Ward v. Veale

253 S.W. 844, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 417
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 12, 1923
DocketNo. 10600.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 844 (Ward v. Veale) 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
Ward v. Veale, 253 S.W. 844, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 417 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

DUINKLIN, J.

By this appeal J. M. Ward seeks a reversal of two orders, one appointing a receiver of his property, and the other restraining the Bank of Mineral Wells from paying out to him, or upon his order, any money on deposit in said bank to his credit, and also restraining said bank from delivering to him, or to any one else upon his order, any bonds, notes, warrants, or other personal property in its possession belonging to said appellant.

The suit was instituted by Mrs. Ida W. Veale and Mrs. Lilly B. Sloan, daughters of J. M. Ward, who, together with the Bank of Mineral Wells, were made defendants. It was alleged in the petition that plaintiffs and Joe Winston, a grandson of J. M. Ward, were part owners of the money on deposit with the defendant bank to the credit of J. M. Ward, aggregating approximately $44,000, and also certain notes, bonds, etc., standing in his name as owner, all of which belonged to the community estate of J. M. Ward and his deceased wife, Mrs. M. M. Ward, who was the mother of the plaintiffs and grandmother of Joe Winston, and her community interest in said property, had been inherited by plaintiffs and said Winston.

The petition contained further allegations to the effect that defendant Ward had recently married again; that his second wife exercised undue influence over him by means of which she had induced him ■ to Indulge in extravagant and wasteful expenditures of his means for her benefit; that shortly prior to the institution of the suit said Ward, together with his wife, had gone on an extended trip and at the time the suit was instituted they were then in Havana, Cuba, where J. M. Ward had fallen a victim to sharpers and swindlers, who had inveigled him into an agreement to put up the sum of $45,000 on a supposed horse race which had already been run in the city of New Orleans; that in order to consummate the agreement he had with those swindlers he had wired the defendant bank instructions to cable him at Havana the sum of $45,000, which would be wholly^ lost if that request should be complied with.

It was further alleged that prior to the death of his former wife, Mrs. M. M. Ward, which occurred in 1921, J. M. Ward had been a man of frugal habits, of sound and conservative business judgment, but that since her death he had spent his money extravagantly and had become an easy victim to designing persons; that he had reached the seventy-fifth year of his life and was no longer mentally capable of caring for and managing the property and funds to his credit in the defendant bank, which was of the proximate value of $285,000.

On that petition the writ of injunction prayed for against the defendant bank was forthwith issued, and a few days thereafter defendant’s grandson, Joe Winston, was appointed receiver of all the assets in the defendant bank and vested with power to collect the notes, interest on bonds, etc., and he was also directed to pay over to defendant Ward a certain sum monthly for living expenses for himself and wife, which sum was later sufficiently increased to meet all of their needs.

Upon his return home, defendant Ward, through his counsel, filed a motion to dissolve the injunction and to vacate the receivership; said motion being embodied in his answer filed to the plaintiffs’ original petition. That answer contained numerous exceptions to the sufficiency of the'petition and also a denial, which was duly verified, of all of plaintiffs’ allegations of extravagant expenditures, of undue influence exercised upon him, of his susceptibility to such influence, if attempted, of the mental incompetency to manage his business, and also of the allegations in plaintiffs’ petition to the effect that he would have been swindled out of the $45,000 if the defendant bank had cabled the same to him. It was further alleged in the defendant’s answer that he had made full settlement with the plaintiffs and his grandson, Joe Winston, for all of their interest in the community estate of himself and his former wife, Mrs. M. M. Ward, and) *846 that all of the assets held hy the defendant bank was his own separate property.

After that answer was filed, plaintiffs filed an amended original petition and also a supplemental petition in reply to allegations contained in the answer. In both the pleadings so filed the allegations in the original petition were repeated' and amplifiéd. There was a further allegation that certain real estate situated in the city of Mineral Wells-was also a part of the community estate of defendant Ward and his former wife, Mrs. M. M. Ward, and that plaintiffs and Joe Winston had inherited a one-half interest therein. It was further alleged that .at the time of the settlement with defendant Ward for their interest in the community estate of their mother they did not ¿now of the fact, which they afterwards discovered, that prior to the death of their mother their father had deeded to her all of his community interest in several tracts of oil-bearing lands which are now yielding large revenues from oil royalties, and some of which royalties were included with, the funds on deposit with the defendant bank. Plaintiffs further alleged that after their mother’s death their father had deeded to them and Joe Winston the life estate in one-third of said land which he inherited from his former wife, and that plaintiffs did not know of. that fact at the time of said settlement with their father, which was made upon the assumption that all of those lands belonged to the community estate of defendant Ward and his former wife, and that he was the owner of a one-half interest therein. By reason of those facts plaintiffs alleged that the settlement with their father was of no binding effect, and they strenuously resisted the application of the defendant for a dissolution of the injunction and also of the order appointing the receiver.

The application for a vacation of the orders granting the injunction and appointing Joe Winston receiver was heard after the filing of the amended original petition and plaintiffs’ supplemental petition. Upon that hearing an order was made continuing the writ of 'injunction and also refusing to vacate the receivership, but the court removed Joe Winston as receiver and appointed W. O. Gr'oss receiver in hisp stead, who was clothed with the same powers as were formerly vested in Winston. Gross then qualified as receiver by giving bond required and took charge of the property.

[1] The defendant Ward addressed numerous exceptions to the original petition, all of which were overruled. By one of the exceptions the point was made that the petition was insufficient, in that it contained no prayer for judgment on the merits of the suit, but was for no other purpose except the appointment of a receiver and the issuance of an injunction, which would not of themselves constitute a cause of action. That objection was removed by the plaintiffs’ first amended original petition, in which they prayed that the interest of plaintiffs and Joe Winston in the property in controversy be established and set apart to them.

[2] The principal exception urged to the petition was'the , failure to make Joe Winston one of the parties to the suit, since he was equally interested with each of the two plaintiffs in the property in controversy. That defect in the original petition was not cured in the first amended petition filed after the defendant’s answer was filed, and the court erred in overruling that exception.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 844, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-veale-texapp-1923.