First Tennessee Bank National Assocation v. Harold B. Stone, Dependent of the Estate of Charles A. Ogle

First Tennessee Bank v. Stone

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,

AT AUSTIN





NO. 3-91-450-CV



FIRST TENNESSEE BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION,

APPELLANT



vs.





HAROLD B. STONE, DEPENDENT EXECUTOR

OF THE ESTATE OF CHARLES A. OGLE, DECEASED,

APPELLEE









FROM THE PROBATE COURT NO. 1 OF TRAVIS COUNTY

NO. 50,136, HONORABLE GUY HERMAN, JUDGE



First Tennessee Bank National Association (the "Bank") appeals from a probate court order that attempted to give full faith and credit to a Tennessee court judgment but at the same time awarded the estate a credit for those attorney's fees contained in the judgment which the probate court determined were not properly chargeable against the estate. Appellee Harold B. Stone, dependent executor of the estate of Charles A. Ogle (the "Executor"), brings cross points asserting that the probate court erred in classifying the judgment as a claim against decedent's estate. We agree with the Bank and will modify the probate court order to the extent it grants a credit for attorney's fees.





BACKGROUND

This is a companion case to Stone v. First Tennessee Bank National Ass'n, No. 3-91-419-CV (Tex. App.--Austin Sept. 16, 1992, n.w.h.) (not designated for publication). Although these two cases do not depend on each other, they arise out of the same estate administration and are based on the same set of business transactions. Moreover, the claims, both evidenced by judgments from the Chancery Court of Tennessee, were presented in the same hearing. A background of the business transactions is helpful to understand the claim at issue here.

This claim against the estate arises out of two notes made by the Bank to Athletic Goods Associates, Inc. (AGA). The notes were made on November 8, 1982, and April 1, 1983, for $100,000 and $200,000 respectively. Both notes were variable-interest-rate instruments and were secured by various personal guaranties of limited and unlimited amounts. Athletic Industries International, Inc. (AII) eventually bought out AGA. On September 27, 1983, the decedent, Charles Ogle, and four others, executed an unlimited guaranty agreement for all debts of AII. The Bank claimed that AGA and AII were run as a single entity and, therefore, the September 27, 1983, agreement also guaranteed AGA's debts.

The November 1982 AGA note matured on August 12, 1985, and the April 1983 AGA note matured on August 26, 1985. Neither loan was paid in full on maturity. The Bank was still seeking repayment when Charles Ogle died in December 1985. The Bank made demand on the Executor for the remainder due on the notes along with interest and attorney's fees. The Bank's AGA claim was filed on September 12, 1986, and the Executor rejected that claim on September 16, 1986. On September 30, 1986, the Bank sued the Executor in Tennessee to prove the rejected claim. That suit was eventually joined with a pre-existing suit that had been filed by the Bank against the other guarantors of the AGA notes for recovery of the balance due on the AGA notes and other notes guaranteed by those individuals.

The Tennessee court originally found that the decedent's guaranty of all AII debts did not include the AGA notes. That decision was reversed on appeal and a final judgment (the "AGA judgment") was issued which included a finding that the Executor was liable to the Bank for the amount of $368,336.33 and post-judgment interest. The AGA judgment does not allocate the total judgment amount among principal, interest, and attorney's fees. The AGA judgment also found AGA liable to the Bank in the same amount. However, the judgment did find the Executor eligible for a credit against the award of amounts already paid on the AGA notes by two of the other guarantors, in the total amount of $218,594.90.

The Bank filed a certified copy of the AGA judgment with the probate court in Texas where the estate was being administered. After a hearing, the probate court found the AGA judgment valid, final, and binding on the Executor, and granted it full faith and credit. The probate court then ordered the claim classified as a class-five claim and ordered that the current value of the AGA judgment be paid. (1) According to the probate court, the AGA judgment's value at the time of its order was $398,336.33 plus post-judgment interest of $92,334.18, minus the amount allowed to be credited by the judgment $218,594.90 and minus an additional credit of $39,464.61. Nothing in the order provides an explanation for this additional credit. The order then noted that the Executor had already paid $159,358.02 against the AGA judgment, which amount was credited to the amount due on the claim. The probate court ordered payment of the remainder of the judgment, amounting to $43,252.98 according to its calculations.





