Whitfield v. Burrell

118 S.W. 153, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 258
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 153 (Whitfield v. Burrell) 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
Whitfield v. Burrell, 118 S.W. 153, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 258 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

LEVY, Associate Justice.

—By order of the Probate Court of Lampasas County, Texas, made April 8, 1890, appellant E. E- Whitfield was appointed guardian of the person and estate of Eugenia G-. Whitfield and Ethel M. Whitfield, minors, and he duly qualified as such guardian. On May 22, 1907, said Eugenia G-. Burrell (nee Whitfield), joined by her husband, filed in the Probate Court of T.ampasas County a complaint in writing complaining to such court that said guardian had never made and rendered any annual account of his guardianship, or settlement in any manner, of his transactions as such guardian, and had failed and refused to settle with complainant for her estate; that she was now a married woman; and *568 prayed that an order be made citing the said guardian to appear and file his final account of settlement as such guardian, and for an order directing him to pay and deliver to complainant such money and property as she was entitled to have. The application also asked for his accounting with Ethel M. Whitfield, who was still a minor. After service of citation the guardian appeared at the regular term of the' Probate Court and answered by general denial and a plea of the statute of two and four years limitation in bar of the right to have final accounting; and without waiving his plea of limitation, tendered an account in final settlement. The Probate Court passed the accounting as to Ethel, a minor, and determined the accounting as to appellee only. The appellee entered a contest to some of the items in the account of the guardian; and after hearing evidence thereupon the court entered an order restating the account as filed and presented by the guardian, and after approving and allowing certain disbursements by the guardian decreed that by a full and fair settlement of accounts the guardian has in his possession as due the appellee the sum of $2644, and “which said sum he, the said E. E. Whitfield, is hereby ordered and directed to at once pay over to said Eugenia G. Burrell; and upon compliance with this order said E. E. Whitfield shall be discharged and said guardianship closed so far as the same affects said Eugenia G. Burrell.” Erom the order of the Probate Court the appellant and the sureties on his guardian’s bond appealed to the District Court. The sureties on the guardian’s bond seem, from the record, to have voluntarily appeared and made themselves parties to these proceedings in the Probate Court. In the District Court a decree was entered upon trial fixing the amount of the property in money after allowing certain disbursements due by the guardian to appellee, and directing the guardian to pay over the same to the appellee and upon the payment of the same that he be fully discharged by reason of his guardianship; and further ordered that the decree be certified to the County Court for observance. From this decree so entered by the District Court an appeal was prosecuted to this court by the guardian and his sureties.

After Stating the Case.—Appellant Whitfield, the guardian, pleaded limitations in bar of the proceedings, and complá'ins, by proper assignments of error, that the court erred in not sustaining the pleas. The court in his decree finds, and we consider that finding, that appellee, the ward, became twenty-one years old on August 24, 1902. The application to the Probate Court in this case was filed in the Probate Court on May 22, 1907. Appellant contends that this is an action to which article 3358 of the Limitation Statutes would apply in bar. The application in this record on which the proceedings in this case were founded, was under authority of article 2766, Rev. Stats., which provides: “Should the guardian fail to file his account for final settlement at the proper time, the court shall, upon its own motion, or upon the complaint in writing of anyone interested in the estate, cause such guardian to be cited to appear at a regular term of the court and file such account.” The order of the Probate Court was entered in accordance with article 2770, which says: “After *569 citation has been duly served the court shall proceed to examine the account for final settlement, and to hear all exceptions and objections thereto, if any, and the evidence in support of and against such account, and if the same is found to be fair, just and correct an order Shall be entered upon the minutes approving it and directing the guardian to deliver the estate remaining in his hands to the ward or other person legally authorized to receive the same, and upon compliance with such order the guardian shall be discharged, and such guardianship closed by an order to that effect upon the minutes.” By article 3358, which appellant insists is applicable to these proceedings, it is provided, “Every action other than for the recovery of real estate, for which no limitation is otherwise prescribed, shall be brought within four years next after the right to bring the same shall have accrued, and not afterward.” The “every action” in this article does not include nor mean the demand by the Probate Court of the guardian, as in these instant proceedings, for a final accounting of his transactions about the estate of his ward during his ward’s minority. Such special proceeding by the Probate Court is not an action within the meaning of the article just quoted. All the limitation statutes employ the words “action” and “suits.” As was said in Webb v. Allen, 15 Texas Civ. App., 605, 40 S. W., 342, “‘Actions’ and ‘suits,’ as generally used in these limitation statutes, are synonymous and interchangeable terms.” “Suit” is defined in Ex parte Towles, 48 Texas, 433. The accounting “for final settlement” by the Probate Court arises from the trust relation of guardian, and is within and under the power and control of the Probate Court. Such proceedings constitute a process of returning a detailed statement of the accounts of the fiduciary relation, showing the balance of receipts and disbursements of the estate in his possession. The decree of the court in respect thereto operates as an account stated between ward and guardian, as well as the formal release from the trust upon such account. It is the duty of the guardian, under the statute, when his ward arrives at twenty-one years of age to render his account to the court for final settlement and discharge. It is within the power of the Probate Court to inquire into and determine whether the same as rendered be fair, just and correct. Sheffield v. Goff, 65 Texas, 354. The Probate Court having the power to appoint the guardian, such court retains jurisdiction and control over him to terminate the appointment in the way provided by statute. Marlow v. Lacy, 68 Texas, 154; Logan v. Robertson, 83 S. W., at p. 397. The guardian is not entitled to an absolute discharge of his trust by the court until he has submitted his final account or settlement with the court. The fact that the ward has reached majority does not deprive the Probate Court of its jurisdiction over the guardian to compel and enforce an accounting of his guardianship about the estate during the ward’s minority. This article 2766 continues the control and jurisdiction of the Probate Court over the guardian for final accounting during the ward’s minority, and expressly authorizes the court either “upon its own motion, or upon the complaint in writing of anyone interested in the estate,” to cause the guardian to appear and at a regular term of the court file such account. The article does not undertake to *570

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 153, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 567, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitfield-v-burrell-texapp-1909.