Beckham v. Beckham

202 S.W. 517, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 301
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 9, 1918
DocketNo. 8064.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 517 (Beckham v. Beckham) 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
Beckham v. Beckham, 202 S.W. 517, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 301 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinions

We adopt the statement of the case taken from the brief of appellants, as follows:

"This suit was brought and prosecuted by Helen Beckham Taylor, joined pro forma by her husband, Dave Taylor; J. J. Beckham, Jr., and Tracy Beckham, minors, by their guardian J. B. Franklin; and Euola Beckham and Guy Beckham, minors, by their guardian, Martha Cotton, joined by her husband, Pat Cotton — against John J. Beckham, Sr., individually and as independent executor of the will of Hodges Beckham Taylor, deceased for a construction of the will of said Hodges Beckham Taylor, for an accounting of his stewardship as such executor, and for possession and partition of the estate of testatrix, and, in a cause on appeal from the probate court to the district court which was consolidated with this cause upon trial, to settle the final account of John J. Beckham, Sr., as temporary guardian of plaintiffs. And upon a trial of the consolidated cause, before the court, without a jury, judgment was rendered in favor of Helen Beckham Taylor, granting her all the relief asked by her, and she is satisfied with the judgment, and does not appeal. Judgment was also rendered upon the account on appeal from the probate court and upon the accounting by appellee, as such executor, of which no complaint is made by any one, nor does any one complain of the judgment awarding Mrs. Taylor partition and immediate possession of her inheritance. But the court construed the will adversely to the contentions of the minor plaintiffs and rendered judgment against them, denying them the possession of all their estate and awarding same to appellee until they respectively reach their majorities, and of this portion of the judgment only complaint is made on this appeal. Motion for new trial was made by the minor plaintiffs and their guardians, and overruled and notice of appeal given. This case is brought here upon an agreed case on appeal, agreed to by all the parties and certified by the court.

"Conclusions of Facts.
"Hodges Beckham Taylor, testatrix, married Guy Beckham, who died September 1, 1914. She married Dave Taylor, June 13, 1915, and died December 15, 1915. She left a will written August 17, 1900, which will is as follows:

"`First. I give and bequeath to my children, Helen Beckham and J. J Beckham and to any other children that may hereafter be born to me, share and share a like, all my property of every kind of which I may die seized and possessed, real, personal, and mixed.

"`Second. I appoint J. J. Beckham, Sr., of said county and state, father of Guy Beckham, my husband, independent executor of this my last will and testament.

"`Third. I desire that no bond or other security shall be required of my said executor for the performance of his duties. I further direct and desire that no probate or other court shall have any authority or control over my estate or my said executor, except to appoint appraisers and to receive and have recorded an inventory and appraisement of the property belonging to my estate.

"`Fourth. I hereby authorize and empower my said executor to take possession of any and all property belonging to my estate; to sell and convey same; to invest any money that may come into his hands in such way as he shall deem proper; and to execute all the deeds of conveyance, acquittances and receipts necessary or proper to be executed in order to carry out the objects of this instrument.'

"Testatrix left surviving her five children, only, Helen Beckham, who married Dave Taylor, September 18, 1916, and is now his wife, J. J. Beckham, Jr., now married and 18 years old, Tracy Beckham, now 16 years old, Euola Beckham, now 5 years old, and Guy Beckham, now 3 years old. She left an estate valued at more than $90,000. Appellee, J. J. Beckham, Sr., qualified as independent executor and took charge of the estate immediately after the will was probated. Appellee, upon his own application, was appointed temporary guardian of the persons and estates of all of the plaintiffs, and asked to be made permanent guardian thereof, and was appointed permanent guardian of the estate of J. J. Beckham, Jr., and qualified as such, but was later removed and J. B. Franklin was appointed guardian of the estates of both J. J. Beckham, Jr., and Tracy Beckham, and is still such; and Martha Cotton was likewise appointed and qualified as guardian of the persons and estates of Euola Beckham and Guy *Page 518 Beckham, and is still such guardian. None of the minors have any estate except that involved in this suit. * * * At the time of making the will in question, testatrix lived in Limestone county, Tex., where she continued to live up to a few months prior to her death, when she married Dave Taylor, and moved to McCulloch county, Tex. At her death the five children were all with her in McCulloch county, Tex., and J. J. Beckham, Sr., who is the paternal grandfather of the minor appellants, filed the application to be appointed temporary guardian of said minors, including Helen Beckham, who is now Helen Beckham Taylor, in order that he might get possession of the persons of said minors and bring them to Limestone county, Tex., and get them out of the possession of their stepfather, Dave Taylor, who is now the husband of Helen Beckham Taylor; she having married her stepfather shortly after the death of her mother, and after the probate of the will in question."

The estate was indebted for about $12,000, which appellee has reduced some, leaving due at the date of trial about $9,000, which is secured by mortgages. Appellee has made some needed repairs on the property.

Opinion.
The first assignment of error complains of the action of the court, and is as follows:

"The court erred, to the prejudice of the plaintiffs, J. J. Beckham, Jr., Tracy Beckham, Euola Beckham, and Guy Beckham, in the construction of the will and in rendering judgment against them denying them an immediate partition of their joint property; and in rendering judgment for the defendant, J. J. Beckham, Sr., to the effect that he should have and hold, manage, invest, and control, said property until these plaintiffs attain their respective majorities, before they may have partition of said property."

The proposition thereunder is that:

"The will gives the property in fee simple and absolutely to appellants, without reservation or remainder in any one; it follows this provision with an attempt to create a trust in the same property in appellee for the use and benefit of appellants, but fails to make provision for delivery of any of the property or the revenues thereof, to appellants at any time, and is therefore incomplete as a trust and fails in that respect for want of any direction for delivery of the property to the beneficiaries; and the beneficiaries took title under the will and are entitled to immediate possession."

While the will is not quite as explicit as it might have been, yet we are of the opinion that it is so worded that its meaning is clear, and the intention of the testatrix when her surroundings and situation are considered is manifest. To arrive at the true intention of a party in making a will is one of the cardinal rules in construing a will and is to govern a court in its determination. In arriving at a just construction its language must be such that there appears therefrom what the maker desired to be done with the property mentioned therein. The will unmistakably names her children as beneficiaries, who are to receive her estate. It names appellee as her executor, who is a man of unquestioned character, in whom she had faith and confidence; he being the father of her first husband.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 517, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beckham-v-beckham-texapp-1918.