Cole v. Houston

152 S.W.2d 522, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 569
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1941
DocketNo. 14243
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 S.W.2d 522 (Cole v. Houston) 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
Cole v. Houston, 152 S.W.2d 522, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 569 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

F. T. Cole and Annie M. Cole, husband and wife, were childless, and on March 16, 1912, undertook to adopt an infant girl that had been placed in the Cole home by Texas Children’s Home and Aid Society.

[523]*523The instrument, properly executed by the Coles and filed for record, as was required, reads as follows: “That we F. T. Cole and wife Annie M. Cole of the County and State aforesaid, hereby adopt a baby girl named ‘Geraldine’ an orphan child now in my home, placed there by the Texas Children’s Home and Aid Society. Said child to hereafter be known as Margaret Frances Cole. We adopt said child under the laws of the State of Texas, and pledge ourselves to be to said child kind and affectionate parents and to accord to it all the opportunities in life that our means and standing entitle it to. We pledge ourselves to be to said child the same parents as if it was our child by nature, and to see that its intellectual and moral training is well cared for. The said child shall share our property as provided by the laws of Texas. Witness our hands this 16th day of March, 1912.”

After the execution of the above quoted instrument, the child lived with the Coles until she was practically grown and married.

On July 12, 1935, Annie Cole purported to execute a will with the following provisions : “I give, bequeath and will to my married daughter-in-law, Francis Piant, the sum of Five Dollars only, as I have specially hereinbefore provided her and given her liberally for her in other ways.”

It is evident that this paragraph of the will refers to the adopted daughter Frances, and it is so understood by all concerned.

There is nothing in the will that deals with or concerns Frances except the quoted paragraph.

The will next purports to give the testatrix’s husband a life estate in all of her property, with express provision that the surviving husband cannot sell or in any manner incumber such devised estate, with remainder in fee simple to the testatrix’s two nephews, Seibert and Willie Houston, who are nominated as independent executors, but who are expressly denied the right to dispose of or incumber the estate until after the death of the surviving husband.

Mrs. Cole died on or about June 10, 1940, and Seibert Houston and Willie Houston produced the above purported will and offered same for probate. The surviving husband, F. T. Cole, objected to the probate of such purported will by pleading specifically the adoption deed, by denying that Annie Cole had any separate estate, by alleging mental incapacity to make such will and alleging undue influence, and asserting Cole’s right to administer upon the property as the community property of himself and his deceased wife.

The surviving adopted daughter contested the probate of the purported will, particularly upon the theory that the deed of adoption estops Annie Cole from depriving her of her lawful share of the estate of Annie Cole, by the execution of such purported will.

The contestant insists that the language used in the deed of adoption constitutes in law a contract whereby Mrs. Cole could not defeat her right of inheritance through the instrumentality of a will.

The will was admitted to probate by the County Court of Tarrant County, the contests denied, the Houstons were appointed independent executors and appraisers were appointed by the court.

From this order an appeal was taken to the 48th District Court of Tarrant County, and the contest was heard by the court without the assistance of a jury.

The judgment of the district court finds the will to be a valid instrument and admits same to probate; such judgment then finds that the real estate described in the judgment is “community property” and that $4,000 of the separate estate of Annie Cole went into such property and improvements, and the judgment next finds that 4000/9250 of the said real estate and improvements is the separate estate of Annie M. Cole, and that 5250/9250 oí same is the “community estate” of the said parties.

The judgment next finds that the monies invested in the name of Annie M. Cole in the post office at Fort Worth, to-wit, $2,075, is likewise “community property” of the parties.

The judgment next directs the executors to collect the said $2,075, then to pay over one-half thereof to F. T. Cole, and directs the Houstons to take the other one-half and out of such sum to pay the funeral expenses and the cost of the grave marker over her grave' — all amounting to $686— and directing them to then deliver the balance of such sum to F. T. Cole, after the payment of the costs of administration of the estate, for his use as a portion of his life estate.

[524]*524The judgment finds that the deed of adoption only served to make Frances an adopted child, and that such instrument does not estop Annie Cole from disposing of her properties by the will. The two contestants have appealed.

There is nothing in the pleadings or the evidence to disclose that the adopted daughter is now suffering under the disabilities of coverture, and since no such issue was raised by the pleadings or the proof, we are not called upon to discuss the matter of whether or not all necessary parties were before the court.

When the Coles solemnly executed the deed of adoption, they did so under the Statute enacted in 1850, Rev.St.1879, art. 1, Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 42, which simply provided: “Any person wishing to adopt another as his legal heir shall file in the office of the county clerk of the county in which he resides a written statement signed by him and duly authenticated or acknowledged as deeds are required to be, reciting in substance that he adopts the person named therein as his legal heir, and the same shall be admitted to record in said office.”

Our Supreme Court, in Cheney v. Coffey, 131 Tex. 212, 113 S.W.2d 162, 114 S.W.2d 533, has held that a contract to adopt or to take a child as an heir, although made with a third person for the benefit of the child, is enforceable by the child.

We believe it to be our duty to construe the language used by the adopters liberally and in favor of the adopted child. When, the deed of adoption recited that: “We adopt said child under the laws of the State of Texas, and pledge ourselves to be to said child kind and affectionate parents and to accord to it all of the opportunities in life that our means and standing entitle it to. We pledge ourselves to be to said child the same parents as if it was our child by nature, and to see that its intellectual and moral training is well cared for”, and having preceded these words and pledges by saying, “That we * * * ’ hereby adopt a baby girl named ‘Geraldine’ an orphan child now in my home, placed there by the Texas Children’s Home and Aid Society”, such language was all that was necessary to constitute a legal adoption and to make the child an heir at law.

There was then no necessity for the last separate and distinct sentence that was used by the adopters, and the language in such portion of the deed of adoption must be given some effect.

The words, “The said child shall share our property as provided by the laws of Texas”, in our opinion, carry a greater meaning than the mere making of the child an heir at law.

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Related

Houston v. Cole
162 S.W.2d 404 (Texas Supreme Court, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W.2d 522, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-houston-texapp-1941.