Schaeffer v. Williams

208 S.W. 220, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1379
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 11, 1918
DocketNo. 6096.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 220 (Schaeffer v. Williams) 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
Schaeffer v. Williams, 208 S.W. 220, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1379 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

*221 FLY, C. X

This is an action of trespass to try title instituted by appellees against appellant to recover an undivided 77/i2 8 interest in three certain tracts of land in Live Oak county, said tracts containing respectively 640, 320, and 320 acres, each patented to Henderson Williams, assignee of J. Poite-vent, as well as for rents and damages. Appellant pleaded not guilty, and limitations of three, five, and ten years. The cause was tried without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of appellees for 69/128 of the three tracts of land herein mentioned.

The evidence showed that the guardian, R. H. Brown, through whom appellant claims, conveyed by his deed to F. W. Schaeffer only 8/2 8 of the land in controversy which was decreed to her by the trial court. Further necessary facts to a proper understanding of the decision of this court will be found throughout this opinion.

Error is claimed through the first assignment of error in the action of the court in holding that a certain sale made by R. H. Brown, guardian of the estate of Martha Williams, one of the appellees herein, was null and void, and in rendering judgment for her for a portion of the land sued for by her. Martha Williams was born in 1870, and her father, Henderson Williams, died in Live Oak county in 1875, and her mother, Mary Elizabeth Williams, died in 1877. R. H. Brown was appointed guardian of the person and estate of Martha Williams in January, 1877, and qualified in the March following. He returned an inventory of the property of his ward and administered the same. ' In January, 1878, although no debts were due by his ward and she had notes and cash amounting to $4,317.65, he applied for a sale of certain of her lands because of the land being owned jointly by others and the difficulties attending a partition of the same and because the land was decreasing in value and not revenue producing. The guardian sought the sale of all the real estate to which his ward might be entitled “in law and equity of the estate of H. Williams, deceased.” On March 9, 1880, Brown made application again to sell “a distributive share of the real estate of the said Henderson Williams, deceased,” belonging to Martha Williams, a minor. The ground for a sale was that the lands were unimproved and did not yield any revenue, and the timber was being cut and removed therefrom by depre-dators. An order of sale was granted to sell “the interest which the said minor has in and to the real estate belonging to the estate of Henderson Williams, deceased, as one of the heirs at law of said Henderson Williams.” There was an order confirming the sale of the “ward’s interest in the estate of her father, Henderson Williams, deceased.” The deed was made to F. W. Schaeffer, deceased husband of the appellant, Rowena Schaeffer. In the granting clause of the deed the guardian conveyed “all the right, title, claim or interest which my-said ’ward, Martha Williams, has in or to the lands and real estate . of Henderson Williams, dec§ased.” The court held that the sale was null and void.

[1] The first application for a sale of real estate was made, by the guardian, on January 26,1878; but no order of sale was made until March 16, 1880, and that order was made in answer to another application which was filed on March 9, 1880. The record fails to show definitely to which of the applications. for a sale the order was directed. No necessity for the sale, however, appears in either of the applications, nor in the order of the court. It is stated in the applications and in the order that it would be advantageous toXthe estate to make the sale, but no necessity is shown in either for the sale.

It is held in Texas -that probate courts are courts of general jurisdiction as to all matters within the scope of the powers conferred upon them by law. In the law of 1876, being article 2653, Sayles’ Civ. Stats. 1897, it was provided that—

“When the income of the ward’s estate, and the personal property thereof, and the proceeds of previous sales, are insufficient for the education and maintenance of the ward, or to pay the debts against the estate, the guardian of the person, or of the estate, or any person * * * interested in the ward, may, by application in writing to the court in which such guardianship of the estate is pending, ask for an order for a sufficient amount of real estate to be sold to make up the deficiency.”

Article 2654 provides:

“It is the duty of the guardian to apply for such order whenever it appears that a necessity exists therefor, and to set forth fully in his application such necessity, and accompanying the application with an exhibit, under oath, showing fully the condition of the estate.”

The last article is embodied in the Revised Statutes of 1911, being article 4156, but article 2653 has been greatly enlarged in its scope by the acts of 1913 (Acts 33d Leg. c. 151 [Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, art. 4155]), by the additional, provision that non-revenue bearing property and an undivided interest in real estate may be sold. This law was anticipated by the guardian who sold the land in controversy by some 33 years. There was no such provision authorizing a sale of a ward’s land previous to 1913, and none of the grounds set forth in article 2653 were set forth in the application or order of sale. The necessity mentioned in article 2654, it would seem, would be governed and qualified by the exigencies mentioned in article 2653, and no sale would be justifiable unless made under one of those exigencies.

In the case of Weems v. Masterson, 80 Tex. 45, 15 S. W. 590, which is relied upon by appellant, the sale was made in 1859, on an ap *222 plication quite sijnilar to title one in tlie case now before' this'court; but in the order of the court was a recital “that a sale is necessary and will be of advantage to said minors.” The Supreme Court, through Chief Justice Stayton, held that a judgment of the district court could not be attacked collaterally because of defective pleading-s if the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and parties, and said:

“While proceedings in probate are to some extent in rem, we do not see that such is in all respects their character as to parties actually before the court in person or by legal representation; and, in a proceeding in guardianship such as that on which the rights of the parties in this case rest, we do not see why the same rule that would be applied to an adversary proceeding- in a district court should not be applied to a ward whose guardian makes an application for an order to sell property of the ward’s estate, obtains it, sells, reports the sale, and has it confirmed.”

The authorities cited in the opinion, as well as others, sustain it. Lynch v. Baxter, 4 Tex. 431, 51 Am. Dec. 735; Poor v. Boyce, 12 Tex. 443; Kleinecke v. Woodward, 42 Tex. 312; McNally v. Haynes, 59 Tex. 585; Gillienwaters v. Scott, 62 Tex. 672; Lyne v. Sanford, 82 Tex. 63, 19 S. W. 847, 27 Am. St. Rep. 852; Kendrick v. Wheeler, 85 Tex. 253, 20 S. W. 44; Driggs v. Grantham, 41 S. W. 408.

In the case of Taffinder v. Merrell, 95 Tex. 95, 65 S. W. 177, 93 Am. St. Rep. 814, the Supreme Court in following the Weems-Mas-terson Case said:

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 220, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schaeffer-v-williams-texapp-1918.