Yates v. Watson

221 S.W. 966, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 509
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1920
DocketNo. 120-2988
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 966 (Yates v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yates v. Watson, 221 S.W. 966, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 509 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1920).

Opinion

TAYLOR, J. W. B. Wilson

was killed in a railway accident in November, 1904. His wife and three minor children survived him. He left no money or estate, except a claim for damages against the St. Louis & San Francisco Railway Company. Mrs. Wilson, acting for herself and as next friend for her children, employed Wolfe, Hare & Maxey, attorneys, to prosecute the suit against the company on the claim, and agreed to pay them as their compensation one-third of the amount recovered.

Immediately upon the death of (her husband, Mrs. Wilson and her children moved to the home of I. H. Yates, her father, where a few months later the fourth child was born. The entire family from that time until June 4, 1906, were dependent upon Yates for the necessaries of life, which he provided at his own expense. On that date judgment was rendered in the cause growing out of Wilson’s death for $2,000 in favor of Mrs. Wilson, and for $4,000 in favor of the minors. The proceeds of the judgment for the minors were deposited in the registry of the court.

In July, 1906, Yates qualified as guardian of the estates of the minors. On August 10th following, the clerk of the court paid him as guardian the sum of $3,973.62, retaining $60 as his commission. Yates, upon receipt c£ the money, paid Wolfe, Hare & Maxey one-third .of the amount received, and forthwith filed an inventory and appraisement showing that the only estate owned by the minors was a two-thirds interest in the judgment recovered in their favor, and appraising such ' interest at $2,666.66, the net amount of the recovery. The amount paid out as attorney’s fees was never inventoried or appraised as a part of the estates of the minors, or referred to directly or indirectly in any of the orders of the court.

Yates, • upon qualifying as guardian, made application to the court for an allowance for the care, education, and maintenance of the minors, which the court granted, entering an order, directing that the sum of $480 per annum he paid out of the funds in his hands as guardian for the purpose stated. He filed no annual accounts or reports of his guardianship,* other than his final account. There were no orders of the probate court authorizing Yates to expend any of the money belonging to the wards, except for the $480 annual expenditure referred to.

On May 25, 1908, Yates removed his daughter and grandchildren from his home in Stith, Tex., to a house in Merkel, Tex., owned by him, where he continued to treat them as members of his own family, furnishing them all the necessaries of life, until about December 25,1908, when Mrs. Wilson married N. K. Watson.

In October, 1913, the county court entered an order requiring Yates to file an annual account, which he filed as a final account in December following, including therein, in legal effect, his application to resign. The account as stated showed: (1) That he received as guardian $2,066.66, the amount of the proceeds of the judgment recovered against the railway company; and (2) that he paid out of the money received the following items: Court costs, $10.80; personal expenses incurred in prosecuting the railway company suit, $38.20; expense of burial of W. B. Wilson, $131.10; attorney’s fees paid in the probate proceedings, $50; commissions paid the clerk of the federal court, $60; amount paid for board, care, and schooling for three minors, at the rate of $10 per month, to December 25, 1908, $1,491; amount paid for care, board, and maintenance of one of said minors born after the death of the father, $423.00; amount paid Mrs. Watson for the support, maintenance, and education of all the minors subsequent to December 25, 1908, $488. The account as filed was silent as to the one-third of the judgment received by Yates, and paid out by him to the attorneys, but showed on its face that the total amount paid out by [968]*968him was $25.44 in excess of the amount received.

Yates did not, during the pendency of his guardianship, or at any time, file claims for any of the amounts expended prior to his appointment as guardian. No* claims were docketed by him, or allowed, or approved by the court.

Citation by publication was duly issued and published on final account, returnable to the February term, 1914, of the county court. None of the minors at that time were of age, but one of the girls, Ola May, had terminated her disability of minority by marrying E. IX Treadwell. During the February term of the court an order was duly entered upon the minutes approving Yates’ account, and directing that he be discharged and his guardianship closed.

None of the parties interested in the estate filed objections to the inventory and ap-praisement filed by Yates and approved by the court, or sought to have a new appraisement made in the manner provided? by law. R. S. 1911, arts. 4117 — 4120; S344r-3347.

Mrs. Watson, as next friend of her minor children, and her daughter, Mrs. Treadwell, both joined pro forma by their husbands, filed this suit in the county court to review the judgment approving the final account. The cause was heard at the May term of the county court, 1915, and resulted in so revising and restating the account as to show that $989.50 should be in the hands of the guardian belonging to the estates of the minors.

The court prdered one-fourth of the amount paid to Mrs. Treadwell, and that Yates be removed from the guardianship on account of having failed to make his annual reports, and because of neglect and mismanagement in the performance of his duties in not investing the guardianship funds. The decree further directed that the amount remaining, to wit, the sum of $742.17, be paid into the registry of the county court for the other minors.

Trial in the district court under the bill of review resulted in a revision and restatement of the final account in the following particulars: The item of $131.10 for burial expenses was not allowed. The items of $1,491 and $423 were reduced $760, the amount charged by Yates for boarding the minors prior to his qualification as guardian; $20 was deducted from the $60 item of commissions paid the clerk of the federal court. The item of $488 paid to Mrs. Watson subsequent to December 25, 1908, was found to be excessive in the sum of $113.

The total amount disallowed on final revision by the district court was $1,024.10. The court found that by the use of reasonable diligence Yates could have invested this sum, but that he failed to do so, and should therefore be charged with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum. The . interest item thus charged against the guardian amounted to the sum of $713.15. The court, adding this amount to the principal sum of $1,024.10 and deducting $25.44, the excess paid out, found that the guardian should have had on hand the sum of $1,735.-81. The district court directed disposition of this sum in the manner provided by the county court judgment.

Yates appealed, questioning the authority of the court to review the judgment approving his final account, and complaining of the court’s action in striking from it certain items of credit, and in reducing others. Mrs. Watson by cross-assignments filed originally in the CouA of Civil Appeals, asserted error in the action of the court in, among other things, not revising the item of the account stating the amount received by Yates as guardian.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 966, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-watson-texcommnapp-1920.