Taylor v. Taylor

91 S.W.2d 394
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1936
DocketNo. 4527.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 91 S.W.2d 394 (Taylor v. Taylor) 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
Taylor v. Taylor, 91 S.W.2d 394 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

This case seems to be a hangover from the case of Taylor v. Small et al. (Tex.Civ.App.) 71 S.W.(2d) 895, to which reference is made for a better understanding of the issues presented here.

On December 22, 1927, Mrs. Virginnie Taylor conveyed in fee to Mrs. Lily Small, her daughter, and Mrs. Beulah Taylor, widow of her son, 960 acres of land adjacent to the town of Coleman, which was valued by Mrs. Virginnie Taylor at $96,000. June 28, 1928, she conveyed to her only living son, Fred Taylor, a business house in the town of Coleman, and conveyed to his three children three tracts of land in Con-cho county, Tex., in all of which property she reserved a life estate.

On July 10, 1928, Mrs. Small, a resident of Oklahoma, filed this suit, purporting to act as next friend for Mrs. Virginnie Taylor, seeking to cancel the deeds which Mrs. Taylor had executed to Fred Taylor and his children, alleging that Mrs. Virginnie Taylor was of unsound mind, and that these deeds were procured by the undue influence of Fred Taylor and his children, arid were not in fact executed by Mrs. Taylor, alleging that the property so conveyed to Fred Taylor was of the value of $15,000, and the two tracts which had been conveyed to his children were of the value of $8,500 each, the aggregate value of the property conveyed to Fred Taylor and his children being $32,000.

Mrs. Small, as next friend, prayed for the cancellation of these deeds, and alleged that Fred Taylor for many years had managed, controlled, and appropriated the property of Mrs. Taylor, and would continue to do so unless restrained; that Mrs. Taylor owned a large estate, consisting of notes and personalty, and was shortly to receive a collection of $10,000 on notes which would be received and collected by Fred Taylor, unless restrained by the court, and said sum misapplied by him, and the said Virginnie Taylor deprived thereof. That by reason of the conflicting claims of the plaintiff, Mrs. Vir-ginnie Taylor, and of said defendants, to said property and to other property, real and personal, including lands, notes, money, and income, rents, and revenues of.every kind, it is necessary for the protection of the rights of plaintiff and all parties that said property should be placed in the hands of a receiver, pending the final determination by the court as to the ownership of same and, of the person entitled to possession, control, and disposition thereof, and in order to prevent the same being wasted, misapplied, misappropriated, or unlawfully used by the defendants, or any of them, and that plaintiffs are without any adequate remedy at law to protect plaintiffs’ rights to said property so conveyed, or other property which has not been conveyed, but which is in the possession and control of the defendants. That plaintiff is entitled to have a receiver appointed for said property and each item of the same, and to have defendants and each of them restrained, during the further pendency of this suit, from disposing of the same, or any part thereof. There was also a prayer for temporary injunction, and the immediate appointment of a receiver.

On presentation of the petition, and without notice, the court granted a temporary injunction restraining defendants from disposing of any of said property, and from exercising any control over the same, and appointed S. H. Gray receiver, with authority:

“To take charge, control and custody of said property, real and personal, including the land and premises in question, and including all monies and personal property of every kind belonging to the said Mrs. Taylor, and hold the same and dispose of the same upon the orders of this Court.
“It is further ordered by the Court that said receiver shall have authority to use so much of the funds or property of the said Mrs. Virginnie Taylor as shall be necessary or proper for her support and maintenance, and he is also authorized, upon so qualifying, to receive and collect any notes or other indebtedness due to her estate— and to receive and collect the rents and revenues from all her real and personal property, and to hold the same subject to the further orders of this Court and the Judge thereof, and to use so much- of said estate as is reasonably necessary to preserve and care for the same during the pendency of this suit, until further orders of this Court.”

On August 7, 1928, defendants filed a motion to vacate the receivership and dissolve the injunction, and filed an answer, under oath, categorically denying each of the allegations of the petition of said next friend.

*396 On August 23, 1928, Mrs. Virginnie Taylor, pro se, filed’ her own answer in this cause, alleging that this suit was brought by Mrs. Lily Small without her knowledge and consent, and denying that Mrs. Small had any authority to file it, and alleging her mental soundness, and fully ratifying the deeds in controversy, and adopting the answers and motions of the defendants in toto, and on May 3, 1929, filed another answer of like import.

On the hearing to dissolve and vacate, held before Judge M. S. Long of the Forty-Second district, who was duly appointed to hear same, the order appointing the receiver was continued in full force and effect, and the injunction was dissolved, except in so far as it restrained defendants from disposing of the lands in controversy; said hearing haying been held on August 22 and 23, 1928. No appeal was taken from this order. This is a significant fact bearing upon the issue of the necessity for an injunction and a receivership.

On August 25, 1928, Mrs. Taylor made her will, wherein she bequeathed to each of the persons taking part against her in this cause, including Mrs. Lily Small, the sum of $5, and to a granddaughter, Mrs. Lula Whitten, who took no part in the suit, the sum of $5,000, leaving all the rest of her property, except for a few bequests to the children of Fred Taylor, to Fred Taylor himself, appointing him independent executor, without bond.

Mrs. Virginnie Taylor died July 9, 1931, and on August 11, 1931, Fred Taylor filed application to probate the will of Mrs. Virginnie Taylor, and the same was contested by Mrs. Lily Small, Vivian Taylor, Mrs. Virginie Marie Newsome, Frank W. Taylor, Mrs. Elfreda Pirtle, and Mrs. Lula Whitten, and said will was admitted to probate on May 9, 1934, in cause No. 7967 on the docket of the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third district of Texas, and writ of error was denied by the Supreme Court. Taylor v. Small, 71 S.W.(2d) 895.

Janiuary 2, 1935, Fred Taylor, as executor of the will and estate of Mrs. Virginnie Taylor, deceased, filed his petition in intervention in this case, and moved the court to vacate the receivership and dissolve the injunction and dismiss this suit at the cost of Mrs. Lily Small; whereupon S. H. Gray, receiver, filed his report and application for discharge, praying for his allowances and commissions and compensation for his services as receiver in the sum of'$5,752.55, being 5 per cent, on all moneys alleged to have been collected and 5 per cent, on all moneys disbursed by him.

The intervener and defendants in said cause excepted to said report and account, and to each item thereof, and alleged that the appointment of such receiver was resisted by Mrs. Virginnie Taylor and the defendants in this cause, and that all proceedings and the appointment of said receiver were void ab initio, and that the court had no jurisdiction of this cause as Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.W.2d 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-taylor-texapp-1936.