This is an appeal from an order appointing a temporary administrator of an estate over which an independent executor already had full power and authority. Few, if any, of the facts are disputed. Most of them are stated by stipulation which reveals that on January 19, 1948, an order was entered by the probate judge in cause number 1982 of the probate court of Wilbarger County admitting to probate the last will and testament of Jessie King, deceased, and appointing her son, appellant in this action, C. V. (Carl) King, independent executor of her estate in accordance with the terms of the will of the deceased; that thereafter Carl King, the principal beneficiary under the will, took the oath as such independent executor after which he caused to be filed an inventory and appraisement of the estate; that the judgment admitting the will to probate and appointing Carl King independent executor became final without an appeal therefrom and no proceedings had been filed in cause number 1982 endeavoring to remove Carl King as independent executor; that thereafter on April 13, 1949, a new and independent cause bearing number 2071 was filed in the probate court of Wilbarger Comity seeking to set aside the will of Jessie King, deceased, and the order admitting it to probate; that subsequent thereto on July 6, 1949, an order was entered -by the probate court in the said cause number 2071 denying the relief sought in the said cause from which order an appeal was perfected to the district court where it bears number 9365 and is still pending; that thereafter on September 27, 1949, appellees, Earl J. King, Mrs. Hettie Pitts, Miss Minnie King and R. D. King, who were likewise children of Jessie King, deceased, filed an application for the appointment of a temporary administrator of the estate of Jessie King, deceased, in cause number 2071 of the probate court of Wilbarger County; that on the same day at an ex parte hearing on the said application, without the issuance or service of citation or process on appellant, Carl King, independent executor of the estate in question, or any other person, and in the absence of appellant, Carl King, the probate court entered an order in cause number 2701 appointing Tom G. Davis temporary administrator of the estate of Jessie King, deceased, from which order Carl King perfected his appeal in due time to the district court where the cause bears number 9411. A hearing was held in the district court in the said cause that resulted in the entry of a judgment substantially the same as that entered in the probate court, from which judgment an appeal has been perfected by Carl King to this court.
*337 The record reveals that Tom G. Davis took the oath as temporary administrator and executed the required bond immediately after his appointment was made by the probate court. Thereafter appellant made his first appearance in this action in the district court where he challenged the jurisdiction of both the probate and district courts to appoint a temporary administrator of the estate in question for reasons hereinafter set out. On October 24, 1949, at a hearing had in the district court appellant’s pleas in abatement and exceptions were overruled by the district court and Tom G. Davis, a citizen and resident of Wilbarger County, was appointed temporary administrator of the estate in question with his bond fixed at $20,000, which bond had already been executed. Appraisers were likewise appointed as was previously done in the probate court in this action. As such temporary administrator Tom G. Davis was directed by the district court to take possession of the estate in question, control and manage it. Appellant superseded the judgment of the district court with a bond in the sum of $20,000 fixed by the said court and he is still therefore in possession of the estate, managing and controlling it subject to a final judgment in this action.
The stipulation made between the parties reflects a full copy of the will of the deceased. It bequeaths to each of the ap-pellees the sum of $500 and bequeaths to ’Carl King the remainder of the estate and names him as independent executor of the estate. The inventory and appraisement returned in cause number 1982 of the probate court wherein the will was admitted to probate reveals that the estate consisted of land of the approximate value of $14,-000; notes, securities, bonds, cash on deposit, livestock and other personal property of the approximate value of $126,000. •
Appellant predicates his appeal upon twelve points of error in which he assails the judgment of the district court as well as the probate court. Appellant charges, in effect, that the judgments of both the probate court and the district court attempting to appoint Tom G. Davis temporary administrator of the estate in question are void ab initio and are without authority for such action because appellant was already legally administering 'the said estate with full powers as independent executor and there cannot be two legal administrations of an estate pending at the same time. In resisting such charges appellees contend that the probate court had jurisdiction to appoint a temporary administrator to take charge of the estate in question and thus “suspend the custody and control of the estate from the appellant” during the pen-dency of their suit to set aside the order of the probate court admitting the will to probate.
Under the facts stipulated appellant had been appointed independent executor with full powers to have full control of the estate. He was so named by the testatrix and so appointed by order of the probate court in accordance with the terms of the will. There was no appeal from the order making such appointment and it soon became final. As the principal beneficiary under the will appellant qualified as independent executor, took charge of the estate, had control of it with full power to manage it for some fifteen months before appellees filed in the probate court a new and independent suit to set aside the order admitting the will to probate. Some three months thereafter appellees were denied the relief sought in the probate court but they perfected their appeal immediately to the district court. Their appeal was still pending when appellees sought the appointment of a temporary administrator without charging mismanagement of the estate by appellant further than to allege in an unverified pleading that he would' “probably dissipate” the estate in question after he had then already been administering the estate as the principal beneficiary under the terms of the will for some twenty months.
In support of his contention appellant cites the case of Yeager v. Bradley, Tex.Civ.App.,
“A county court has no authority to appoint an administrator, except upon a petition showing the necessity therefor. There cannot be two legal administrations of an estate pending at the same time. In order to give the county court jurisdiction to appoint appellant administrator of the estate of John Bradley, deceased, it must have been shown, among other things, that there was no administration pending; otherwise the necessity for such administration could not have been shown.
