Wheeler v. Duke

67 S.W. 909, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 20, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 210
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 909 (Wheeler v. Duke) 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
Wheeler v. Duke, 67 S.W. 909, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 20, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 210 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This proceeding was instituted by appellants on the 11th day of April, 1901, in the probate court of Shelby County, the object of the suit being to obtain an order of said court to enter nunc pro tune an order made by said court at its October term, 1892, in the guardianship of the estate of the minor heirs of W. J. Duke, deceased. The appellants are the heirs at law and sureties upon the guardian's bond of M. W. Wheeler, deceased, who was the guardian of said minor heirs at the time the order sought to be entered nunc pro tune is alleged to have been made, and the appellees are the former wards of the said guardian and the owners of the estate administered by him. The probate court refused to have said order entered nunc pro tune, and upon an appeal to and a trial de nova in the District Court the same judgment was rendered. The petition alleges that M. W. Wheeler qualified as guardian of the estate of the minor heirs of W. J. Duke, deceased, on the-day of August, 1892, and continued to act as such until his death, which occurred on the 8th day of January, 1897, at which time said guardianship was still pending and has never been closed; that on the-day of 'October, 1892, said guardian made application in writing to- the probate court of Shelby County, in which said guardianship was pending, showing that the income of the estate of said minors was insufficient for their maintenance and education, and asking that he be allowed to expend a portion of the corpus of said estate for said purpose; that said application was granted in open court at the October term, 1892, and an order was made by the court allowing and authorizing said guardian to use a sufficient amount of the body of said estate to maintain and educate said minors, which order the court directed the clerk to enter upon the minutes of the court; that said guardian caused the order so made to be put in writing and handed same to the clerk to be placed upon the minutes of the court, but for some cause not known to petitioners the clerk failed to enter said order in the minutes; that said guardian fully believed that said order had been duly and properly entered by the clerk, and in the administration of said estate expended about $800 of the corpus of same in the maintenance and support of said minors, believing that he was fully authorized so to do under the order of said court; that said guardian never became aware during his lifetime of the fact that said order had never been entered in the minutes of the court, and petitioners did not know that said order had never been entered until about the 6th day of April, 1901. The following exhibits are attached to the petition and are al *22 leged to be copies of the application and order referred to in the petition :

Exhibit A.—“In the Probate Court of Shelby County, Texas, October term, 1893. To the Hon. W. T. Riggs, Judge of said Court: Your petitioners, M. W. Wheeler, guardian of the estates of Warwick, Jack, Lula, Maud, Horma, Wheeler, and Blanch Duke, minors, with respect shows to you honor that the rents, revenues, and incomes of said estates are wholly insufficient to support or educate said minors,- there being no income of said estates except the interest on the claims in favor of said estates, which claims are all on parties who are insolvent and nothing can be made out of them by law, and pray that the court grant him as guardian of said estates an order allowing and empowering him to use a sufficient amount of the means of said estate to maintain and educate said minors. M. W. Wheeler, Guardian of said Minors.”

Exhibit B.—“On this the-day of October, 1893, the application of M. W. Wheeler, guardian of the estates of Warwick Duke, Jack, Lula, Maud, Horma, Wheeler, and Blanch Duke, minors, came up to be heard, and after the court seeing said application and hearing the evidence in, support thereof, and it appearing to the satisfaction of the - court that the rents, revenues, and incomes of said estates are wholly insufficient to support or educate said minors, said application is hereby granted in all things, and that said guardian is hereby authorized and empowered to use a sufficient amount of the means of said estates to maintain and edueaté said minors.”

Plaintiffs by trial amendment filed in the District Court further alleged that when said application was presented to the probate, court the judge of said court, W. T. Riggs, granted same in open court and made and officially signed an entry in writing upon the back of said application granting same, and directed that said order and judgment be prepared in writing and recorded in the, minutes of the court; that W. T. Riggs is now deceased, having died in the year 1893 or 1894, and that said application and the indorsement of the judge thereon, together with the decree prepared and handed to the clerk, as well as many other papers and documents pertaining to said guardianship, are now lost or destroyed and can not be found; and that it was the custom and usual practice of " said Riggs as probate judge to make his entries upon the back of applications presented to him instead of making same on a regular probate docket. The only evidence in the case is the testimony of E. B. Wheeler, one of the plaintiffs, and J. R. Swanzy, clerk of the County Court of Shelby County. Both of these witnesses testify to the facts alleged in the petition. E. B. Wheeler was attorney for the guardian and prepared the order set out as an exhibit to the petition and presented same to the county judge, who approved it and directed him to hand it to the clerk to be recorded, which witness did. Swanzy was clerk of the court at that time, and fully óorroborated Wheeler as to the granting of the application in open court by the judge and his indorse *23 ment upon the application that the same was granted, and also as to the preparation of the order by Wheeler at the request of the judge and the presentation of said order to him with instructions to enter same in the minutes of the court. This witness did not know that he had neglected to enter this order in the minutes of the court until a short time before the filing of this suit. He further testified that Judge Riggs never used a probate docket except in lunacy eases, and always entered his order on the back of applications presented to him. Diligent search was made for the original application and for the order prepared by Wheeler and filed in the case, but neither could be found. As before stated, this evidence was uncontradicted and fully sustains the allegations of the petition.

After the filing of the trial amendment by the plaintiffs the court below overruled a general demurrer to the petition, but upon hearing the evidence rendered judgment for the defendant on the ground that the evidence having failed to show that any entry of said order was ever made on any record required by law to be kept, such order was a nullity and could not therefore be entered nunc pro tune. Article 1853, Revised Statutes, provides that all orders, decrees, and judgments of the probate court shall be nullities unless entered upon the records of the court during the term at which same were rendered. If the order sought to be entered nunc pro tune was a nullity, or void order, for any reason, no effect or validity could be given it by having it entered nunc pro tune upon the minutes of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 909, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 20, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-duke-texapp-1902.