Wilder v. Mossler

583 S.W.2d 664, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 1979
Docket17417
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 583 S.W.2d 664 (Wilder v. Mossler) 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
Wilder v. Mossler, 583 S.W.2d 664, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3743 (Tex. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

PEDEN, Justice.

Rita Wilder appeals from a probate court order authorizing the temporary administrator, Texas Commerce Bank, to compromise and settle certain tort cases filed by Christopher Mossier and pending in a district court against the estate of Candace Mossier, deceased. The appellant contends that the probate court was without jurisdiction to entertain an application to settle and compromise the pending litigation and that the court erred in refusing to accord her a trial by jury on the contested issues. We affirm.

The appellant does not complain by point of error of any finding of fact made by the trial court. She did not object to any of them, request additional findings, or assign points of error to them.

In 1978, Christopher Mossier and Daniel Mossier jointly filed two suits against their adoptive mother, Candace Mossier, in district court. In the first suit, they alleged that Mrs. Mossier had acted wrongfully as executrix of the estate of Jacques Mossier and as trustee of certain trusts created under his will (the executrix-trustee suit); in the second, they alleged she acted wrongfully in conducting the affairs of Nationwide Securities Company, a corporation in which she owned the controlling interest and Daniel and Christopher Mossier were minority stockholders (the Nationwide suit). Mrs. Mossier died in 1976, while these cases were still pending, and the temporary administration of her estate was opened in November, 1976. The temporary administrator was later made a defendant in these cases.

In August of 1978, the temporary administrator filed an application for authority to settle and compromise the suits pending against the estate by Daniel Mossier and Christopher Mossier. In October of that year, the temporary administrator filed an application for instructions because Rita Wilder and other heirs had entered into a proposed settlement agreement as to the claims of Daniel Mossier, including his contest of a purported codicil. Upon receiving instructions from the court, the temporary *666 administrator submitted an application to settle all of Daniel Mossler’s claims and a separate application for authority to settle Christopher Mossler’s tort claims.

The applications to consider both Daniel Mossler’s and Christopher Mossler’s proposed settlements were considered at the same hearing in November of 1978 and resulted in the court’s authorizing the temporary administrator to proceed with both of them. The appellant did not assert that the probate court lacked jurisdiction to authorize settlement of the tort cases pending in the district court. In fact, she urged the court to approve the settlement as to Daniel Mossier.

We summarize the findings of fact made after the hearing on the applications. In July, 1978, Rita Wilder had filed a demand for jury trial concerning the claims of Christopher Mossier, but not with regard to the temporary administrator’s application to settle Christopher Mossler’s interest in the Nationwide and executrix-trustee suits. Her demand for a jury trial might be construed as including an opposition to the claims filed by Christopher Mossier, but she did not file a written opposition to the temporary administrator’s application for authority to settle and compromise his interest in the Nationwide and executrix-trustee suits.

Unless settled, the costs of preparing and trying the two suits of Christopher Mossier could amount to as much as the settlement proposed by the temporary administrator’s application. If the Nationwide suit were tried, a jury or court could reasonably conclude that Candace Mossier diverted the business of Nationwide to another entity which she controlled but in which Christopher Mossier and Daniel Mossier had no interest. Further, a jury or court could reasonably make findings upon which a judgment could be entered awarding Christopher Mossier at least $54,000 plus interest from 1973 or approximately $10,000 a year plus interest from 1971.

If the executrix-trustee suit were tried, a jury or court could reasonably find that Candace Mossier, as executrix of the Jacques Mossier Estate, sold assets of that estate (including a residence) to relatives and then acquired them from those relatives at a time when Christopher Mossier was a minor. Further, a jury or court could reasonably find that Candace Mossier paid fees to her own attorneys from trust funds belonging to Christopher Mossier. She received about $750,000 in commissions and fees as executrix. The temporary administrator was justified in believing that there was a reasonable probability that a jury would make some or all of the determinations set forth in the findings concerning evaluation of these suits.

The claims of Christopher Mossier filed in this proceeding were rejected by the temporary administrator and were not approved by the probate court. The settlement of the Christopher Mossier litigation is in the best interest of the estate.

The probate judge made these conclusions of law:

“1. Upon written application to and order by the Court, the temporary administrator of an estate may compromise litigation against the estate.
2. The settlement of the Christopher Mossier litigation proposed by the Temporary Administrator’s Application is in the best interests of the Estate.
3. By reason of the many independent issues and applications which may be presented during the probate of a complex estate such as this, a demand and fee for jury trial is required with regard to each application or issue so triable.
4. Under the Probate Code of Texas, the Local Rules of the Probate Courts of Harris County, Texas, and the facts, trial by jury was not required concerning the Temporary Administrator’s Subject Application.
5. The Probate Court had authority to perform the discretionary function of approving compromises or settlements of litigation pending against the Estate.”

Mrs. Wilder’s first point of error is that the probate court was without jurisdiction to entertain an application to settle and *667 compromise litigation pending against a decedent’s estate where the claim had been rejected by the temporary administrator and the claimant had thereafter failed to timely institute action in the probate court as prescribed by § 313 of the Texas Probate Code. That section provides in part: “When a claim or a part thereof has been rejected by the representative, the claimant shall institute suit thereon in the court of original probate jurisdiction in which the estate is pending or in any other court of proper jurisdiction within ninety days after such rejection, or the claim shall be barred.

We hold that Christopher Mossler’s tort actions dealt with unliquidated potential liability of the kind that require fact-findings to ascertain their amount; they did not constitute a “claim for money” of the kind that must be presented to the executor or administrator for approval as provided by § 298 of the Code. See Allen v. Denk, 87 S.W.2d 303, 306 (Tex.Civ.App.1935, no writ); 18 Tex.Jur.2d 342, Decedent’s Estates § 401.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
583 S.W.2d 664, 1979 Tex. App. LEXIS 3743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilder-v-mossler-texapp-1979.