“As the record herein shows that Mrs. Coleman was the duly appointed, qualified, and acting trustee of the estate of John Bradley, deceased, and as we hold that she was thereby made independent executrix of said estate, the county court had no jurisdiction to appoint appellant administrator of said estate; such appointment was void ab initio.”
In approving the opinion the Supreme Court said: “We think the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is correct, whether the 'orders in the administration be voidable or void.”
It may be further observed that, although the powers of an independent executor are not as restricted as those of a duly appointed administrator, the estate is still subject to the jurisdiction of the probate court and the control of an estate by an independent executor is no less an administration than it would be if such person were acting under the full control of the court. Roy v. Whitaker,
The .record does not reflect any creditors in the case, at bar but at any rate no creditor nor any of the heirs have instituted any action to remove appellant as independent executor or have asked that he be required to execute a bond as they had a legal right to do if they thought he would “probably dissipate” the estate. But, assuming that appellees as heirs of the testatrix are seeking indirectly to “suspend the custody and control of the estate from the appellant” upoií a plea that he would “probably dissipate” the estate, such invokes another well established rule announced in Simkins Administration of Estates in Texas, Third Edition, Section 133, page 180, which is strongly supported by the case of Hocker v. Stevens, Tex.Civ.App.,
No such proceedings were had in the case at bar. Appellees here rely on the provisions of Article 3378, and cite in support thereof several cases, all of which we shall now discuss. Article 3378 provides that: “Pending a contest relative to the probate- of a will, or the granting óf -letters of administration, the county judge may appoint a temporary administrator, with such limited powers as the circumstances of the case may require; and such appointment may continue in force until the termination of the contest and the appointment of an executor or administrator with full powers.” This article was passed in 1876 and has been brought forward in the re-codification of the laws with “no material difference in the wording” according to a statement made by the Supreme Court in the case of Knipp v. Kutchinsky,
Appellees also cite and rely on the case of Huth v. Huth, Tex.Civ.App.,
It is obvious that the appointment of a temporary administrator was sustained in the Huth case becáuse no one was administering the estate while in the case at bar the estate of Jessie King, deceased, was already being administered by an executor with full power. There is another distinction between the two cases in that no appeal was perfected from’ the order appointing the temporary administrator in the Huth case as- was done in the instant case but an independent suit was there filed in the district court seeking to avoid interference by a writ of injunction against the temporary administrator, which constituted a collateral attack made upon the appointment of such an administrator.
Appellees cite the case of Ware v. Barfield, Tex.Civ.App.,
“It will be noted that appellants took no appeal directly from the order appointing appellee temporary administratrix, but filed a motion to vacate the same, claiming that her appointment was void, * * *.
“The question, therefore, presented is not one of the improper use of a power lodged by law with the court, but a lack of any power to act in the premises.”
The court further held in that case that: “An improper exercise of the power to appoint is not involved in this appeal.” In that case it will be observed that the total value of the estate was placed at $500,000 with debts of approximately $400,000 against the estate. Bequests were made under the will to various persons amounting to more than $100,000, among whom *341 were named the executors. The will then provided that the remainder of the estate be placed in trust with the independent executors for the benefit of the daughter who was the only child and heir at law of the testatrix. It was the said daughter, appellee in that case, who was appointed temporary administratrix. It is obvious that unless the estate there was carefully managed with prudence there would be nothing left as a remainder for the sole and only heir at law of the deceased after paying the debts and complying with the other provisions of the will, while no indebtedness was shown in the case at bar and no charge is made that appellees may lose their interest in the estate.
It is our opinion that distinctions are clearly made between the factual situation in the case at bar and those found in the cases cited by appellees. It is therefore obvious that the rules of law enunciated in the cases cited by appellees do not determine the controlling issue here presented. In each of the cases cited by appellees the appellate court was careful to point out the distinction between the case there being considered and a case of this nature.
Appellees challenge the service had in the original action to probate the will ■of Jessie King, deceased, on the grounds that the citation was directed to “the sheriff or any constable of Wilbarger County” and not “to any sheriff or any constable within •the State of Texas” as is required by law. In support of their challenge, they cite the case of Mitchell v. Rutter, Tex.Civ.App.,
Under the facts presented and the rules of law governing such, it is our opinion that both the district court and the probate court erred in appointing a temporary administrator of the estate of Jessie King, deceased, when the same was already being administered by an independent executor with full powers, nominated by the testatrix in her will and duly appointed by the probate court prior to any attempt to appoint a temporary administrator. Other assignments of error have been presented but in view of our holding already made, we do not deem it necessary to pass on them.
For the reasons stated the judgment of the district court is reversed and judgment is here rendered for appellant instructing the district court to direct the probate court to vacate its order appointing Tom G. Davis as temporary administrator of the estate of Jessie King, deceased, and to nullify all orders in connection with such appointment, without disturbing insofar as this action is concerned the appointment and powers of Carl King as independent executor of the said estate. Reversed and rendered. '
