Edwards v. Edwards

36 S.W. 1080, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 87, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 1080 (Edwards v. Edwards) 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
Edwards v. Edwards, 36 S.W. 1080, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 87, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 284 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Associate Justice.

In 1849 Lemuel J. Edwards and Elizabeth Edwards, his wife, settled in Tarrant County, Texas, where in the course of twenty years they accumulated a valuable estate, consisting of both personal and real property. In 1869 Lemuel J. Edwards was killed by his son-in-láw James Creswell, leaving Elizabeth, his widow, and C. 0. Edwards, Martha Creswell and other children surviving him. An inventory and appraisement of this community estate was returned by the survivor, in accordance with the statute then in force. C. O. Edwards, being the oldest son, was mainly relied on by his mother, after his father’s death, t6to guide and direct her in nearly all of her business affairs.”

October 18, 1889, Ambrose and Martha Creswell, with others, instituted a proceeding in the County Court of Tarrant County to have Elizabeth Edwards adjudged of unsound mind and a guardian of her estate appointed, which culminated in a verdict and judgment, on 25th of October, 1889, adverse to their contention.

Four days thereafter they, with still others, instituted suit in the District Court of Tarrant County against Elizabeth Edwards, C. O. Edwards, and L. J.-Edwards, Jr., alleging a conversion of the personalty belonging to said community estate, which resulted in a judgment, De *90 cember 8, 1892, against Elizabeth Edwards in the sum of 11819.54; but nothing was recovered against the other defendants.

A partition of the real property belonging to said estate had already been made before these proceedings were instituted, and the several tracts of land involved in this controversy, which were included in said inventory, had become the property of Elizabeth Edwards. By deeds made in 1888, 1889 and 1892 she divested herself of all of said lands, conveying them either to C. O. Edwards or Crawford Edwards, his minor son.

This suit was instituted on the 21st day of June, 1893, by Ambrose and Martha Creswell, as next friends of Elizabeth Edwards, to have these conveyances set aside, on the ground of fraud and undue influence on the part of C. O. Edwards in taking advantage of the feeble and helpless condition, mental and physical, of his mother, to strip her of all her property, which was of considerable value. The petition charged that she was an illiterate person of unsound and feeble mind, ever eighty years old, weak and trembling from palsy, nearly deaf and nearly blind; that her mind was almost totally ruined by disease and old age, so that she was but a mere child, and unable to comprehend her rights or manage her affairs, etc.; and that C. O. Edwards had taken advantage of this condition and defrauded her out of all her property, and had her entirely under his influence and control.

A motion and plea sworn to by Elizabeth Edwards, denying her want of capacity, or that she had been defrauded, as alleged, and charging that Ambrose and Martha Creswell were her enemies and not her next friends, and praying that the suit be dismissed, was presented to the court and filed August 28, 1893, by attorneys subscribing themselves as her attorneys, who were also attorneys for C. O. Edwards.

The case was tried in March and April, 1895, and the court directed the jury to determine this issue first, which they did as follows:

“We, the jury, find that at the filing of this suit (June 21, 1893), at the date of the motion to dismiss (August 28, 1893), and the present time, the mind of Mrs. Elizabeth Edwards was impaired to the degree as "specified in the issue submitted by the court, which issue is as follows, to-wit: ‘Was the mind of the said Elizabeth Edwards so impaired by age, disease or otherwise as to render her, under the circumstances surrounding her, as shown by the evidence, incapable of understanding and appreciating her property rights, to such an extent as to render her unable to exercise her free and unbiased will with respect to the same, either at the date of the filing of this suit, to-wit, June 21, 1893, or at the date of filing said motion to dismiss, to-wit, August 28, 1893, or at this date; and if so, at which of said times?”

The extent and effect of this finding will be better understood when the charge, which submitted this issue quite fully, is read in the light of the evidence; but as only a question of jurisdiction is raised on this branch of the case, enough is stated for the disposition of that question.

Having determined this preliminary inquiry in favor of plaintiffs be *91 low, the jury, under charges submitting the issues as to the validity of the several conveyances made by Elizabeth Edwards, found against those made in 1892, and sustained all others. A recovery of a few thousand dollars in money was also had against C. O. Edwards by plaintiffs below, in behalf of Elizabeth Edwards. The court approved the verdict, and of his own motion, on the ground of its being made to appear that the mind of Elizabeth Edwards was so impaired as to render her incapable of managing her own affairs and protecting the property so decreed to her, appointed a receiver to take charge of the real estate, collect the rents, hold the money collected on the judgment, etc., subject to the further orders of the court and until a duly qualified person should apply for the same.

Thereafter, during the same term of court, an allowance was made to the next friends and their attorneys for reasonable expenses and attorney’s fees on account of the prosecution of this suit to judgment, which the receiver was directed to pay out of the first moneys coming to his hands. The motion for this allowance was resisted by an attorney appointed by the court as guardian ad litem for that purpose, who was also one of the attorneys for C. O. Edwards.

Plaintiffs below moved for a new trial as to so much of the verdict as upheld the conveyance made in 1889 of the north half of the George Shields survey, situated near Fort Worth, known in the record as the McCar't land, and sued out a writ of error to this court, assigning errors to that part of the judgment only.

A writ of error was also sued out in the name of Elizabeth Edwards by the attorneys who presented her plea and motion in the trial court, and by her guardian ad litem, one of said firm of attorneys. The questions raised under this writ will be first considered.

It is insisted that the District Court had no jurisdiction in the premises, and that it erred in refusing to dismiss the suit upon the sworn plea and motion of Elizabeth Edwards. The question thus raised has been considered by the courts and discussed by the text writers, and it seems to be the general consensus of opinion that equity jurisdiction is maintainable in cases like this, where the person of weak mind has not been or cannot be adjudged a lunatic by the special tribunal provided by law for that purpose, and yet it is so far incapacitated by disease, decrepitude or other infirmity as to require the protection of a court of equity against the undue influence and fraud of others. The most satisfactory statement of this doctrine we have been able to find is made by Mr. Beach in see. 49 of bis work on Modern Equity Practice, where the authorities are cited in the foot notes. Holzheiser v. Railway Co., 33 S. W. Rep., 887, decided by the Galveston Court of Civil Appeals, is an instance of its application. Howard v. Howard, 1 L. R.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 1080, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 87, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-edwards-texapp-1896.