OPINION
Appellant A
&
W Industries (“A & W”) brings this appeal from the trial court’s order dismissing its motion to remove Appellees James M. Day and Ramona Day (“Appel-lees”) as independent co-executors of the estate of Tommy Joe Day, deceased. A & W asserts in a single point that the trial court erred in holding that A & W lacked standing to sue for Appellees’ removal as a matter of law. Because A & W failed to both plead and prove that it was an “interested person”
BACKGROUND
Because of the disposition of this case, only a brief recitation of the facts is necessary.
Following Tommy Joe Day’s death in June 1990, A & W entered a contractual agreement with Appellees as co-executors of Day’s estate to purchase the assets of Wilbert of North Texas, a burial vault manufacturing business owned by the estate. Appellees subsequently filed suit to rescind the contract and A & W counter-filed seeking specific performance.
On August 6, 1997, A & W filed a motion to remove Appellees as independent co-executors of the estate, alleging that Appellees had engaged in gross misconduct or mismanagement in the performance of their duties and had misapplied estate property committed to their care. See Tex. Prob.Code Ann. § 222(b)(1), (4) (Vernon Supp.1998). Appel-lees answered the motion by asserting that A & W lacked standing to sue.
On December 3, 1997, the court held a hearing on A & W’s motion to remove the estate representatives. Before receiving testimony on the motion to remove, the trial court held an in limine proceeding on the issue of A & W’s standing, at which time A & W asserted that it had a property right in and a claim against the estate being administered. After hearing arguments from counsel, the trial court held that A & W lacked standing to sue for removal of the co-executors. The court timely filed conclusions of law, concluding that none of the acts alleged by A & W gave it standing to sue to remove Appellees as co-executors, and that even if every act alleged was established by competent evidence, A & W would still not have standing in this ease.
INTERLOCUTORY APPEAL
Before considering A & W’s point, we must decide whether the order in this case is a final disposition that may be appealed or whether it is merely interlocutory, as alleged in A & W’s notice of appeal. Under section five of the probate code, “[a]ll final orders of any court exercising original probate jurisdiction shall be appealable to the courts of appeals.” Tex. Prob.Code Ann. §
5(f)
(Vernon Supp.1998). To appeal a probate matter, however, it is not necessary that the order or judgment fully dispose of the entire probate proceeding.
See Crowson v. Wakeham,
If there is an express statute, such as the one for the complete heirship judgment, declaring the phase of the probate proceedings to be final and appealable, that statute controls. Otherwise, if there is a proceeding of which the order in question may logically be considered a part, but one or more pleadings also part of that proceeding raise issues or parties not disposed of, then the probate order is interlocutory.
See id. at 783.
In this case, there is no express .statute that declares an order dismissing plaintiffs motion for lack of standing to be final and appealable.
Cf.
Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 55(a) (Vernon 1980) (specifically stating that a judgment in a proceeding to declare heirship “shall be a final judgment, and may be appealed or reviewed”). The “proceeding” of which the order may logically be considered a part is the hearing on A & W’s motion to remove. Because the trial court’s order that A & W lacked standing to bring the motion “dispose[d] of all issues in the phase of the proceeding for which it was brought,” we hold that the trial court’s order constitutes a final judgment that may be appealed.
See Crowson,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The existence of standing is a question of law.
See Cleaver v. George Staton Co.,
STANDING AS AN “INTERESTED PARTY”
For any person to maintain a suit, it is necessary that he have standing to litigate the matters in issue.
See Hunt v. Bass,
In this case, A & W alleges that it has standing as an interested person because it has a contract claim against the estate and because it has a pecuniary interest m estate and non-estate assets of the decedent. Ap-pellees, on the other hand, assert that A & W’s contract claim does not qualify as a “claim against the estate” as defined in section 3(r). Thus, both sides urge us to decide whether a party with a contract claim against an estate qualifies as an “interested person” under the probate code. Because there is a paucity of authority on this issue, we looked by way of analogy to the extensive and well-settled rules governing standing to bring a will contest or offer a will for probate. As a result of that review, we conclude that we should not reach the merits of this issue.
As a general rule, where the issue of standing is unchallenged, the trial court looks only to the plaintiffs allegations set forth in his pleadings to determine whether he has alleged jurisdictional facts.
See Texas Ass’n of Bus. v. Texas Air Control Bd.,
The same fundamental principle that bars an uninterested party from interfering in the probate of a will is equally important in the area of estate administration. A mere interloper has no more right to intervene in the administration of a decedent’s estate than he does in the admission of a decedent’s will to probate. For this reason, we hold that where the standing of a party suing to remove the personal representative of an estate is challenged'before a trial on the merits, that party must support his allegations of interest with proof. If he fails to present evidence on this point or the evidence is insufficient to establish his interest in the estate, his suit must be dismissed. The alternative to this requirement — allowing uninterested strangers to interfere in the administration of a decedent’s estate by merely alleging a factual scenario that, if true, would qualify them as “interested persons” under section 3(r) — is repugnant to the public policy of this state.
See Womble,
We now consider this rule in the context of A & W’s complaint. When Appel-lees challenged A & W’s interest at the beginning of the hearing, A & W offered no evidence to prove that it had standing as an interested party. A & W did not request that the trial court take judicial notice of files in the main estate case or in any ancillary cases, nor does the record reflect that the trial court did so on its own motion. A & W called no witnesses and offered no sworn affidavits or certified documents to prove its allegations of standing. A & W thus failed to carry its burden of proof at the in limine hearing. Because Appellees timely challenged A & W’s standing, and A & W failed to carry its burden of proof at the in limine proceeding, the trial court should not have reached the merits of A & W’s allegations. However, because the trial court’s order is otherwise correct, we hold that the probate court did not err in finding that A & W lacked standing as a matter of law to sue to remove Appellees. We overrule A & W’s sole point on appeal and affirm the probate court’s order.
