85 S.W.2d 799 | Tex. App. | 1935
This is on motion to dismiss the appeal of Hodge, administrator, who appealed without giving bond, under article 2276, R. S.
Leonard Taylor died in Tennessee, leaving an estate both real and personal in Texas, as well as in Tennessee, and leaving a purported will, the probate of which in Tennessee was contested. Appellant Hodge was appointed administrator in Texas.
At the conclusion of a lengthy contest in Tennessee, the will was there admitted to probate. The executor there named applied in Texas for ancillary letters upon the personalty in Texas and asked that Hodge be required to deliver to him the personal estate as it existed at the death of Leonard Taylor. Admittedly, the will is insufficient under Texas statutes as to the realty in Texas, and no effort is made to *800 unhorse Hodge as to the Texas realty. The district court on appeal ordered Hodge to deliver said personalty without prejudice to his continuing as administrator in control of the realty.
Appellee contends that the appeal concerns Hodge personally and that he must give bond under article 3700, R. S.
There are no debts presented or to be presented to Hodge as administrator, but the distribution of the estate under the will is different from that to be made under descent and distribution. Hodge was regularly appointed administrator and became bound for the proper distribution of the estate under order of court. For ought that we know of this case, not being before us on the merits, this order requires him to deliver the estate to one who will in turn be automatically under obligation and promise to deliver it to those not entitled to it, and if Hodge, knowing this, takes no steps by appeal to protect those who are rightfully entitled to the estate and to whom he is bound by his oath and bond, he might be liable thereon to the rightful heirs by descent.
It is not merely a question of who shall administer the estate, pay the same debts, and deliver the property under the same rules appertaining thereto, to those heirs under the same law. If it were, then Wedgworth v. Roberson (Tex.Civ.App.)
In Guest v. Guest,
Our Supreme Court in Drew v. Jarvis,
Of course, the duty to withhold, just quoted, does not mean from another administrator who would be under the identical duty of the servicing administrator. Rather it means the duty to withhold from one who would divert it from the creditors and heirs. Arai v. Saenz (Tex.Civ.App.)
Whether the appeal must be dismissed rests in the last analysis on this question: Does the administrator owe a duty to the heirs to resist, to the last available remedy, the attempt of those who are not entitled to that estate as against the heirs? In Marshall v. Stubbs,
*801The motion to dismiss the appeal is overruled.