Estate of Buford Scott, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 7, 2020
Docket08-19-00011-CV
StatusPublished

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Estate of Buford Scott, Jr., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ No. 08-19-00011-CV IN RE § Appeal from the Probate Court No. 2 THE ESTATE OF BUFORD SCOTT, JR., DECEASED § of Tarrant County, Texas Appellant. § (TC# 2015PR02393-2-A)

OPINION

This is a will contest. Actually, it is a wills contest (plural) because three wills are at issue

and a jury found two were signed without testamentary capacity, and all three were signed as the

result of undue influence. The decedent and maker of the wills is Buford Scott, Jr. (Buford). The

proponents of the wills are the Appellants here, Geoffrey Tait and Irene Rueda. The antagonists

of the wills, and Appellees here, are John Paul Scott, III and Vinnie V. Dungan. The jury also

found that the will proponents did not act in good faith in opposing the will contest, and that they

were therefore not entitled to attorney’s fees. On appeal, the will proponents argue that the

evidence was both factually and legally insufficient to support the jury’s findings. Because we

find sufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that all three wills were signed as the result

of undue influence, and that Appellants did not act in good faith in defending the wills, we affirm.

Our view of the undue influence findings means that we need not address challenges to the jury’s

1 testamentary capacity findings, or a question on revocation of one of the wills. It does mean,

however, that we need to supply the reader with a detailed recitation of the evidence.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Factual Background

Buford Scott, Jr., who never married and had no children, grew up on a ranch in Cresson,

Texas, where he lived until his death in August of 2015. For most of his life Buford lived a

sheltered existence with his immediate family members. Buford who had a below average IQ and

some cognitive impairments, did not graduate from high school until he was 22 years old, and was

never regularly employed outside of working on his family’s ranch. His parents and his only

sibling predeceased him, each dying intestate. When his mother passed away in 2003 or 2004,

Buford inherited a substantial estate, but was left to live alone on the ranch.

1. The Creation of the management trust in 2008

After Buford’s mother passed away, his mother’s attorney expressed concern about

Buford’s ability to live on his own, and thereafter initiated a guardianship proceeding in the Hood

County Court. In 2007, that court appointed both a guardian ad litem and an attorney ad litem to

represent Buford’s interests. The guardian ad litem filed an application to place Buford under a

guardianship management trust pursuant to the then applicable Section 867 of the Texas Probate

Code.1 The court ordered Buford to undergo a mental health evaluation by Dr. Larry Padget, a

local general practitioner, who determined that Buford was “mentally retarded,” and suffered from

substance or alcohol abuse or both.2 Dr. Padget further reported that Buford was unable to make

1 The Texas Probate Code was repealed and replaced with the Texas Estates Code by Act of June 17, 2011, 82nd Leg., R.S., ch. 823, 2011 Tex.Gen.Laws 1901. The current Code provision relating to management trusts is found in Chapter 1301 of the Texas Estates Code. See TEX.EST.CODE ANN. § 1301.051, et. seq. 2 The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (DSM-5) now uses the term intellectual disability. American Psychiatric Association, DIAGNOSTIC AND STATISTICAL MANUAL OF MENTAL DISORDERS, 5th ed. (2013).

2 his own financial, medical, or other decisions, and was totally incapacitated. The court agreed,

and issued an order creating a management trust, expressly finding that Buford was “completely

without capacity as provided by the Texas Probate Code to manage his property[.]” The court

placed all of Buford’s assets into a trust managed by a local bank.

Upset about the bank’s control of his money, Buford retained an attorney who filed a

motion to set aside the trust on Buford’s behalf in March of 2009. The motion attacked the court’s

order creating the trust on several procedural grounds, including that the court did not follow the

proper procedures in appointing the guardian ad litem or in making its determination that Buford

was incapacitated. The court thereafter replaced Buford’s guardian ad litem with a new ad litem

who requested a psychiatric report to determine Buford’s mental capacity. The court granted the

request and appointed psychiatrist Dr. Lisa Clayton to perform the psychiatric evaluation.

2. Dr. Clayton’s psychiatric report

Dr. Clayton evaluated Buford on February 22, 2010. In her report, Dr. Clayton noted that

Buford admitted that he had not taken very good care of his financial affairs after his mother died,

and that he “did need help” with his finances. Although she disagreed with Dr. Padget’s

assessment that Buford was “mentally retarded,” she believed that Buford’s IQ was below average,

that he suffered from learning disabilities, and evidenced various cognitive impairments. He also

exhibited some degree of paranoia, poor insight, and impaired personal judgment. Dr. Clayton

concluded that Buford was unable to take care of himself independently, noting, among other

things, that Buford had rotting teeth, did not have a primary care doctor, and did not appear to be

well-groomed. In addition, she concluded that Buford was “extremely susceptible to the

manipulation and control by others” due in part to his below average intelligence and paranoid

See also Ex parte Cathey, 451 S.W.3d 1, 11 n.23 (Tex.Crim.App. 2014) (noting change from “mental retardation” to “intellectual disability” by the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities).

3 tendencies. She noted that Buford had previously been manipulated by an individual who

convinced him to pay for assistance in obtaining some unclaimed property located in Oklahoma.

In her report, Dr. Clayton advised the court that she believed Buford was “partially incapacitated”

and needed a partial guardianship with regard to managing his financial and business affairs.

3. The August 2011 settlement agreement

In August of 2011, Buford settled the dispute raised in his pending motion to terminate the

management trust. He agreed to allow the management trust to continue with modifications,

which allowed him to retain his personal property and to open his own bank account. The bank

trustee agreed to pay Buford $800.00 a week for his personal use. The agreement further stated

that the “temporary guardianship” under which Buford had been placed was to be dismissed, as

were all court appointees.

4. Buford hires Geoffrey Tait and Irene Rueda

Despite signing the settlement agreement, Buford continued to be dissatisfied with the

bank’s control of his assets. After unsuccessfully asking his friends for assistance, in June 2012

Buford contacted a private investigator, Geoffrey Tait, whose name he found in a phone book.

Tait, and his assistant, Irene Rueda, agreed to assist Buford with his efforts to have the management

trust lifted. In addition, Tait and Rueda soon began providing Buford with other services,

including cleaning, cooking, bill paying, shopping, and running errands. In fact, Rueda testified

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