Beadle v. McCrabb

199 S.W. 355, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1079
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1917
DocketNo. 7319.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 199 S.W. 355 (Beadle v. McCrabb) 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
Beadle v. McCrabb, 199 S.W. 355, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1079 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinions

This was a proceeding instituted by C. D. Beadle, appellant, in the probate court of Harris county, Tex., to probate the will of Mamie Reynolds, deceased. The application for probate in the county court was contested in that court by Kitty McCrabb, and upon a hearing in that court the will was admitted to probate. Contestant appealed from the order probating said *Page 357 will to the district court. After the cause was transferred to the district court by appeal, appellees Mary Wilkens and her husband, by intervention, joined in the contest. Upon the trial in the district court judgment was rendered sustaining the contest, and refusing to probate the will. From such judgment C. D. Beadle appealed to this court.

The pleadings of the contestants, in substance, alleged: (1) That contestants were heirs at law of Mamie Reynolds, deceased, and Interested in her estate as such. (2) That the will of Mamie Reynolds now offered for probate should not be admitted to probate, and that C. D. Beadle, the beneficiary under the proposed will, should not be permitted to receive and get the benefit of the property which belonged to the said Mamie Reynolds at the time of her death; in this connection as grounds of contest, assigns the following reasons why said will should not be admitted to probate, to wit: (a) That the said Mamie Reynolds, deceased, at the time of the alleged making of said pretended will and at the time of the making of the alleged codicil thereto, was not of sound mind and disposing memory. (b) Because said will and codicil were executed, if at all, under an undue influence exercised by the beneficiary in said will, the said C. D. Beadle, who is named therein as executor without bond, and to whom said will undertakes to bequeath the property of the said Mamie Reynolds, deceased; that by reason of the relations existing between the testatrix (the said Mamie Reynolds) and the said C. D. Beadle at the time of and prior to the making of said will, and by reason of the undue influence exercised by the said C. D. Beadle at said time over the said testatrix, and by reason of the weakened condition of the mind of the testatrix at said time, the said testatrix was induced by the said influence and at the solicitation of the said C. D. Beadle to disinherit these contestants, and Beadle's influence was such that his will and desires, and not those of deceased, are expressed in the alleged will.

After the cause had been appealed to the district court proponent filed the following motion:

"Now in this cause comes the proponent and shows to the court that this is an attempted appeal by the contestant from an order and judgment of the probate court admitting the will of Mamie Reynolds, deceased, to probate, and this court has no jurisdiction of said appeal because the transcript from said county court was not filed in the district court at the next term after the appeal from the probate court was perfected as is required by law, and because said transcript was not so filed to the second term of the district court to which notice of appeal was given. Wherefore this proponent prays that this suit and the attempted appeal of the probate court to this court be dismissed."

This motion was refused by the court and thereupon appellant, C. D. Beadle, named as independent executor in the will of Mamie Reynolds, in replication to the contestants, pleaded by general demurrer, and by special exception to section (b) of appellee's contest, on the ground that the allegations of undue influence therein were but the conclusions of the pleader, and not the statement of any facts supporting such conclusions, and that the same were too vague, general, and indefinite to apprise the proponent of the nature or character of evidence to be offered in support thereof. He also denied the allegations of contestants relative to the unsound mind of Mamie Reynolds, and of the allegations of undue influence.

As there is nothing in the record to show that either the general demurrer or special exception, above mentioned, were presented to the court for its ruling thereon, or that any order was entered with reference thereto or disposing of the same, it is to be presumed that they were waived, and we shall therefore make no further mention of them in this opinion.

The cause was tried before a jury to whom the court submitted the following charge:

"This case is submitted to you upon special issues, and your verdict will be in form of an answer to one or both of such issues, according as you find the facts to be, and in keeping with the instructions herein given you.

"(1) You are charged that you are exclusive judges of the facts proven, the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony, the law you must receive from the court, as given you in this charge, and be guided thereby.

"(2) By the term `undue influence,' as that term is used in these charges, is meant such improper dominion, constraint, or control of one person exercised over the mind of another as to be sufficient to subvert and overthrow such other person's volition, or, in other words, to destroy his free agency, so that the party so influenced has been thereby induced to do that which he would not have done had he been left to act freely and voluntarily, the influence must be such that the act so done represents the result of the exercise of such dominion, constraint, or control, rather than the will and expression of the party doing the act.

"(3) The burden of proof is on the contestants to show by a preponderance of the testimony the affirmative of each of the following isues or questions submitted to you. Guided by the foregoing instructions and definitions, you will answer the following questions:

"Special issue No. 1. Did or did not C. D. Beadle exercise `undue influence,' as that term has been heretofore explained to you, over the mind of Mamie Reynolds as to the act of making the instrument herein offered for probate as the last will of Mamie Reynolds? (Answer this question `Yes' or `No.')

"In the event you should answer the foregoing question or issue in the negative, you need not answer the following question; but, in the event you should answer the foregoing question or issue in the affirmative, then you will proceed to answer the following question or issue:

"Special issue No. 2. Did such undue influence, exercised by the said C. D. Beadle over the said Mamie Reynolds to induce her to execute the instrument herein offered for probate, subvert and overthrow the will of said Mamie Reynolds and destroy her free agency and cause her to execute the instrument herein offered for probate as her last will, when, but for such influence, she would not have done so? *Page 358

"If this question is answered, the answer should be either `Yes,' or `No.' "

The verdict of the jury was as follows:

"We, the jury, find answers to the foregoing special issues as follows:

"To special issue No. 1, we answer, Yes.

"To special issue No. 2, we answer, Yes."

Upon this verdict the court rendered judgment refusing the probate of the will.

Appellant's first and second assignments are grouped and, in substance, are that the court erred in submitting the case to the jury and in not sustaining appellant's motion for an instructed verdict in his favor, because there was neither pleadings nor evidence to justify a submission of issues sought to be raised by the contestants. We think the allegations made by the contestants, in the absence of special exceptions being presented to the court, were sufficient to present the issues sought to be presented thereby.

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Bluebook (online)
199 S.W. 355, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beadle-v-mccrabb-texapp-1917.