Autrey v. Stubenrauch

133 S.W. 531, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 247, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 82
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 7, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 531 (Autrey v. Stubenrauch) 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
Autrey v. Stubenrauch, 133 S.W. 531, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 247, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 82 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

This suit was instituted by E. L. Autrey and his wife, Hettie Autrey, against her brothers, Max Stubenrauch and Lorenz Stubenrauch, and her mother, Selma Stubenrauch, to obtain a construction of the last will and testament of M. Stubenrauch, the deceased father of Hettie Autrey and her brothers, and husband of Selma Stubenrauch, to remove Max Stubenrauch and Selma Stubenrauch as executor and executrix of the will and have others appointed in their stead; that certain deeds made by the executor and executrix to Max and Lorenz Stubenrauch be annulled and that the executor and executrix be held accountable for the revenues of the estate wantonly and recklessly squandered by them, and that plaintiffs be protected in their rights in the property and revenues. A temporary writ of injunction to restrain Max and Selma Stubenrauch from collecting rents was applied for and obtained.

The petition for the writ of injunction and the amended petition setting up the cause of action are very voluminous, occupying over twenty typewritten pages, but the gist of the pleadings is that plaintiffs seek to have the will of M. Stubenrauch construed to mean that he disposed of all the community estate of himself and wife, and gave to her only a sufficient sum out of the revenues of the estate for her maintenance and support, which it is alleged would not amount to more than $2500 or $3000 a year, and that by qualifying as executrix she had accepted under the will and had relinquished her half of an estate valued at $120,000, and that all of the estate and the revenues, rents and income therefrom were held by defendants Max and Selma Stubenrauch in trust for the four children named as devisees. Plaintiffs alleged that the will had been duly probated in 1894, and therein it had been provided that the estate should not be partitioned until the youngest son, Lorenz, had reached the age of twenty-one, and that he had long since reached that age. It was also alleged that Mrs. Selma Stubenrauch had no interest in the corpus or body of the estate, but notwithstanding she had no such interest, she had by deed sought to convey what she described as one-half of her community interest in and to certain lots in Houston to Max Stubenrauch, the consideration being the interest of Max in her homestead; that on the same date for a like consideration she had conveyed her remaining interest in said lots to Lorenz Stubenrauch.

• The court after hearing the evidence, rendered a decree that the will had no reference to anything but the one-half interest of the testator in the community property, and that a life estate in that interest was bequeathed to Selma Stubenrauch as well as the rents and revenues arising therefrom, with power to dispose of the same, no trust therein *250 being created in favor of the children during her lifetime; that the executor and executrix had complied with the terms of the will, and the temporary injunction was dissolved and the executor and executrix placed in charge of the property.

We adopt the findings of fact of the trial judge, which in substance state that Max Stubenrauch, deceased, and his wife were married in Hew Orleans in 1861, neither having any property, and that they removed to Houston, Texas, in 1866, where they acquired all their prop-erty. The husband died in Houston on or about April 6, 1894, leaving surviving him his wife, Selma Stubenrauch, and four children, the offspring of his marriage with his said wife, namely, Max Stubenrauch, then aged about 26 years, Mrs. Hettie Autrey, wife of Robert L. Autrey, then aged 28 years, and Lorenz and Daisy Julia, minors, his estate at the time of his death being inventoried at about $121,000, but at time of the trial of the probable value of $425,000. The gross income of Max Stubenrauch at time of his death was $9,000 or $10,000 a year, the present gross income of the estate being approximately $18,000 per annum. The elder Stubenrauc-hs obtained their property by hard labor and the practice of frugality and economy, the elder Max being a shoemaker, in which occupation his wife, when household duties were performed, would assist him. The wife, while living much better than in bygone years, spent not more than $200 or $300 a month.

When Max Stubenrauch, senior, died in 1894, he left the following will, omitting the formal opening and closing of the same:

“(2nd) It is my wish and desire that my estate be not partitioned or divided during the life of my beloved wife, Selma Stubenrauch, nor until my youngest son has become twenty-one years of age.

“(3d) I will and bequeath to my beloved wife the rents and revenues of my estate during her life, for her support -and maintenance and for the education and support of my unmarried children.

“(4th) Subject to the life estate in favor of my wife, I will and bequeath all of my property, real, personal and mixed, to my beloved children, share and share alike, to wit: My son Max, my daughter Mrs. Hettie Autrey, my daughter Daisy Julia, and my son Lorenz.

“(5th) I name and appoint my beloved wife, Selma, and my beloved son Max, independent executors of my will and estate, without bond, and desire that the court take no jurisdiction of my estate further than to, probate my will. I wish my executors to keep my estate in good repair,' as I have done, and should either of my executors die, or be unable or decline to act as such, or should either die or decline or be unable to act after qualifying, then the survivor, or the one so acting, shall have all the powers conferred on both.

“(6th) Should my beloved wife die before my youngest child becomes of age, then it is my will that my son Max should act as surviving executor without bond, and independent of the court, and from the rents and revenues shall support my minor children, and upon the youngest becoming of legal age he shall partition my estate equally among my four children.”

*251 The will was duly probated on May 14, 1894, and the estate has since been administered by the executor and executrix according to the terms of the will and in compliance therewith, paying all taxes and insurance and making the necessary repairs. Daisy Julia Stubenrauch conveyed her interest in the estate to others, and E. L. Autrey has acquired that interest. Mrs. Selma Stubenrauch in 1908 conveyed to '“her sons, Max and Lorenz, her half interest in the community real estate, except her homestead, reserving the rents and revenues arising from said property during her life, and Max Stubenrauch and Lorenz Stubenrauch have mortgaged their interest in the property, each claiming a three-eighths interest. Fifty shares in the Commercial National Bank valued at $6,000 were, by agreement, divided among the heirs of the testator.

The prime and controlling rule to be observed and followed in the construction of a will is to endeavor by a study of each and every part of it to ascertain the intention and desire of the testator, and when that is discovered, it should be put into execution. That rule will be kept in view in this case.

In the second clause of the will in unmistakable terms and in the plainest language the testator has expressed the desire that his estate should riot be partitioned or divided during the life of his wife, Selma Stubenrauch.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 531, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 247, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/autrey-v-stubenrauch-texapp-1910.