Cherye Altice v. Krystal Hernandez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 2023
Docket01-22-00019-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cherye Altice v. Krystal Hernandez (Cherye Altice v. Krystal Hernandez) 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
Cherye Altice v. Krystal Hernandez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Opinion issued November 8, 2022

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-22-00019-CV ——————————— CHERYE ALTICE, Appellant V. KRYSTLE HERNANDEZ, Appellee

On Appeal from the Probate Court No. 1 Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 474669

OPINION

Appellant, Cherye Altice, filed suit contending that the will of her deceased

mother, Theresa Altice, was procured by undue influence, was invalid, or both. After

jury disagreed and made findings in favor of Cherye’s niece, appellee Krystle

Hernandez, the trial court confirmed Krystle as the Independent Executrix of Theresa’s will and ordered that the will, which had previously been admitted to

probate, be probated. In four issues, Cherye contends that (1) there was legally and

factually insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that the will met the

requisite statutory formalities, (2) the self-proving affidavit attached to the will was

defective, (3) there was factually insufficient evidence for the jury to reject Cherye’s

undue-influence claims, and (4) there was legally and factually insufficient evidence

to support the jury’s finding that Cherye proffered a purported 1998 Holographic

Will in bad faith. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The Parties, the Properties, the Claims, and the Wills

Theresa Altice died on March 14, 2019, at the age of 81. Theresa had four

children, Andy, Randall, James, and Cherye, and several grandchildren, including

Krystle, Randall’s daughter. Theresa’s estate at death included a home on Scharpe

Street in Houston, a home on Kingston Street in Houston, and a home in Wimberley,

Texas,1 as well as stocks, cash accounts, and mineral interests.

1 The evidence shows that Cherye and Randall lived with their mother at the Scharpe Street home while they were growing up. When Krystle was young, she lived in a garage apartment behind the Scharpe Street home with Randall, while Theresa lived in the main house. At some point, Theresa inherited the Kingston Street house in River Oaks from her employer and lived there with her husband, Julio Madrigal. For a few months before her death, Theresa moved back into the Scharpe Street house with Cherye so that Cherye could help care for her. 2 Theresa left a will dated October 19, 2017, that named her granddaughter,

Krystle, as executor and sole beneficiary. Krystle filed an application to probate the

will, and, on April 9, 2019, the trial court admitted the will to probate [“the Admitted

Will”], ordered that Krystle be named as Independent Executrix, and authorized the

issuance of Letters Testamentary to her.

In December 2019, Cherye filed an Opposition and Contest to the Admitted

Will. In her live pleading before trial, Cherye claimed that the Admitted Will was

(1) a forgery or (2) procured by undue influence. Cherye also offered a holographic

will dated March 5, 1998, which she sought to probate as an alternative to the

Admitted Will.

In fact, there were three wills in this case: (1) a March 5, 1998 Holographic

Will [the “1998 Holographic will”], in which Theresa left “all my world[ly]

possessions to my Children Andy Martinez, Randall Martinez, James Martinez, and

Cherye Altice,” and specifically disinherited a prior husband, Bob Adams; (2) a

Holographic Will dated October14, 2017 (the “2017 Holographic Will”)—five days

before the Admitted Will—in which Theresa expressed her wish “to grant my

granddaughter Krystle Elizabeth Martinez my whole estate” and, to “specifically

disinherit Julio Perez Madrigal (my husband)”; and (3) the October 19, 2017

Admitted Will, in which Theresa again “specifically disinherit[ed] Julio Perez

Madrigal” and stated that “I give, devise and bequeath my entire estate, both real

3 and personal property, to my grand-daughter, Krystle Martinez.” The Admitted Will

bears both Theresa’s signature and those of two witnesses, Randall and Christian

Hernandez.2

The Trial

Cherye, as the contestant of a will that had been admitted to probate, was the

plaintiff in the case and had the burden of proof. See Williams v. Hollingsworth, 568

S.W.2d 130, 132 (Tex. 1978) (“[T]he burden of proof is upon the contestant in a suit

to set aside an order admitting a will to probate”). She called six witnesses, whose

testimony we summarize below.

Joe Garza—the Notary

Joe Garza testified that he was a notary in the Spring Branch area of Houston.

Randall and Theresa walked in his place of business on October 19, 2017, and asked

him to notarize a document. As is his practice, he made copies of their driver’s

licenses and the document he notarized. In his records, he had copies of pages 6 and

7 of the Admitted Will, which contained only the self-proving affidavit and the page

on which he affixed his notary seal. He did not recall seeing pages 1 through 5,

which included the will itself. He only notarized Randall’s and Theresa’s signatures,

but he did not notarize Christian’s signature, or he would have made a copy of

2 Christian Hernandez is Krystle’s husband, but they were not married in 2017, when he witnessed Theresa’s will. Christian and Krystle did not marry until 2020, well after Theresa’s death. 4 Christian’s driver’s license. Based on his records, he concluded that Christian did

not appear before him. Garza testified that he did not type Christian’s name on the

self-proving affidavit, but he did say that he had a typewriter in his office. He did

not recall if he typed Randall’s name on the self-proving affidavit.

Garza testified that, sometime later, a man came to his office and asked if he

could also sign the document, and Garza told the man that he could not alter a

document that he had already notarized. It was his understanding that the man who

came by his office was married to one of the parties.

Garza testified that he was comfortable that Theresa was “willingly signing

the document” because it was his practice to tell affiants that if they were not

comfortable signing, he would not notarize the subject document.

Christian Hernandez—the Witness

Christian testified that he was married to Krystle and that Theresa was

Krystle’s grandmother. But, at the time the will was executed, he and Krystle were

not yet married; they did not marry until 2020. On October 19, 2017, Randall and

Theresa came by his house and told him that they needed his signature. He

recognized the Admitted Will as the document he saw. Christian did not see Theresa

sign the Admitted Will, but, when asked how he was sure she signed it, he responded,

“By her words.” “By her words, you know. They just said they needed my signature

and, you know, that they signed and they just needed my signature.” Christian

5 testified that he signed the document in his home; he was not at the notary’s office

and he did not sign either the Admitted Will’s attestation clause or the self-proving

affidavit in Garza’s presence. It was his recollection that when he signed, both his

and Randall’s typed names were already on the document and he did not know who

added the names. When Randall and Theresa asked him to sign, “[Christian] pretty

much signed it, scanned through it and signed it.” He identified his signature and

writing on the Admitted Will. He was sure that the Admitted Will was the document

that he signed.

Christian admitted that sometime later, he went to Garza’s office to see if the

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