Withrow v. Adams & Wickes

23 S.W. 437, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 438, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 454
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 27, 1893
DocketNo. 179.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 23 S.W. 437 (Withrow v. Adams & Wickes) 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
Withrow v. Adams & Wickes, 23 S.W. 437, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 438, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 454 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

COLLARD, Associate Justice.

Appellants state the nature and result of the suit as follows:

“ On May 21, 1890, appellants, Amelia P. Withrow, joined by her husband, George B. Withrow, James Masterson, B. A. Shepherd, Sidon Harris, and Carrie Chew, a lunatic, by her guardian, Henry F. Fisher, Jr., filed this suit against H. B. Adams and E. D. L. Wickes, asking for a partition of 640 acres of land in Tom Green County, being survey 173, patented to Henry F. Fisher, Sr. They alleged that Amelia P. Withrow, Sidon Harris, and Carrie Chew each owned an undivided one-eighth, and Masterson and Shepherd jointly an undivided one-eighth, and admitted that Adams & Wickes owned the remaining undivided one-half.

“Adams & Wickes answered, and denied that any of the appellants owned an interest in the land, and set up title in' themselves to the whole of the survey.

“ On April 19, 1890, trial was had before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered for appellees for the whole survey of land and for costs. Plaintiffs appealed.

‘ ‘ The land in controversy was the community property of Henry F. Fisher, Sr., and his wife, Mary C. Fisher. He died intestate in 1867, leaving surviving him his wife and four children, to-wit, Amelia P. With-row and Carrie Chew, two of the appellants, and Mary S. McKeen, wife of Byron McKeen, and Henry F. Fisher, Jr. The son, Henry F. Fisher, in 1882, conveyed to appellants Masterson and Shepherd his interest in his father’s estate, and Mary S. McKeen, April 8, 1889, conveyed to appellant Sidon Harris her interest in her father’s estate.

“Appellants admit that appellees own the community half of Mary C. Fisher of the land in controversy, but they deny that they have acquired title to the community half of said Henry F. Fisher, deceased. This half, appellants contend, is now owned by them, as alleged in their petition.”

Appellants contend that the court erred as follows: “In admitting in evidence, over plaintiff’s objections, the copies of the purported application and inventory and appraisement of lands of the community estate of *443 H. F. Fisher, deceased, because said inventory and appraisement do not appear to have been made in compliance with the directions of the law, •as fully set forth in bill of exceptions number 1.”

Defendants, having shown title by deeds to Mary C. Fisher’s community half of the land, read in evidence a general warranty deed executed ■by Mary C. Fisher, through Gustav Schleicher, her attorney in fact, to Adams & Wickes, defendants, for an undivided half of the same, her remaining interest, of date June 5, 1871, duly recorded on date.

The proceedings of the County Court objected to by appellants are:

1. The petition of Mary C. Fisher to the County Court of Harris County, Texas, in which she alleges the residence of herself and former husband, Henry F. Fisher, in that county; his death on the 23rd day of October, 1867, intestate, leaving four children surviving him, naming them; that there was community property of herself and deceased, consisting principally in lands; that the business of the estate required attention, and that she desired to settle it as surviving wife. She prays that “ inventory may be recorded and an appraisement made according to the statute in such cases.” The petition was sworn to by her on February 27, 1868, and filed March 18, 1868, in the County Court.

2. A document filed same day, with the following caption: “ Inventory of the community estate of Henry F. Fisher and Mary C. Fisher, acquired during their marriage.” Then follows in the document a list of some 134 surveys of land, many thousand acres, giving, in ruled columns, the abstract number, name of the original grantee, the number of acres in each survey, in what counties situated, and the valuation; the total value being $4770. It is signed and sworn to before the county judge by three persons, G. Loeffler, I. G. Yeith, and Otto Artz. It contains only a list of lands—no personal property—and is not signed or sworn to by Mrs. Fisher. The minutes of the court of same date, March 18, 1868, book F, page 296, have the following entry: “ Mary C. Fisher, surviving wife, having filed an inventory of community property of herself and her deceased husband, and G. Loeffler, I. G. Yeith, and Otto Artz being appointed appraisers, and having returned an appraisement, duly sworn to .according to law, the said inventory is approved and ordered of record. It is further ordered, that the clerk issue this certificate in testimony to the effect that said Mary C. Fisher be recognized under the Act of August 26, 1856. as having authority to manage, control, and dispose of the ■community property, subject to the provisions of said act, without bond .and without any further action in the Probate Court. Closed.”

The Act of August 26, 1856, dispensed with administration upon the community estate of the husband and wife in case of the death of the latter, and made it his duty to file in the County Court “ a full, fair, and complete inventory and appraisement of all the community property of himself and his deceased wife, to be taken and recorded as in cases of ad *444 ministration, and to have the same force and effect in all suits between parties claiming under it; after which, without any administration or further action whatever in the Probate Court, he shall have the right to manage, control, and dispose of said community property, both real and personal, in such manner as to him may seem best for the interest of said estate, and of suing and being sued with regard to the same in the same manner as during the life of the wife.” Pasch. Dig., arts. 4647, 4648. The same act also provided, that “ the surviving wife may retain the exclusive management and control'Of the community property, * * * in the same manner and subject to the same rights, rules, and regulations as-provided in the foregoing provisions of this act, until she marry again.” Id., 4642.

No bond was required of the survivor under this act; but was required under the Act of August 1, 1870, in amount equal to the value of the-whole community. Pasch. Dig., arts. 4648, 5494.

It is contended, that as the statute requires the inventory and appraisement of all the property belonging to the community to be taken and recorded as in eases of administration, the directions of the law as to such inventories must be fully complied with, viz., that three appraisers should be appointed by an order entered on the minutes of the court, and that the survivor, with the assistance of the appraisers, should cause to be-made a full inventory and appraisement of all the estate; that the inventory and appraisement be subscribed and sworn to by the appraisers, and that the survivor should make and attach to the inventory a full and. complete list of claims owing to the estate, signed and sworn to by him as a complete inventory and list of all the property belonging to the community, as required by the statute in cases of administration; and appellants say, that because all this was not done by Mrs. Fisher, the proceedings-were invalid and gave her no control of the property as survivor, under the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W. 437, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 438, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/withrow-v-adams-wickes-texapp-1893.