Van Grinderbeck v. Lewis

204 S.W. 1042, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 734
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 8, 1918
DocketNo. 7989.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 204 S.W. 1042 (Van Grinderbeck v. Lewis) 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
Van Grinderbeck v. Lewis, 204 S.W. 1042, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 734 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court appointing a receiver. The suit in which the receiver was appointed is one instituted by the appellees on June 28, 1917, against appellants for the partition of real and personal property alleged to be owned by appellants and appel-lees in equal rights as the heirs of Clemence Van Grinderbeck, deceased. The petition alleges that the said .Clemence Van Grinder-beck died intestate on March 13, 1917; that no administration is pending on her estate, and that no necessity for administration exists; that since the death of the said Clemence Van Grinderbeck the appellant Eddie Van Grinderbeck has been in full possession of all of the property belonging to her estate, asserting title thereto and denying the interest of appellees; that he is collecting the rents and revenues arising from, said property and applying the same to his own use and benefit; that the appellant is insolvent and unable to account to appellees for the amount of the rents and revenues which may be determined to belong to or owing to appellees and refuses to pay over to them any part of the same. They prayed for the appointment of a receiver to collect the rents and revenues arising from the property belonging to the estate to be held pending a final decree; for. judgment for their interest in the property and for partition; for an accounting between themselves and the appellants as to the amount of rents and revenues collected by appellant since the death of the said Clemence Van Grinderbeck; and for general relief. The appellants filed an answer July 17, 1917, in which they pleaded in abatement of the application for the appointment of a receiver that appellant Eddie Van Grinderbeck, on the-day of July, 1917, by order of the county court of Dallas county, Tex., duly made and entered, was appointed temporary administrator of the estate of Clemence Van Grinderbeck, and that he had duly qualified and was acting as such administrator; that a necessity existed for the appointment of such administrator, and that such facts had been so adjudged by said county court; that by reason of the pendency of said administration the district court was without jurisdiction to now hear and determine the cause, or to appoint a receiver, and that the same should be abated or stand continued to abide the termination of the administration upon said estate. The answer; among other things, also alleged that the petition and application for the appointment of a receiver disclosed that they were without merit, in that there was no allegation showing that no necessity existed for administration of the estate in question, and that, as an adminstration had been granted upon said estate and was then pending, exclusive jurisdiction over said estate was vested in the county court. It was further alleged that on July 17, 1917, there was filed in the county court of Dallas county, Tex., by the appellant, an application to have probated the last will and testament of Clemence Van Grinderbeck, deceased. On the 10th day of August, 1917, the appellees’ application for the appointment of a receiver was heard by the court, and after the conclusion of the evidence offered, from which it appeared without dispute that a temporary administration, as alleged by appellant, was pending in the county court, and that an application by appellant had been subsequent to the granting of such administration filed for the probate of a will purporting to be the last will of the said Clemence Van Grinder-beck, and in which appellant and his brother were the chief beneficiaries, an order was made appointing a receiver, and from that order appellants perfected an appeal to this court.

No brief has been filed in this court by appellant, and we are therefore without aid from his counsel in determining the question arising on the appeal. Counsel for-appellees in a short brief urge the following proposition in support of the trial court’s ruling, namely:

“When a court of equity, in a cause over which it has jurisdiction, takes possession of property, through a receiver, the property is withdrawn from the jurisdiction of all other courts.”

This proposition is asserted upon the authority of Lauraine v. Ashe, 191 S. W. 563, and 'that ease is apparently cited as controlling the decision of the question arising on this appeal. The facts, however, in the instant case and those of the case cited are, in material particulars, different, and we are aware of no case directly in point here. Lauraine v. Ashe was a proceeding having for its purpose the issuance of a writ • of mandamus directing the district judge for the Eleventh judicial, district of Texas to vacate as to the property of Mrs. Margaret Allen a receivership pending in the district court of that district and order the delivery *1044 of such property to the relator therein as administrator of her estate. The receivership sought to be vacated was an incident of a suit filed in the lifetime of Mrs. Allen and against her and A. C. Allen, her son. “In that suit the plaintiff asserted the ownership of a judgment against Mrs. Allen and A. O. Allen in an amount in excess of $7,000, and constituting a lien upon their real estate situated in different counties in the state.” It was also pleaded in that suit “that Mrs. Allen and A. C. Allen were variously indebted to other persons in large amounts, such indebtedness being in some instances secured by mortgage liens upon their property and having in others been reduced to judgment with the judgments operating as liens upon their real estate; that the * * * various creditors of the Allens were threatening to proceed against their property for the enforcement of their claims, through foreclosure sales, levying of execution, etc.; which, if permitted, would result in its sacrifice, whereas its actual value was more than double tire amount of the entire lawful indebtedness against it.” There were further allegations with respect to the necessity for the appointment of a receiver for the preservation of the property pending the establishment of the claims to rvbich it was lawfully subject. “The prayer was for the appointment of a receiver and an order directing the presentment by all creditors of the Al-lens of their respective claims for adjudication by the court; that the court determine and adjudge the amounts really due upon such claims, and thereafter under its direction so much of the property be sold as should be necessary for their payment. Upon this prayer a receiver was duly appointed. He qualified and took into possession certain real and personal property belonging to Mrs. Allen and A. O. Allen, for the purpose of preserving it.” The suit with the receivership in force was still pending at the time of the institution of the proceedings for mandamus. Some years after the institution of the suit against the Allens and the appointment of tlie receiver therein Mrs. Allen died, and the relator Lauraine, ip. the proceedings for mandamus, was appointed temporary administrator of her estate by the county court of Harris county, and duly qualified as such. Later he was appointed and qualified as permanent administrator. This appointment was contested, and the contest at the time of the filing and hearing of the petition for mandamus was still pending in the district court on appeal undetermined; the county court having continued the powers of the relator as temporary administrator in the meanwhile.

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Bluebook (online)
204 S.W. 1042, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-grinderbeck-v-lewis-texapp-1918.