DISCUSSION

Bank's Point of Error

In a single point of error, the Bank complains of that portion of the probate court's order reducing the AGA judgment by an additional amount of $39,464.61. The Bank asserts that there is no evidence or, alternatively, insufficient evidence to support the additional credit. Although the probate court's order does not explain the additional credit, the record and the Executor, in argument on appeal, attribute that credt to an attempt to segregate out attorney's fees incurred by the Bank in establishing, in the Tennessee court, its case against parties other than the Executor. The Executor asserts that the evidence at the hearing was sufficient to support a credit for this purpose because the fees used to establish a case against the other guarantors were not incurred in the establishment of the claim rejected by the Executor.

In reviewing a no-evidence point of error, we consider only the evidence and inferences from the evidence tending to support the finding of fact and disregard all inferences to the contrary. Alm v. Aluminum Co. of Am., 717 S.W.2d 588, 593 (Tex. 1986). We may sustain a no-evidence point of error if the trial court were barred by rules of law from considering the evidence offered. Cecil v. Smith, 804 S.W.2d 509, 510 n.2 (Tex. 1991).

In this case, the probate court was barred by law from relitigating the value of the judgment found by the Tennessee court. Paxton v. Meyer, 2 S.W. 817 (Tex. 1886); cf. Blair v. State, 640 S.W.2d 867, 869 (Tex. 1982). The Texas Probate Code requires the court to classify a judgment filed with it and "[handle] as if originally allowed and approved in due course of administration." Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 313 (West 1980). Thus, an adjudicated claim presented to the probate court must be treated as if already approved as well as allowed, and the probate court supervises payment of the judgment by the classification process. See Farmers' Nat'l Bank v. Crumley, 204 S.W. 358 (Tex. Civ. App.--Dallas 1918, no writ).

By hearing evidence on whether the AGA judgment award against the Executor included attorney's fees not incurred to establish a rejected claim, the probate court relitigated the value of that judgment. Essentially the probate court, despite finding the judgment valid and final, attempted to give it full faith but only partial credit. Since the court was barred from relitigating this issue, it should not have heard evidence on that point and this Court will disregard all such evidence. Accordingly, we find no evidence to support the additional credit of $39,464.61 against the AGA judgment award. Finding no evidence to support this part of the probate court's order, we need not address the factual sufficiency of the evidence and will sustain the Bank's single point of error.





Executor's Cross-Points of Error

The Executor brings five points of error on cross-appeal contending that the probate court erred in granting the application to classify the amended AGA claim. Cross-points one through four contend that the probate court erred because the claim sued upon in Tennessee was not the claim presented and rejected by the Executor. Cross-point five asserts that the evidence linking the AGA judgment to the AGA claim the Executor rejected was legally and factually insufficient.





1.  Proper Presentment

Points of error one through four present the argument that the claim established by litigation must be for the same exact amount as the claim the executor rejected to meet the presentment requirement of the Texas Probate Code. See Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 314 (West 1980) ("No claim shall be rendered in favor of a claimant upon any claim for money which has not been legally presented to the representative of an estate or ward, and rejected by him or by the court, in whole or in part."). In this case, the petition in the Tennessee court reflected a change in the variable interest rate charged on the notes and an increase in attorney's fees due to the continuing litigation. The Executor asserts that this change created a new claim which had to be presented to and rejected by him before it could be established by suit. To support his contentions, the Executor cites Ramsay v. Rouse, 68 S.W.2d 317 (Tex. Civ. App.--Texarkana 1934, writ ref'd).

This same issue was raised in the previously mentioned companion case, in reliance on the same authority. As we discussed in the companion case, because the petition in the Tennessee court alleged presentment, and that allegation was supported in the record, the issue should have been addressed in that court and on direct appeal from its judgment, not in the Texas probate court. See Podgoursky v. Frost, 394 S.W.2d 185, 189-90 (Tex. Civ. App.--San Antonio 1965, writ ref'd n.r.e.) (stating that allegations and statements of fact in the petition that claim was presented satisfy jurisdictional requirement). See also White v. White, 179 S.W.2d 503, 506 (Tex. 1944) (holding as impermissible a collateral attack to challenge the jurisdiction of a court issuing a binding judgment which is regular on its face and on the record). These points of error are an impermissible collateral attack on a judgment regular on its face.

