Stephenson v. Marsalis

33 S.W. 383, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 162, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 21, 1895
DocketNo. 818.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 33 S.W. 383 (Stephenson v. Marsalis) 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
Stephenson v. Marsalis, 33 S.W. 383, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 162, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 202 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

LIGHTFOOT, Chief Justice.

Appellants’ statement of the case is substantially correct, as follows: 'This suit was instituted by appellants. Their petition contained two counts: one in the ordinary form of an action of trespass to try title; the other, which was the first contained in the petition, represented that appellants were the children and only heirs of J. W. Stephenson, and his wife Priscilla Stephenson, both of whom died in January, 1885. Mrs. Stephenson died after the death of her husband. The land in controversy was their homestead, and *164 continued to be the homestead of Mrs. Stephenson after the death of her husband until her death.

That appellants Priscilla and Jennie Stephenson, their daughters, were minors at the time of the death of their parents, and were members and constituents of the family of their parents up to the time of the death of their father, and remained members of their mother’s family until her death.

That administration was opened on the joint estates of J. W. and Priscilla Stephenson, resulting in the sale of the homestead. The appellee P. W. Linskie, was the administrator of said estates, and each of the other appellees claims a part of said home tract, deraigning title through the purchaser at said sale, who is also made a party.

Appellants specifically set up all the proceedings had in the Probate Court from the grant of administration down to the order approving the sale by the administrator of said homestead, in compliance with the order of the court made prior thereto, and applied for a writ of certiorari to the County Court to revise and correct all the proceedings had in the Probate Court, which writ was granted. Certiorari bond was given, the writ was issued and duly served on the clerk of the County Court, and a transcript of all of said proceedings was filed by him with the papers of the cause.

The answer of the defendants contained a general denial, plea of limitation, and a special plea to the effect that after the sale appellants acquiesced in it, by accepting their pro rata share of the surplus of the proceeds left after paying approved claims and costs of administration, and that the property remaining unsold was also turned over to appellants and received by them. Also, special plea that appellees, except Linskie, were purchasers in good faith, for value, without notice of any matters affecting the validity of their title. The cause was submitted to the court, who rendered a judgment for appellees, and the ease is brought to this court by appeal.

The conclusions of fact found by the court below are not excepted to by appellants, and are adopted. So much thereof as we deem important to the decision of the case we here set out, as follows:

“(1.) In January, 1885, J. W. and Priscilla Stephenson, husband and wife, died intestate, within a few days of each other (the husband’s death preceding that of the wife), leaving as their only heirs an adult son, J. E. Stephenson, Lelia Duncan, wife of Robert Duncan, Sallie B. Tunnell, wife of J. B. Tunnell, Ella C. Bumpas, wife of J. H. Bumpas, and Jennie Stephenson and Priscilla Stephenson, minors, all the heirs, being the surviving children of deceased.
“(2.) At the time of and before the death of said parents, their family consisted of themselves and said minor children. They lived on a four-acre tract of land, being the property in controversy in this suit, and it was in fact their homestead. After their death, Robert Duncan was by the County Court of Dallas County, sitting for probate business, appointed guardian of the estate of Priscilla Stephenson, and J. D. Tunnell *165 was appointed guardian of the estate of Jennie Stephenson, and said minors lived with their said guardians, and none of the heirs ever after lived on the said four acres in controversy, or otherwise used or occupied the same, or attempted to do so, until the institution of this suit, and it was not used or occupied by them or any of them for any purpose.
“(3.) The estate also included another three-acre tract of land, no part of the homestead, of the value of $150.
“(4.) Excluding said four-acre tract, the estate was insolvent; including it, the estate was solvent.
“(5.) After the surviving members of the family had vacated said homestead tract, and when it was entirely unoccupied, P. W. Linskie applied to the County Court of Dallas County, sitting in probate business, for joint letters of administration on the community estate of said J. W. and Priscilla Stephenson, deceased, to pay debts, and on September 10, 1885, after proper notice had been given, administration was granted on the community estate of the decedents, said property being community property, and the debts being alleged community debts. The proceedings were entirely regular. Said four-acre tract was inventoried at $1000 and said three-acre tract at $150. On September 28, 1885, P. W. Linskie’s bond as administrator of the community estate of both decedents was approved and letters of administration issued to him. September 22, 1885, the inventory and appraisement of said estates was filed, containing no property except said two tracts of land.
“(6.) Claims against the estate were regularly presented and allowed in favor of the following parties: P. W. Linskie, $105; J. M. Quinney, M. D., $28; C. C. Gillespie, M. D., $30; T. Y, Terry, $127; J. PL Bumpas, $34. The bulk of the claims being for undertaker’s and doctors’ bills, and one claim, that of J. H. Bumpas, being in favor of one of the plaintiffs to this suit. The claim of P. W. Linskie only, for funeral expenses, was allowed as a first class claim.
“(7.) On December 5, 1885, the administrator filed his application to sell both said tracts of land, to pay the approved debts. * * *

The application was properly signed and sworn to. Due notice to all parties in interest was given, as provided by statute. February 24, 1886, J. E. Stephenson, for himself and as next friend of the minor heirs, filed an answer resisting said application, claiming said four acres as exempt on the ground that it was homestead, and asking that it he set aside for the benefit of the minors. The other heirs did not resist the application to sell. On July 7, 1886, the court overruled objections to the sale, on what ground does not appear, and ordered the property sold, and said four acres were regularly sold to Jno. W. Wright for $1205, who bought in actual good faith, for a full and adequate consideration, at a fair sale, all the proceedings being entirely regular and according to the statute. No notice of appeal was given from, the order of sale, and no other objections were made to the sale until this suit was instituted. The other defendants in this cause claim under mesne conveyances from *166 Wright, and they are also admitted to be innocent purchasers for a valuable and adequate consideration.

The report of sale is dated July 26, 1886, the administrator reporting to the court that he had sold said four-acre tract for one-half cash and the balance on time.

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.W. 383, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 162, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenson-v-marsalis-texapp-1895.