Court Opinion

ID: 5003294
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-10-01 01:39:06.850052+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:17:10.733716
License: Public Domain

McClendon, C. J.
Appellant Mary B. Cox (her husband joining pro forma) sued appellees (her father and brothers and sisters) in the district court to partition the community estate of her father and deceased mother. The suit was filed November 1, 1930, and it was alleged that on December 12, 1927, her father had taken out community administration upon the estate. The trial court sustained a general demurrer to the petition and a special exception thereto urging want of jurisdiction in the district court because of the pendency of administration in the county court. Appellant declined to amend, and the suit was dismissed. From this judgment, the appeal is taken.
Appellees urge two propositions in support of the trial court’s judgment:
1. That since the petition showed on its fact that community administration had been taken out in the county court, that court had exclusive jurisdiction in the matter of partition.
2. That, even without such allegation, the district court was without jurisdiction, in the absence of an allegation that no administration was pending and no necessity therefor existed.
Numerous authorities are cited in support of these propositions. None of them, however-, relates to community administration.
R. S. 1925, art. 3681, reads:
“After the lapse of twelve months from the filing of the bond by the survivor, the persons entitled to the deceased’s share of such community estate, or any portion thereof, shall be entitled to have a partition and distribution thereof in the same manner as in other administrations.”
There are several cases which hold that the county court has jurisdiction to partition under this statute. Huppman v. Schmidt, 65 Tex. 583; McGillivray v. Eggleston, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 35, 31 S. W. 539.
In the Huppman Case, which was brought in the district court, discovery and accounting in addition to partition were sought, plaintiffs alleging a false inventory and conversion of a part of the estate. It was held that the district court had jurisdiction. We quote from the opinion:
“If the heirs of the deceased partner invoke the jurisdiction of- the probate court to effect a distribution, when a survivor has fraudulently concealed or squandered their inheritance, that jurisdiction may discover, but cannot remedy, the wrong. The bond, their only source of indemnity, must be proceeded upon in the court having jurisdiction of the, amount. If the allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition are truev a proceeding in the county court would be an idle ceremony. In cases in which the trust has been fairly and discreetly managed, an accounting and division would be complete redress, and this could be had in the- probate court. But, even then, why should that be regarded as an exclusive jurisdiction? The survivor may settle with the heirs, without the aid of any court— but if he refuses to settle, in providing that the distributees may have partition in the county court, there is no implied denial of any other remedy. There is nothing in the act expressly confining the parties to the *445remedy it authorizes. The act of 1848 (Hartly, art 1215, sec. 106) authorized, the county court to partition between any joint owner and the estate in process of administration any property jointly held to be governed by the rules and regulations applicable to the ordinary partition and distribution of estates. In Ellis v. Rhone, 17 Tex. 131, this statute was held not to confer upon the county court exclusive power, nor to affect the concurrent jurisdiction of the district court to accomplish the same purpose.
“If the district court now has the requisite power under the constitution, its exercise is not prohibited by the article of the Revised Statutes, which confers upon the county court the same authority.
“We think the jurisdiction of the district court is quite indubitable. Its general jurisdiction is given in the very language of the constitution of 1845, changing only the amount. It embraces all ‘suits, complaints and pleas whatever, without regard to any distinction between law and equity, when the matter in controversy shall be valued at or amount to five hundred dollars exclusive of interest.’ Constitution of 1845, sec. 10, art. 4; Constitution of 1876, art. 3, sec. 8. In Newson v. Chrisman (9 Tex. 113), this language was held to vest in the district courts all the powers possessed by both common law and chancery courts in England, not incompatible with the organic law. In Ellis v. Rhone (supra), it was held that the district court as a court of equity, independent of the partition statutes, had every authority and instrumentality requisite to the nicest adjustment of the rights and claims of the distributees of a mixed estate. And in Ponton v. Bellows (22 Tex. 681), the propriety of joining the sureties in the suit against the principal was discussed and established. The amount in controversy in this suit is more than five hundred dollars — its object is within the scope of the powers of the district court. There is in the proposed investigation no revision or review of any ruling or order of the county court, nor in the progress, nor in the end of the cause is there any interference with the county court or with any matter pending before it.”
This language clearly upholds the jurisdie-. tion of the district court as. concurrent with that of the county court, when partition alone of an estate in which community administration has been taken out is involved. There is no authority to the contrary, nor has this holding ever been brought in question, so far as we have been able to discover.
In Clark v. Bank (Tex. Com. App.) 210 S. W. 677, 679, it was held that the survivor who takes out community administration is an administrator within the meaning of article 5703, R. S., which tolls the statute of limitations for one year after decedent’s death, “unless an administrator or executor shall have sooner qualified according to law upon such deceased person’s estate.” The opinion adverts to the statement in the Huppman Case: “He is a trustee — not an administrator.” This language, however, should be read in connection with the context. The court was there illustrating the powers of the survivor in handling the estate, untrammeled by any control or action of the probate court. Immediately following the quoted language, the court say:
“His manipulation of the trust is not an administration pending in any court. * * * He is not the agent, or hand; or officer of any court. No probate decree is the source of his authority, and the exercise of his discretion is under no judicial warrant or control, as in cases of ordinary administration.” (Italics ours.)
We are in accord with the reasoning in the Huppman Case upon the question here at bar, and hold that the district court was not without jurisdiction to partition the estate.
The trial court’s judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for trial on the merits.
Reversed and remanded.
BAUGH, J., not sitting.