the Estate of Leah Rita Tillotson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 2021
Docket05-20-00258-CV
StatusPublished

This text of the Estate of Leah Rita Tillotson (the Estate of Leah Rita Tillotson) 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
the Estate of Leah Rita Tillotson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

REVERSE IN PART; MODIFY IN PART; AFFIRM IN PART; Opinion Filed March 18, 2021

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-20-00258-CV

THE ESTATE OF LEAH RITA TILLOTSON, DECEASED

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 2 Hunt County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 18359

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Schenck, Osborne, and Partida-Kipness Opinion by Justice Schenck Thomas Tillotson, surviving spouse of decedent, appeals from the trial court’s

turnover order requiring Thomas to turn over to the administratrix certain designated

amounts and values. Thomas argues the trial court erred by ordering him to turn

over what he alleges is his sole management community property to the

administratrix in the absence of an application for partition of community property

by Thomas. We reverse the trial court’s order insofar as it relates to Thomas’s U.S.

savings bonds. We accordingly modify the order to order Thomas to turn over the

designated amounts/values to Leah’s heirs or devisees as identified by the administratrix. In all other respects, we affirm the order. Because all issues are

settled in the law, we issue this memorandum opinion. TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4.

BACKGROUND Thomas and decedent Leah Rita Tillotson were married in 1980. Leah died

intestate on August 31, 2017. Kristi Sherrill Hoyl, one of Leah’s daughters from a

previous marriage, was appointed administratrix of Leah’s estate.

Hoyl filed an initial and amended inventory, appraisement, and list of claims

with the trial court. Thomas objected to the amended inventory, appraisement, and

list of claims. The trial court heard and overruled Thomas’s objections. This Court

decided Thomas’s appeal of the trial court’s order in a companion case, In re Estate

of Leah Rita Tillotson, Deceased, No. 05-19-01192-CV, 2020 WL 7767937 (Tex.

App.—Dallas Dec. 30, 2020, no pet. h.).

After the trial court overruled Thomas’s objections, Hoyl filed a Second

Application for Partition and Distribution of the Estate. Following a non-evidentiary

hearing, the trial court signed an order (Turnover Order) from which Thomas now

appeals.

DISCUSSION Thomas argues the trial court’s Turnover Order erroneously orders Thomas to

turn over to Hoyl sums representing Leah’s one-half community property interest in

Thomas’s Rollover IRA, Roth IRA, U.S. savings bonds, and a Fidelity individual

stock account. Thomas argues (1) as surviving spouse, only he alone may apply for

–2– a partition of the community property, which he did not do; (2) as surviving spouse,

he is entitled to retain possession and control of all community property that was

legally under his management during the marriage; (3) all of the property he was

ordered to turn over was his sole management community property; and (4) even

assuming Hoyl had the right to apply for partition of Thomas’s sole management

community property, the Turnover Order does not comply with the Estates Code

because it fails to address Thomas’s right to statutory deductions.

I. Administratrix May Apply for Partition The Estates Code permits a surviving spouse to apply in writing for a partition

of the community property as follows:

If a spouse dies leaving community property, the surviving spouse, at any time after letters testamentary or of administration have been granted and an inventory, appraisement, and list of claims of the estate have been returned or an affidavit in lieu of the inventory, appraisement, and list of claims has been filed, may apply in writing to the court that granted the letters for a partition of the community property.

TEX. EST. CODE ANN. § 360.253(a) (emphasis added). Thomas argues this provision

operates to the exclusion of the power granted to an administratrix and permits only

a surviving spouse to apply for a partition and that because Hoyl, and not he as

surviving spouse, made the application, the trial court erred by partitioning the

community property. Hoyl responds that section 360.253(a) merely provides legal

authority to a surviving spouse who is not a personal representative of the estate or

–3– an heir or devisee the opportunity to force the partition of the community estate when

it has not been partitioned to that surviving spouse’s satisfaction.

The Estates Code provides that at any time after the first anniversary of the

date original letters testamentary or of administration are granted, an executor,

administrator, heir, or devisee of a decedent’s estate, by written application filed in

the court in which the estate is pending, may request the partition and distribution of

the estate. See EST. § 360.001(a). The Estates Code further provides that if an

intestate deceased spouse is survived by a child, the deceased spouse’s undivided

one-half interest in the community estate passes to the deceased spouse’s children.

See id. § 201.003.

Thomas relies on a decision from a sister court of appeals, Wassmer v.

Hopper, 463 S.W.3d 513 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2014, no pet.), to argue that he alone

may apply for a partition. In Wassmer, the court held that under the predecessor to

section 360.253, only a surviving spouse could apply for a partition of community

property. See id. at 526–27. Hoyl distinguishes Wassmer by noting the community

property at issue in that matter was the constitutional homestead and urging that the

surviving spouse’s one-half interest was therefore not properly part of the deceased

spouse’s estate at all, but was subject to administration. See TEX. CONST. art. XVI,

§ 52. We agree.

As relevant here, the Wassamer court confronted two questions concerning

the status of her right of possession to certain real property pursuant to the

–4– constitutional homestead provisions protecting a surviving spouse from the prospect

of homelessness—a concept formerly recognized at common law as the “widow’s

right of dower.”1 First, the court considered whether the widow’s interest was

subject to disposition by the administrator. In keeping with the “warning” with

which it began its opinion—that the decedent’s and community estates are “not the

same thing,” Wassmer, 463 S.W.3d at 517—the court answered that it could not

be. Next, the court confronted the more vexing question of whether the widow’s

interest in the balance of the decedent’s estate should be offset to reflect the value of

her retained homestead right. It is in connection with this question that the court

observed that only the surviving spouse could request a partition of the balance of

the community estate from that life estate. Finding no authority to support the notion

that, absent that effort by the widow, any value could or should be ascribed to the

indefinite life estate she held, the court answered “no.” Given that the interest

allegedly subject to partition in Wassamer was one jointly held by the estate and the

surviving spouse and was constitutionally prohibited from diminution by the estate

or anyone else, it comes as little surprise that the court would find only the surviving

spouse to be authorized to request it. That posture, of course, is not implicated here,

and Wassamer does not purport speak to whether section 360.253(a), in giving the

spouse a discretionary right generally to seek partition as to all community property,

1 See, e.g., George L.

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Related

Laura S. Wassmer and Stephen B. Hopper v. Jo N. Hopper
463 S.W.3d 513 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2014)
Shamoun v. Shough
377 S.W.3d 63 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2012)

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