Tison v. Gass

102 S.W. 751, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 163, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 102 S.W. 751 (Tison v. Gass) 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
Tison v. Gass, 102 S.W. 751, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 163, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 48 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.—

That is a suit by Lula B. Gass against Robert M. Tison, both in his individual capacity, as sole legatee and devisee under the will of his father, James W. Tison, deceased, and as independent executor of his will, to. recover, as sole heir of her deceased mother, Mrs. Gilley P. Tison, certain money and the value of certain personal property, the separate estate of said Gilley P. Tison, which it is alleged had been appropriated and used by the said James W. Tison, husband of the said Gilley P. Tison, and father also of plaintiff. It was alleged that said money and property amounting to $1,425, being the proceeds of a sale of five acres of land, the separate estate of Mrs. Tison, had been used by said James W. Tison in improving a certain tract of land containing 289 acres belonging to the community estate, and it was sought to fix the same as a charge on the land.

It was alleged that the 289 acres of land and certain personal property, belonging to the community estate of the said Gilley P. Tison and her husband, James W. Tison, had gone into the hands of the defendant as independent executor of his father’s will or as sole legatee and devisee thereunder and was held by him in such capacity, and partition of the same was sought. The petition also included a claim against defendant for the value of property belonging to the community estate which it is alleged he had converted, and for rents.

The action developed upon the trial into one against defendant in his individual capacity for' the $1,425 of the separate estate of *167 Gilley P. Tison and for payment thereof out of property which was in his hands as sole legatee and devisee "under the will of James W. Tison, deceased. Pending the trial the plaintiff married T. E. Russell, who came into the suit pro forma as her husband. Annie E. Ransdell, a child of James W. Tison by a former marriage, as was defendant, was, with her husband, made a party defendant and they were served with process, but did not answer, and they were 'by the judgment dismissed with their costs. Defendant answered in his individual capacity alone.

The case was tried by the court without a jury and conclusions of fact and law were filed. In the findings of fact the court found, substantially, that the five acres of land which had been sold by James W. and Gilley P. Tison was the separate property of the said Gilley P. Tison, and that of the proceeds, amounting to $1,425, $426 which had been paid in lumber, had been used by James W. Tison in improving the 289 acres of land, which was his separate estate, and that the balance of the $1,425 was mixed with his separate funds and used by him for the benefit of his separate estate; that Gilley P. Tison died intestate June 26, 1900, and there was no administration on her estate and that plaintiff is her sole heir; that she had no separate estate except the claim on her husband for the $1,425; that there was at her death community estate of the value of $278.75; that James W. Tison had other personalty, his separate estate, of the value of $447.60 in addition to the 289 acres of land; that he died testate on June 9, 1903, still possessing all of said property; that by the terms of bis will his son, the defendant, was named as independent executor and was made sole legate© and devisee; that said will had been duly probated, and that the defendant has had, since the death of said James W. Tison, and now has, possession of all of said property and is claiming it under the will.

The court further found that after the 'death of said Gilley P. Tison the said James W. Tison acquired an outstanding title to an undivided 41 acres of said 289 acres.

The conclusions of law are reflected in the judgment which was in favor of plaintiff that she recover of “the defendant, Robert M. Tison,” the said sum of $1,425, with a decree that $426 thereof was a lien upon all of the 289 acres except the undivided interest of 41 acres aforesaid. It was decreed that the land be sold for the satisfaction of said sum and that the remainder of the proceeds of such sale be disposed of under the direction of the decree. It was further decreed that the balance of the $1,425 be collected, first, out of the sale of specified articles of community property, in possession of Robert M. Tison; second, out of the proceeds of the sale of specified articles of separate property of said James W. Tison in the hands of Robert M. Tison, and that the remainder of said judgment unsatisfied be collected out of the remaining proceeds of the sale of the land. It was decreed that if any of the property was left after satisfaction of the judgment it should be returned to Robert M. Tison, and title to the same is adjudged to him; that no further execution •issue, and that no judgment is rendered against Robert M. Tison *168 except as he has interest, and after execution of the above orders, no further amount shall be collected of him.

Mo notice is taken in the decree of Robert M. Tison specially in his character of independent executor.

Defendant prosecuted an appeal from the judgment as independent executor without giving bond for such appeal, which appeal was, for this reason, dismissed by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth District. (16 Texas Ct. Rep., 266.) He now brings the judgment to this court upon writ of error.

Plaintiff in error suggests, in limine, that the judgment is not a final judgment and this court is without jurisdiction. The ground of the suggestion is that the judgment does not dispose of the case, as against Robert M. Tison in his capacity as independent executor. The suit was to reach and condemn to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s debt against James W. Tison,- certain property in the hands of Robert M. Tison, who was both independent executor and sole beneficiary under the will of his father. He alleges in his answer that he is, by virtue of the terms of his father’s will, the sole owner of the property. The judgment disposes of all of the issues as to all of the parties. There can be no question that it is res adjudicada as_ to all of the issues involved as against defendant in error and the said Robert M. Tison and the estate of James W. Tison, and as such is, we think, a final judgment. (Linn v. Arambould, 55 Texas, 617; Martin v. Crow, 28 Texas, 614.)

The defendant’s plea to the jurisdiction of the trial court was properly overruled. The will having been probated and the inventory and appraisement filed the cause was dropped from the docket of the Probate Court, and the property went into the hands of Robert M. Tison as sole beneficiary under the will, subject to the debts of the estate. Whether he held it as independent executor or as sole legatee and devisee he might be sued by a creditor of the estate and the property in his hands condemned to the satisfaction of the debt.

It does not appear that the rights of other creditors, if any such there be, are affected. Certainly plaintiff in error having taken possession of the estate as owner by virtue of the provisions of the will, can not here set up such rights as defense to this proceeding without at least making such other creditors parties and seeking to have the property in his hands properly applied to the payment of all the debts. The judgment did not partition the property even of the community estate, but subjected all of it to the payment of plaintiff’s debt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 S.W. 751, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 163, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tison-v-gass-texapp-1907.