d 348 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

On September 6, 1933, E. E. Diggs, an attorney residing at Childress, presented to Ovenia J. Ray, guardian of the persons and estate of John F. Robinson et al., minors, his account and claim in the sum of $1000 for professional services rendered to the guardian and estate of her wards. Credits aggregating $342.50 were entered upon the claim, leaving a balance of $657.50. _ The claim was dated August 31, 1933, and on the 6th of September, 1933, the guardian allowed the claim for the entire balance due of $657.50 and caused it to be entered upon the claim docket of the probate court.

The claim shows a memorandum entered and signed by the county judge which states that “On this the 3rd day of October, A. D. 1933, came on for examination the claim of E. E. Diggs against the estate of the said minors for the sum of $657.50, and it appearing to the court that said claim has been allowed by Ovenia J. Ray, the guardian of said minors, and that the same is just, it is ordered that the said claim be and is approved for the sum of $657.50.”

The only file date appearing upon the claim is September 6, 1933, and the claim docket of the probate court shows by entry *350 in the column for that purpose that it was allowed on September 6, 1933.

The claimant, E. E. Diggs, afterwards departed this life, and his surviving wife, Mrs. Wade S. Diggs, the appellee in this case, qualified as independent executrix and sole legatee of his estate. The claim not having been paid, Mrs. Diggs, on November 27, 1937, filed in the probate court an application for an order requiring the present guardian, John F. Robinson, to pay the claim and, in the alternative, for an order requiring him to sell sufficient property of the estate to discharge it.

The application was contested in the probate court by appellant, John F. Robinson, guardian, upon a number of grounds not necessary here to mention, and a hearing upon the application in that court on December 22, 1937, resulted in an order granting the application and directing the guardian to pay the claim out of the funds he then had on hand.

Appellant duly excepted to the order of the probate court and gave notice of appeal to the district court of Childress County where he filed his amended original answer and protest which consisted of four separate counts, the first count consisting of a general demurrer, the second consisting of ten special exceptions, the third consisting of fifteen different allegations, all except the fourteenth setting up various matters claimed to be shown upon the face of the record which he contends renders void the original order of the probate court approving the claim. In the fourteenth paragraph or section of the third count he alleged that the only funds now in his hands are $1191, which.are the proceeds of the sale of certain cotton from 200 acres of land that had, by order of the probate court, theretofore been set aside as the homestead of the wards. .He also alleged in this section that there was pending a secured claim of a machinery company in the sum of $802.26, which had been approved by the probate court and that, after paying the machinery company’s claim, there would not be sufficient money left in his hands to maintain and educate his wards. Wherefore, he alleged the claim of appellant could not lawfully be paid.

In the fourth count he alleged (1) that the claim shows it is for services rendered to recover 322 acres of land and the guardianship record shows that the guardian was never in possession of more than 200 acres, by reason of which the contention is made that, if the claim is approved, it should be for only %ths of the amount which would be in proportion to the quantum of the entire land which is held by the guardianship. (2) That if any portion of the claim is allowed, at most only %ths of it should be charged to the guardianship because, prior to its approval by the probate court on October 3, 1933, one of the five minors had become of age and final settlement had been made with him by the former guardian, and (3) that under orders of the probate court the guardian had theretofore purchased a tractor from a machinery compañy for use on the farm, executed his note therefor in the sum of $802.26, and secured the same by a chattel mortgage on cotton, the sale of which had produced the fund of $1191 now on hand. In this section he further alleged that, as guardian, he had incurred indebtedness in the sum of $746.75 for clothing, food, medical services, and other necessaries which would have to be postponed and the claimants deprived of the money due thereon if the claim of appellee is ordered paid, which would be unjust, inequitable, and not in accordance with the law governing guardian-ships.

' In answer to the allegations of appellant, appellee filed what she terms a general demurrer to all of section 3 of the answer and a special exception to sections 1 to 15 thereof upon the ground that the allegations constitute an attempt to review a final order and judgment of the county court sitting in probate. The general demurrer to the third count of the answer and the special exception embracing sections 1 to 15 which constitute all of the third count, were sustained by the trial court and, upon a hearing of the case, judgment was rendered in favor of the appellee, ordering appellant, as guardian of the estate of the minors, to pay appellee’s claim out of the funds on hand belonging to the estate, together with all interest thereon, and that the judgment be certified to the county court for observance. Appellant duly excepted to the judgment, gave notice of appeal, and presents the case here upon two assignments of error in which the action of the court in sustaining the general demurrer and special exception is challenged and assigned as error requiring a reversal of the case.

The third count of the answer, except section 14, set up as defenses to the application of appellee matters which are stated in the pleading to be shown upon the face of the record. These same contentions *351 and allegations -had been made by appellant in the second count of his answer by way of special exceptions which are not shown by the record to have been overruled. It appears that the entire record of the probate proceedings and all of the matters pleaded in the third count were before the court and considered by him upon the trial. The allegations were more properly in the nature of exceptions and, conceding that the court committed error in sustaining appel-lee’s exceptions to them, appellant could not have been injured thereby because all of the contentions made by him were considered by the court in his consideration of the exceptions. It does not appear that any of the allegations were susceptible of proof other than by the record in the guardianship and, since these proceedings were before the court, appellant was deprived of no substantial right.

The fourteenth section of the third count of the answer alleges that the only funds now on hand are $1191 which are the proceeds of the sale of cotton raised on the land set apart as a homestead and that the claim of a machinery company in the sum of $802.26 has already been allowed and approved by the probate court. It is alleged that if the machinery company’s note is paid out of the funds on hand, there will not be sufficient funds left in the hands of the guardian to maintain and educate the wards.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-diggs-texapp-1939.