Chadwick v. Bristow

208 S.W.2d 888, 146 Tex. 481, 1948 Tex. LEXIS 363
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1948
DocketNo. A-1387.
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 208 S.W.2d 888 (Chadwick v. Bristow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chadwick v. Bristow, 208 S.W.2d 888, 146 Tex. 481, 1948 Tex. LEXIS 363 (Tex. 1948).

Opinion

*483 Mr. Justice Simpson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

J. M. Chadwick and S. A. Chadwick, husband and wife, made a joint will in 1928, which contained these among other provisions:

“third: The said J. M. Chadwick and S. A. Chadwick do hereby agree that the joint will as herein made shall not be changed unless both parties agree to the same and the execution of another will, or the changing of any provision of this will by one party shall operate as a revocation of this will as to the other party. In view of this agreement we hereby will, devise, and bequeath unto the survivor of us all of the property real or person of which we may die seized or possessed, except that set forth in Item Second hereof [not involved in the suit], and the survivor of us in accepting under this will shall be bound to carry out the provisions hereinafter and heretofore set forth.

“To have and to hold such property and and estate unto the survivor of us, for and during the natural life of such survivor.

“This bequest to include all property whether separate estate or either of us or our community estate. After the death of such survivor it is our will and the following* described property shall pass to and vest in the following persons, to-wit:

“(a) to our daughter Ima D. Chadwick [describing 380 acres]. For her the said Ima D. Chadwick to have, hold, use and enjoy forever after the death of such survivor.

“(b) To E. M. Shoemake for and during his natural life [describing 325 acres]. For him the said E. M. Shoemake, to have, hold.use and enjoy for and during his natural life only, after the death of such survivor. At the death of said E. M. Shoemake this 325 acre tract shall revert to our estate and. vest according to the residuary clause herein.

“(c) To our son F. W. Chadwick [describing 272 acres]. For- *484 him the said F. W. Chadwick to have, hold, use and enjoy forever after the death of such survivor.

“(d) To our daughter Ora May Bristow [describing 328 acres]. For her the said Ora. May Bristow, to have hold use and enjoy forever, after the death of such survivor.

“fourth : All of the rest, residue and remainder of our estate, whether separate estate of either of us or our community estate, after the death of such survivor, we hereby will, devise and bequeath unto the said Irma D. Chadwick, Ora May Bristow, and F. W. Chadwick share and share alike, for them to have hold use and enjoy forever.”

J. M. Chadwick died in 1929. Mrs. Chadwick had the will probated, and qualified as executrix under it. She accepted the will’s terms and conditions, and took possession of and collected rents from all the property described in the will until her death in 1944, when the will was again admitted to probate. In the meantime, in 1937 her daughter Ora Mae, wife of Clark Bris-tow, had died childless and had left her property by will to her husband for life, with the remainder to her sister, Irma D.

After Mrs. Chadwick’s death, her son, F. W. Chadwick, filed this suit in trespass to try title against Clark Bristow and Ima D. Chadwick for the lands described in paragraph Third (b) and (d), seeking to have the will of his mother and father construed thus:

1. The remainder to Ora Mae did not become a vested eseate either as to her father’s or her mother’s interest in the community (all lands in suit were community property), but was contingent upon Ora Mae’s surviving her -mother. And since she did not survive, the legacy to her had lapsed.

2. In any event, only the father’s community interest should be held to vest upon his death, since the mother’s interest did not pass by the father’s will.

3. The will did not put his mother to an election.

The district court rendered judgment against Chadwick, which the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed by a divived court. 204 S. W. (2d) 65.

The will is unambiguous and its provisions complete. The *485 facts are stipulated. The will quite plainly stated that the survivor should get all the property (with certain exceptions not material here) belonging to both for the survivor’s life, with remainders to the named legatees. F. W. Chadwick insists that his siter Ora Mae would only have acquired those remainders devised to her had she survived her mother. He reasons that since Ora Mae had predeceased her mother, leaving no descendants, the legacy to her lapsed when she died, and there was no surviving interest in the elder Chadwicks’ estates for Ora Mae’s husband and, after him, her sister to take'. The common law rule that a gift by will lapses when the legatee predeceases the testator was changed by Article 8295, R. S., so as to preserve the legacy for the benefit of surviving children and descendants only, but not, as in this case, for the benefit of a surviving husband and sister. Bomar v. Carstairs, 124 Texas 492, 79 S. W. (2d) 841; Lightfoot v. Poindexter (Tex. Civ. App.) 199 S. W. 1152, error refused.

So it is obvious that if no estate vested in Ora Mae by virtue of the probating of her father’s will, there was nothing for her to devise. In support of his contention that this was so, Chadwick relies most confidently upon Bomar v. Carstairs, supra. There, one Nail for a valuable consideration promised his daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth Carstairs, that he would not disinherit her, and made a will which included her. She died without children or descendants, but left a surviving husband. Nail then changed his will and omitted the bequest of Mrs. Car-stairs. Subsequently, Nail died, and Carstairs sued for the interest in Nail’s estate which Carstairs’ wife would have taken if she had outlived her father and he had not changed his will. The case turned upon the point that all the daughter had was a valid promise from her father to include her in his will, and that “no present interest in the estate was conveyed- — -only the promise that she would not be disinherited.” 124 Texas 492, 501, 79 S. W. (2d) 841, 846.

The Carstairs case does not provide an answer to the problems posed by Chadwick. It was a case of construing a contract to make a will, — a promise by a father not to disinherit a daughter. Here, there is not presented any such a question, but the problem of construing a will itself, one which became fully operative and effectually binding upon the survivor who probated it.

The joint will, by the recitals in paragraph Third, shows clearly that it was executed in furtherance of an agreement *486 and was contractual in its nature. Upon the death of J. M. Chadwick and the probate of the will by his wife, accompanied by her admittedly accepting under it, the dispositions in the will become absolutely binding upon her. Moore v. Moore (Tex. Civ. App.) 198 S. W. 659, error refused; Sherman v. Goodson’s Heirs (Tex. Civ. App) 219 S. W. 839, error refused; Nye v. Bradford, 144 Texas 618, 193 S. W. (2d) 165, 169 A. L. R. 1.

The majority.of the Court of Civil Appeals correctly concluded that the principles stated in Wagnon v. Wagnon (Tex. Civ. App.) 16 S. W. (2d) 366, error refused, will govern here.

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Bluebook (online)
208 S.W.2d 888, 146 Tex. 481, 1948 Tex. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chadwick-v-bristow-tex-1948.