Anderson v. Kennon

353 S.W.2d 241, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2462
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 1961
Docket10894
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 353 S.W.2d 241 (Anderson v. Kennon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Kennon, 353 S.W.2d 241, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2462 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinions

ARCHER, Chief Justice.

This suit was filed by appellants as re-maindermen and residuary legatees of the will of B. B. Simmonds, deceased, against Alice Beatrice Simmonds, surviving widow and a life tenant under his will, to set aside various conveyances and gifts made [243]*243by her out of the estate of B. B. Simmonds, deceased, to the other appellees herein and to recover from such life tenant and the other appellees the value of such conveyances and gifts in the total sum of $11,000,000.00, requesting the appointment of an auditor to adjust the accounts of the parties and seeking to impose a trust upon all of the property of the life tenant, Alice Beatrice Simmonds, and the grantee and donee appellees who were alleged to have been working in concert and collusion with her to cut off the interests of appellant remaindermen and residuary legatees under the will of B. B. Sim-monds, deceased.

During the pendency of this suit the life tenant, Alice Beatrice Simmonds, died and the First National Bank of Temple and the Temple National Bank were appointed Joint Administrators of the Estate of B. B. Simmonds, Deceased. The executors of the estate of the life tenant, Alice Beatrice Simmonds, have been made parties to this suit since her death and the suit has been maintained and prosecuted against her estate.

The appeal is from a judgment of the 146th Judicial District Court of Bell County, Texas, sustaining the appellees’ plea to the jurisdiction of the Court and ap-pellees’ Special Exceptions (a), (c), (m), and (n) to the appellants’ petition and granting appellees’ motion for a summary judgment, ordering and adjudging that the appellants take nothing by their suit and rendering and entering final judgment in favor of appellees.

It is admitted by all parties that the will in question vests in appellee, Alice Beatrice Simmonds, a life estate and vests in appellants a remainder in the estate of B. B. Simmonds, deceased.

The issues presented by this appeal concern the Trial Court’s judgment that a prior suit in the District Court of Nueces County resulted in a binding judgment not subject to collateral attack by appellants herein and which is res adjudicata upon all the matters stated therein and pertain to the Trial Court’s judgment sustaining appellees’ Special Exceptions to appellants’ petition on the same grounds, and the Trial Court’s judgment sustaining appellees’ Special Exception to appellants’ petition to the effect that the will of B. B. Simmonds, deceased, gave Alice Beatrice Simmonds as life tenant the full power of sale and distribution including the right to convey by sale, gift or otherwise for any consideration or no consideration, the property of B. B. Simmonds, deceased, and granting a summary judgment on the same ground.

The main issue involved in this appeal is the construction of the will of B. B. Simmonds, deceased, with reference to what power, if any, it gave appellee, Alice Beatrice Simmonds, as life tenant, to sell his property for an inadequate consideration or to give it away without receiving any consideration therefor.

This appeal is predicated on five points assigned as error of the Trial Court (1) in sustaining Special Exception (n) to appellants’ petition and (2) in granting ap-pellees’ motion for summary judgment, holding thereby in effect that the will of B. B. Simmonds bestowed on the life tenant the full power of sale and disposition of his estate and holding that the life tenant could make gifts of the estate of mineral interest to a corporation which in turn gave back to the life tenant %2nd of such mineral interest as her separate property; (3) in sustaining Special Exceptions (a) and (c) to appellants’ petition to the jurisdiction of the Trial Court, thereby holding in effect that the judgment in a prior suit in Nueces County construing the will of B. B. Simmonds is not subject to collateral attack and is res ad-judicata, because such judgment is void; (4) in sustaining Special Exception (m) to appellants’ petition, thereby holding in effect that the judgment gave the life tenant authority to execute mineral leases [244]*244under the “open mine doctrine” and (5) in granting appellees’ motion for summary-judgment when there were many genuine issues as to material facts involved in the case to be resolved.

B. B. Simmonds died in Bell County on May 21, 1933, leaving a will which was admitted to probate, in which his wife Alice Beatrice Simmonds was named independent executrix and she qualified as such.

Paragraph 3 of the will is as follows:

“I will, devise and bequeath all the property, real, personal and mixed, wherever situate, of which I may die seized and possessed or to which I may be entitled at the time of my demise unto my wife, Alice Beatrice Sim-monds, for and during her natural life only, all or any part of which property, however, she may from time to time, in any manner or to any extent that she may deem best, mortgage, sell, convey and dispose of, conveying fee simple title thereto', for such consideration and on such terms as she may desire, without limitation or restriction whatever, and upon her death the same shall go to and descend and vest in the following persons, to wit:” (naming them).

Trial was had to the Court and several special exceptions were sustained. Ap-pellees filed their motion for summary judgment alleging that there is no genuine or material issue oí fact to be determined in the suit and that the entire proceeding should be disposed of upon an issue of law with reference to the construction of the will, and that under the law and the will of B. B. Simmonds, his surviving wife was given full, complete and absolute power, free and independent of the Probate Court, and without restriction or limitations, to sell, convey and dispose of any property belonging to the estate of B. B. Simmonds, by sale, gift or otherwise and including but not limited to any mineral interest or mineral estate, upon such terms and for such consideration as she might desire, and that the defendants (appellees herein) are entitled to a summary judgment.

In answer to defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the plaintiffs filed an answer alleging that there are many genuine and material issues of fact to be determined in the case, and that the proceeding should not be disposed of upon an issue of law with reference to the construction of the will of B. B. Simmonds; that the provisions of the will herein quoted did not confer upon Mrs. Simmonds any authority to sell or dispose of the corpus of the estate, except for a full and adequate consideration paid to the estate, and did not authorize her to give away, transfer or dispose of any of the corpus of said estate including land, mineral interests and mineral estates, without the estate being paid therefor a full and adequate consideration.

It was further alleged that an issue of fact existed as to whether or not the contents of the petition filed by Alice Beatrice Simmonds v. H. G. Simmonds et al., in 1937 in the 117th District Court of Nueces County, Texas, to construe the will of B. B. Simmonds, were true and correct and as to representations made to the plaintiffs herein that the waivers would not affect their legal rights, or whether or not such representations induced the plaintiffs herein not to contest the suit, or if such representations were false, or if the waivers were legally executed, or if the proceeds of any leases or sales would belong to Mrs. Simmonds, or if Mrs.

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Related

Howell v. Alexander
165 S.E.2d 256 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1969)
Anderson v. Kennon
353 S.W.2d 241 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
353 S.W.2d 241, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-kennon-texapp-1961.