Drewry v. Armstrong

223 S.W. 281, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 737
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 1920
DocketNo. 7838.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 223 S.W. 281 (Drewry v. Armstrong) 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
Drewry v. Armstrong, 223 S.W. 281, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 737 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This appeal is from a judgment probating the last will and testament of Mollie R. Maegill Rosenberg, deceased. The grounds upon which the probate of the will was contested were the want of testamentary capacity in the testatrix and the exercise of undue influence upon the mind of the testatrix by Charles P. Maegill and Nellie A. Maegill, who were named beneficiaries in the will. The contestant, Mrs. Alice Maegill Drewry, is a sister and heir at' law of the deceased and also one of the beneficiaries named in the will.

The cause was tried with a jury in the court below, but the only issue submitted to the jury by the court was whether the tes *282 tatrix was of sound and disposing mind at tlie time slie executed tlie will. This question was answered by the jury in the affirmative, and upon this verdict judgment was rendered admitting the will to probate. Contestant requested the trial court to also submit to the jury the issue of undue influence, and the sole question presented by this appeal is whether the evidence raised the issue of undue influence as alleged by contestant.-

Mrs. Rosenberg died on May 29,1917, fronr a disease of the arteries from which she had been suffering for many months. She executed her will on April 9, 1917. The will was written by Mr. W. T. Armstrong in accordance with instructions given him by Mrs. Rosenberg. They were engaged for several days in preparing the- will, and there is no evidence that during the time the will was being prepared, or prior thereto, any suggestion was made as to any of the terms of tlie will by either Charles P. Macgill or Miss Nellie Macgill, nor is there any evidence tending to show that either of them knew what were the intentions or desires of the testatrix in regard to the disposition of her estate.

The legacies bequeathed by the will amounted to approximately ,$250,000, the number of persons named as beneficiaries were 47, 37 of whom were near relatives of Mrs. Rosenberg, sisters, sisters-in-law, brothers, -nephews* nieces, great-nephews, and great-nieces. The will gives to each of two sisters, Mrs. Eliza R. Bridges and contestant, and a brother, James Macgill, and sister-in-law, Louisa T. Macgill, $12,000; nieces and nephews are given sums ranging from $2,000 to $6,500, except Charles P. Macgill and Nellie A. Macgill, each of whom are given $60,000. Two sisters-in-law are given $5,000 each. The grandnieces and nephews are given sums ranging from $250 to $1,500. Other bequests to godchildren and friends range in amounts from $500 to $3,000. The estimated value of the estate was $300,000. The residue of the estate was bequeathed to Louisa T. Macgill, a sister-in-law of deeeásed, contestant, Mrs. Alice Macgill Drewry, Elizabeth R. Bridges, another sister, Nellie A. Macgill, a niece, and Charles P. Macgill, a nephew, share and share alike.

The will upon its face bears evidence of painstaking care on the part of the testatrix to distribute her estate in accordance with her sense of fairness and justice to her relatives, none of whom to the third degree were omitted from its benefactions. In a number of the smaller bequests to grandnieces and nephews ■ the will recites that the bequests are made as tokens of affection, the testatrix being “assured that said beneficiaries are already provided for with this world’s goods.”

In regard to the legacies to Nellie A. Mac-gill and Charles P. Mdcgill, the will recites:

“It is with special affection that I make the bequest herein to my niece, Nellie A. Macgill, and to my nephew, Charles P. Macgill, in recognition in part of the loving attention they have always shown me in sickness and in health.”

Mr. Armstrong, who wrote the will, testified as follows in regard to the circumstances and method of its preparation:

“I was at Mrs. Rosenberg’s house in April, 1917. 1 went at the request of a telephone call from Miss Nellie Macgill, and after a little preliminary conversation with Mrs. Rosenberg she told me that she had asked me to come in order that she might prepare her will. I did prepare her will for her in pursuance of her request and at her direction. We began the work, but it was not completed that day. She began by stating, as I say, that she wished me to prepare her will for her. I told her it would bo necessary for me to have some paper in order to take down notes that she might give me. * * * She told me if I would raise the lid of the writing desk, or lower it, that I would find some paper in the desk. I opened the desk by her direction and found some paper there. * -* * So I got the paper and told her when she was ready to give me my memorandum I would take it. She then began to.tell me and go into detail concerning the family history of her family. She told me she had several brothers * * * who were dead, and that she had one living brother, and that she had, I think, the sisters that are named in the will; and she began, as she went over these names and those family groups, to. give me amounts of money that she desired to leave to each one of the persons that ¡she named, and she gaye me the names and amounts I put them down on my memorandum sheets. As it developed, there was quite a catalogue of names, as you will see and as you have seen by examination of the will, and when I went to the house it was probably 11 or half past 11 in the morning. It was Monday morning. The will was signed just one week from that date.
“As she proceeded to narrate the history or the names of those brothers and sisters, or their descendants or her relatives, as I say, I took them down, and all that took considerable time because we often divergeu and talked about other things, just in a casual natural way, and about half past 1 she said to me — she asked me if I would stay to dinner; that she would be glad to have me, as she would like to talk further with me about the will after dinner. I told her * * * I would be glad to remain if she wanted to talk with me. I told her we could not finish in one day and she might defer it, and she said, ‘No,’ she ‘preferred to talk with me after dinner.’ So she asked me to call Miss Nellie Macgill. So I went in the hall and called downstairs for Miss Nellie, and presently she responded and she came in the room and Mrs. Rosenberg told her.that she had asked me to dinner and to please set a place for me at the table. There were at dinner, as I recall, Miss Nellie Macgill, Mr. Charles Macgill, the nurse, Miss Piening, and myself. * * *
“After dinner I went again to Mrs. Rosenberg’s room * • * and resumed the conver *283 sation. and the giving of names to me of persons to whom she desired money to he left and as the afternoon progressed * * * I inquired what -the value of her estate was and she told me she didn’t know exactly, but she guessed perhaps in round figures $250,000; but she suggested that she better be certain about it. She said, ‘My estate consists of bonds that are in the South Texas State Bank and of cash that I have in the bank and of the home place,’ where she lived. * * * She then asked me to call Charles Macgill. In pursuance to that request I went to the head of the steps and called him, and Miss Nellie responded, and Miss Nellie came up into the room and Mrs. Rosenberg told Miss Nellie to have Charles Macgill come into the room; that she wished to see him. Miss Nellie went downstairs and returned in a few minutes, saying that Charles was not there.

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W. 281, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 737, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drewry-v-armstrong-texapp-1920.