Court Opinion

ID: 4895757
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:57:11.89066+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:12:44.425790
License: Public Domain

Gaines, Associate Justice.
This is a proceeding originally Instituted in the county court of Falls county, by Wharton Branch, one of the appellants here, for the purpose of compelling E. G. Hanrick, who was alleged to be the administrator of the estate of Edward Hanrick, deceased, to make an exhibit preparatory to a partition of the estate. It was alleged that Branch was the owner of a distributive share of the ■estate; that E. G. Hanrick was appointed administrator thereef in 1867 by said court, and that his administration had never been closed. E. G. Hanrick appeared and answered in effect, that the administration had been closed by lapse of time and by operation of law. Ellen Hanrick, Annie Hanrick and Elizabeth Clare joined by her husband, heirs of the intestate, also appeared and demurred and specially excepted to the petition, and also pleaded specially that no action had been taken in the court in reference to the administration in ten years, and that there was a suit pending in the district court of Falls county, between the heirs, for a partition of the estate. Upon hearing in the county court, it was ordered that E. G. Han-arick, as administrator, make arid file an exhibit of the condi*733tion of the estate. From this judgment he appealed to the district court. J. G. Minter, one of the appellants in this court, intervened in the cause after it was appealed to the district court, alleging that he was administrator of the estates of James Hanrick, John Hanrick and Elizabeth O’Brien, deceased, who with E. G. Hanrick were the sole heirs of Edward Han-rick, deceased, and joined in the application of Wharton Branch. He also alleged that E. G. Hanrick was administrator of the estate of Edward Hanrick, deceased, and that the estate was ready for partition and distribution.
In the view we take of the case upon appeal, it is not necessary to notice the pleadings further. The district court upon final hearing denied the application to require the administrator to make an exhibit, and adjudged that the applicant, Branch, should pay the costs. The judgment recites, that the court was of opinion that the application “comes too late”— from which it is to be inferred that it was held that by reason of the time which had elapsed between the last proceeding had in the county court' and the filing of the application, the administration must be conclusively presumed to have been closed. There was no action upon the demurrer, and they are deemed to have been waived.
The statement of facts shows that the court house of Falls county and a part of the records of the county court were burned. But an order of court was introduced in evidence, dated March 25, 1867, appointing E. G. Hanrick administrator of the estate of Edward Hanrick, deceased; also an order dated April 26, 1867, appointing appraisers of the estate; another dated May 27, 1869, approving the inventory and appraisement,, and lastly, an order of March 31, 1869, approving an annual exhibit on decreeing a sale of lands. Ho record evidence was adduced showing any subsequent action by the administrator in the court or by the court itself in regard to the estate, and we think the court was fully warranted in concluding from the testimony that no such action had been taken. There was no direct evidence offered tetiding to show a settlement of the administration, and the conclusion is inevitable that it was never, ' in fact, closed by any formal action of the court.
Such being the case, is it to be conclusively presumed that the administration had been closed when the application was filed on August 11,1885? We think not. More than sixteen years had elapsed since the last order was made before the application *734was filed. In Murphy v. Menard, 14 Texas, 61, it was held that under the law in force in 1841 an administration must be presumed to have been closed after a lapse of a much shorter time than is shown in the present case. The same doctrine has been recognized and applied in the subsequent cases of Portis v. Cummings, 14 Texas, 140, and Marks v. Hill, 46 Texas, 345. But we think that the forty-sixth section of the act of August 15, 1870, was clearly intended to abrogate this rule. That section reads as follows: “But when letters testamentary or of administration shall have once been granted no presumption is admissible which is contrary to the record, and the persons interested in the administration may proceed, after any lapse of time, to compel a settlement of an estate which does not appear from the record to have been closed. (Pas. Dig., art. 5507.)
The provision is partly copied into the Revised Statutes; the words “no presumption is admissible which is contrary to the record” being omitted. (Rev. Stats., art. 1829.) The object of the omission is not here determined. The article as it now stands applies directly to the case before us and admits of but one construction. In the absence of an order of record showing the settlement of an estate, such settlement may be compelled at any time. It would, in our opinion, be competent in a case like the present, where the records had been destroyed, to show their destruction, and to prove by parol that an order closing the administration had been duly entered on the minutes of the court. Any order not so entered would be a nullity. (Rev. Stats., art. 1802.) We therefore conclude that the application to compel settlement did not come too late, and that the court erred in so holding.
The court below did not pass upon the question of the effect of the partition suit pending in the district court at the time the application was filed. We will say, however, that until the administration was closed, the county court had exclusive jurisdition to decree a partition of the lands of the estate as among the heirs, when the title was clear as among themselves,
and there were no complications with third persons, who claimed an interest adverse to the estate (Rev. Stats., art. 3490), and that the plea setting up merely the pendency of the suit in the district court was not adverse to this application so far as it sought to compel a settlement of the estate. What the action of the court should be upon the coming in of the administrator’s *735report and account, we will not undertake to determine in ad. vanee. The facts are not sufficiently disclosed by the record to justify such an attempt. It may be that the interests of the heirs in the lands may be so complicated with that of third parties that a resort to the powers of a court of equity may be necessary in order to secure a fair and equitable adjustment and partition. We merely decide now that the court should have compelled a settlement.
Opinion delivered May 15, 1888.
The application was excepted to on the ground that Branch did not show an interest in the administration. He averred that he owned an interest in the estate, having purchased that of some of the heirs. This he had the right to do, and he was entitled to the same remedies his grantors had previous to the conveyance. His interest was not denied as a matter of fact. The exception does not appear to have been called to the attention of the court, and we infer his interest was not contested. It was not shown by the evidence, but we presume all controversy as to it was waived, (Newton v. Newton, 61 Texas, 511.)
For the error of the court which has been pointed out, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.

Reversed and remanded.