Further, as we discussed in a footnote in that companion case, Ramsay does not support the Executor's broad proposition. In Ramsay the trial court rendered judgment on a claim different in basis as well as in amount from the claim presented to the administrator. The claimant had presented a claim based on a contract, but the trial court rendered judgment based on a historic employment relationship that the claimant had not presented to the administrator. Ramsay, 68 S.W.2d at 319-20. The appeals court found that the employment relationship was a new claim requiring separate presentment. Id. We conclude in this case, as we did in Stone v. First Tennessee Bank, No. 3-91-419-CV, that the differences in the petition in Tennessee and the previously rejected claim were due to the passage of time and did not create a new or alternate claim. See Thomas v. State Life Ins. Co., 123 S.W.2d 385, 387 (Tex. Civ. App.--Dallas 1938, no writ).

Cross-points of error one through four are overruled.





2.  Sufficiency of the Evidence

The Executor's cross-point of error five asserts that the evidence linking the AGA judgment to the AGA claim the Executor originally rejected is legally and factually insufficient. As we stated in discussing the Bank's single point of error, the standard for reviewing a legally-insufficient evidence or no-evidence point of error is clear. We consider only the evidence and inferences tending to support the finding by the trier of fact and disregard all evidence to the contrary. Alm, 717 S.W.2d at 593. In considering a factual insufficiency of the evidence point, we must weigh all the evidence and will set aside the judgment only if it is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence so as to be clearly wrong and unjust. Cain v. Bain, 709 S.W.2d 175, 176 (Tex. 1986).

In examining the record, we note that the complaint filed in the Tennessee court incorporated by reference the AGA notes comprising the rejected AGA claim. This is the same complaint which was consolidated with the previously existing suit against the other guarantors. The only claim asserted against the Executor in either of those suits, and the only claim upon which a judgment could be rendered against the Executor, was the claim based on those notes. The AGA notes presented and rejected by the Executor are the only notes involved in the consolidated lawsuit which were signed by AGA. The award against the Executor is in the same amount as the award against AGA. This Court holds that the foregoing evidence constitutes some evidence that the notes referred to in the AGA judgment were the AGA notes supporting the claim rejected by the Executor.

We next look at the evidence contrary to the probate court's finding. There is no direct evidence that the judgment against the Executor in the consolidated suit is not based on the AGA notes that formed the basis of the claim rejected by the Executor. The Executor's argument instead relies on the failure of the AGA judgment to specifically describe the notes beyond a reference to "the notes on which the complaint is based." The Executor argues that there is evidence that the suit against the other guarantors included notes besides the AGA notes and on this basis the probate court could not find that the award in the judgment against the Executor was related to the rejected claim.

As we stated above, the only notes which were incorporated in the complaint against the Executor, and the only notes upon which the Executor's liability in that suit could have been based, were the AGA notes. We hold that the probate court's finding that the AGA judgment's award against the Executor was for the same claim previously rejected is not against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. Cross-point of error five is overruled.





CONCLUSION

Because we hold that there was no evidence to support the additional credit of $39,464.41 allowed against the AGA judgment award by the probate court, we modify that portion of the probate court's order that allows the executor an additional credit of $39,464.41 and order that such credit be deleted. As so modified, the order of the probate court is affirmed.





Mack Kidd, Justice

[Before Justices Powers, Jones and Kidd]

Modified and, as Modified, Affirmed

Filed: September 16, 1992

[Do Not Publish]

1.   Probate Code section 322 sets out guidelines for classifying claims. A claim's class determines its priority of payment. Tex. Prob. Code Ann. § 322 (West 1980). Paying claims out of order of their classification could subject the executor to liability if the estate's assets are insufficient to pay all approved claimants and a higher class claim is not paid because of payment of a lesser claim. It is the sole responsibility of the probate court in a dependant administration to determine a claim's classification. See M. K. Woodward & Ernest E. Smith III, Probate and Decedents' Estates, 18 Texas Practice § 940 (1971) (and cases cited therein).