Crowson v. Wakeham

897 S.W.2d 779, 1995 WL 276982
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1995
Docket94-0670
StatusPublished
Cited by282 cases

This text of 897 S.W.2d 779 (Crowson v. Wakeham) 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
Crowson v. Wakeham, 897 S.W.2d 779, 1995 WL 276982 (Tex. 1995).

Opinion

GAMMAGE, Justice,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

in which all JUSTICES join.

This is an attempt to appeal a probate court ruling in a will contest and application to determine heirship proceeding. The trial court granted a partial summary judgment against Bonnie Crowson, who claimed to be the common law wife of the decedent, on the ground that she was not his common law wife. The trial court later severed the Crow-son summary judgment. Crowson followed the appellate timetable from the severance order, not the partial summary judgment order. The court of appeals determined that the appeal was untimely because the original partial summary judgment was an appealable order under the Probate Code. 1 We hold that the partial summary judgment order was interlocutory because of the contested heirship proceeding. Since the appeal from the severance order was timely, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and remand the cause to that court for further proceedings.

George A. Brisson, Jr., died on August 4, 1989. He had no children. Ann Blanks filed a will for probate which she alleged that Brisson executed. The will named Blanks as the sole beneficiary and independent executrix. Bonnie Crowson filed a contest to the application to probate the will. She alleged she was the common law wife of Brisson. She also filed a counterclaim to Blanks’ will proceedings seeking actual and exemplary damages for what she alleged was Blanks’ knowing and willful attempt to defraud her.

Jerry Edwin Wakeham and four other people filed an intervention alleging they were cousins and heirs of decedent. They also contested the will, but alleged they were the *781 true heirs. Carol Grey Honza filed an application to determine heirship and contest of the will. She alleged not only that the Blanks will was a fraud, but also that Brisson had left a will devising his property to his mother, who predeceased him. She alleged that since gifts to his mother lapsed, an heirship proceeding was necessary to determine the heirs under the intestate descent and distribution laws. Several other purported cousins or relatives also intervened in the heirship and will contest proceeding. All the intervenors contested Crowson’s allegation that she was Brisson’s common law spouse.

Blanks voluntarily nonsuited her application to probate her version of Brisson’s will. The controversy that was left involved the heirship determination, and specifically as to Crowson, whether she was the common law wife. The intervenors filed a motion for summary judgment, based on deemed admissions that Crowson was not the common law wife, which the trial court granted on March 30, 1993. Crowson filed a motion for reconsideration to this order, which was overruled. On June 1, 1993, at Wakeham’s request, the trial court signed an order severing the partial summary judgment from the other issues in the heirship proceeding. The stated reason was to make it final for appellate purposes. Crowson filed a motion for rehearing of the summary judgment. The court denied this motion. Following the appellate timetable for the June 1, 1993 order, Crowson filed an appeal that was timely if the severance set the date, but untimely if the March 30, 1993 partial summary judgment date controlled.

After receiving the transcript but before receiving any briefs, the court of appeals on its own motion sent a letter to all counsel requesting briefs on whether the March 30 order was a final order for purposes of appeal. Since there is no opinion and the letter comes closest to explaining the court of appeals’ reasons for dismissal, we reproduce it in the margin. 2 After the parties submitted briefs, the court of appeals issued an order dismissing the appeal for want of-jurisdiction because it was untimely.

The court of appeals correctly noted that the probate statutes create special rules for what is appealable in probate eases. As we have explained:

[I]n order to authorize an appeal in a probate matter, it is not necessary that the decision, order, decree, or judgment referred to therein be one which fully and finally disposes of the entire probate proceeding. However, it must be one which finally disposes of and is conclusive of the issue or controverted question for which that particular part of the proceeding is brought.... This statute doubtless has application only to such decisions, orders or judgments as at the end of a term would be held conclusive as adjudicative of some *782 controverted question or right, unless set aside by some proceeding appellate or re-visory in its nature. [Citations omitted.]

Kelly v. Barnhill, 144 Tex. 14, 188 S.W.2d 385, 386 (1945) (interpreting the predecessor to Tex.PROBATe Code § 5(f)). We subsequently wrote:

We interpret [former Probate Code § 28, recodified as § 5(e)] to mean that it has application only to such decisions, orders or judgments as at the end of a term would be held to have conclusively adjudicated some controverted question or right, unless set aside by some proper appellate or revisory procedure. [Citation omitted.] If the motion to dismiss the contest on the ground that contestants had failed to show an interest in the estate had been sustained, the order would have finally disposed of the controverted question involved, and would have been appealable. Since the order overruling respondents’ motion to dismiss failed to finally dispose of the controverted issue, it, therefore, amounts to no more than an interlocutory order, inclusive in its nature made in the progress of the trial, and, therefore not appealable.

Fisher v. Williams, 160 Tex. 342, 331 S.W.2d 210, 213-14 (1960). Both decisions leave much unanswered about how broad or narrow the “issue” must be to constitute an appealable portion of the proceeding. We have also, on occasion, stated the standard to be that all issues of law and fact between the parties involved have been resolved. See Stevens v. Douglass, 505 S.W.2d 532 (Tex.1974) (order denying application of second testatrix and reinstating first testatrix); see also Halbert v. Alford, 82 Tex. 297, 17 S.W. 595 (1891) (order rejecting the report or account of an estate administrator and directing him to file another report on a stated basis appealable); Lehman v. Gajewsky, 75 Tex. 566, 12 S.W. 1122 (1890) (order setting aside the discharge of a guardian is similar to grant of motion for new trial and not appeal-able).

The case cited by the court of appeals’ letter, Estate of Wright, 676 S.W.2d 161 (Tex. App. — Corpus Christi 1984, writ ref d n.r.e.), is frequently cited for its language that adjudication of “in other words, a substantial right” makes the probate order appealable. Wright, 676 S.W.2d at 163. In Wright, the substantial right adjudicated was the heir-ship of all the heirs.

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Bluebook (online)
897 S.W.2d 779, 1995 WL 276982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crowson-v-wakeham-tex-1995.