Ware v. Barfield

54 S.W.2d 1105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1932
DocketNo. 3904.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 54 S.W.2d 1105 (Ware v. Barfield) 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
Ware v. Barfield, 54 S.W.2d 1105 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

MARTIN, J.

On December 7,1931, the will of Mrs. M. D. Oliver-Eakle, a feme sole, was admitted to probate by the county court of Potter County. In this will R. C. Ware, Wm. C. Perry, Homer A. Callaway, and B. I. Barfield were named as independent executors. Bequests were made to various persons, amounting in value to more than $100,000. The remainder of her estate was placed in trust with the executors above mentioned for her daughter and only child, the appellee herein. Of the bequests named in the will, the following property was devised to the executors: lots of the aggregate value of $50,000 to B. I. Bar-field ; $13,700' in cash to Homer A. Callaway to be used “for purposes known and to be known to him only, together with $1,000.00 additional for expenses.” The will provided further for his appointment as attorney for the executors above mentioned, for which he should be paid suitable compensation. To Wm. C. Perry, another of the executors, she directed that he be retained as manager of the Oliver-Eakle building at a salary not less than that prevailing at the time of her death, during the continuance of the trust. The trust estate created was to last for twenty-one years, at which time it was to go to ap-pellee herein, or to the heirs of her body. The will further provided that the independent executors named above should receive suitable compensation for the services rendered by them, and vested in them full and complete control and management of the estate, without bond, and free from any interference of the probate court. The will further provided: “It is my desire, wish and will *1106 that all doubtful questions of construction in the interpretation of this will shall he conclusively determined by my executors and trustees according' to their best judgment without resort to court.”

Thereafter appellee filed a petition for the annulment of said will, charging a Hack of testamentary capacity on the part of Mrs. Oliver-Eakle, the testator, at the time of and prior to the execution of said will and going into detail with respect to same, which we deem unnecessary to here set out. This petition charged that the estate owed'sums at the time of the making of the will and at the time of her death aggregating approximately $400,000, including $24,000 unpaid taxes, and placing the value of said estate at $500,000. It was further alleged that the payment of the indebtedness and the bequests would exhaust the estate and leave appellee without any property. It further pointed out the personal interest of the executors as devisees under the will, substantially as stated above. Further allegations were made in effect showing the necessity for the careful and prudent management of said estate to enable it to pay the indebtedness existing against same.

The petition asked for the appointment of appellee as temporary administratrix of the estate, and contained an appropriate prayer for service of citation upon all adverse parties at interest and for the annulment of the will.

The application for appointment as temporary administratrix came on to be heard by the county court of Potter county on the 24th day of February, 1932, and upon an ex parte hearing appellee herein was so appointed pending the contest of the aforesaid will, by an order that day entered, and her powers being therein specifically defined. The effect of such order was to oust and displace the executors from the management of said estate, who it appears at that time had theretofore duly qualified and were in possession and control of same.

Thereafter appellee duly qualified as temporary administratrix and took possession of the estate.

On February 27, 1932, appellants R. O. Ware, Homer A. 'Callaway, and Wm. C. Perry filed an application with the county court of Potter county for authority to employ attorneys to defend said will and the probate thereof from the attack made upon it by ap-pellee and to contract and agree with said attorneys for a reasonable fee and for a further order authorizing the expenditure of a sum not to exceed $500 for expenses to be incurred in properly preparing for the defense of said will and its probate. This application was granted and the order prayed for entered, from which appellee appealed to'the district court of Potter county, Tex.

Thereafter an order was entered in the county court of Potter county, upon the petition of the same parties, declaring the former appointment of appellee herein as temporary administratrix null and void, from which ap-pellee also appealed to the district court of Potter county, Tex.

These appeals were consolidated and tried as one cause in the district court of Potter county, Tex.

In these matters B. I. Barfield, who is the husband of appellee, did not join.

Upon the trial of these consolidated cases, the district court of Potter county, on the 16th day of April, 1932, entered an order denying in all things the application of appellants for attorneys’ fees and expenses and holding that the original appointment of appellee by the said county court as temporary administra-trix was in all things valid, and ordering her continuance ás such pending the contest herein, and further vacating and declaring null and void the order entered by said court vacating her appointment as such temporary administratrix.

From these orders the three independent executors named above have appealed to this court, assigning as error the action of the district court in each of the two matters pointed out above.

It will be noted that appellants took no appeal directly from the order appointing ap-pellee temporary administratrix, but filed a motion to vacate the same, claiming that her appointment was void, and that the court was without jurisdiction or power to make such appointment while the said executors were acting, after having qualified and taken possession and control of the estate. The question, therefore, presented is not one of the improper use of a power lodged by law with the court, but a lack of any power to act in the premises.

Upon this question a hurried perspective of the law relating to the appointment and duties of the legal representatives of deceased persons in general will, we think, assist us here.

Appellants were independent executors, creatures of the will, and not of the probate court. They were, by the terms of the will, Vested with unbridled authority over the estate. They might do any act respecting it which the court could authorize to be done if the entire estate were under his control or whatever testator could have done in her lifetime, except as restrained by the will itself. Schramm v. Hoch (Tex. Civ. App.) 241 S. W. 1087; Roy v. Whitaker, 92 Tex. 346, 48 S. W. 892, 49 S. W. 367; Ewing v. Schultz (Tex. Civ. App.) 220 S. W. 625, 630. Independent executors receive property in trust for the benefit of creditors and devisees. Stephenson v. McFaddin, 42 Tex. 322; Farmers’ & Merchants’ National Bank v. Bell, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 124, 71 S. W. 570, 572. The probate *1107 court had nothing to do with their appointment, his only judicial act being to enter the order probating the will, after which it was the ministerial duty of the clerk of his court to issue letters testamentary to the executors named therein. Journeay v. Shook, 105 Tex. 551, 152 S. W. 809.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W.2d 1105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ware-v-barfield-texapp-1932.