Franks v. Chapman

61 Tex. 576, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 150
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1884
DocketCase No. 4987
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 61 Tex. 576 (Franks v. Chapman) 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
Franks v. Chapman, 61 Tex. 576, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 150 (Tex. 1884).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.—

This action was brought by some of the children of G. W. Chapman against the widow and the other children of Chapman, in the probate court, to contest the validity of his will, which, in that court; had been probated within four years before the bringing of the suit.

[579]*579The action is based on substantially the same facts as was a former suit between1 the same parties instituted in the district court, in which, on appeal, it was held that such a suit instituted by an original proceeding in a district court could not be maintained under the provisions of the present constitution, which give to such courts only an appellate jurisdiction in probate matters, except in those cases in which a county judge may be disqualified; of which the constitution expressly gives the district courts original jurisdiction. Franks et al. v. Chapman et al., 60 Tex., 46 (2 T. L. R., 53). The county judge being disqualified by reason of having been of counsel in the case, it was transferred to the district court.

The averments of the petition are such as to show, not only irregularities in the procedure through which the paper claimed to be the will was probated, but also such, if true, as show that the paper was wanting in some of the essential elements necessary under the statutes of this state to the existence of a will.

There are also averments tending to show that if the paper was intended by Chapman at one time for his will, it was subsequently revoked by an instrument in writing. The averments in reference to this, however, are of the most general kind, and the special demurrer to so much of the petition should have been sustained; but there were substantial averments of facts sufficient to show not only that great, if not fatal, irregularities existed in the procedure through which the paper was probated as the will of Chapman, but also to show that in fact and in law the paper never was the valid will of G-. "W Chapman.

On demurrer those averments are to be taken as true; and in so far as the court below may have been influenced in sustaining the demurrers to the petition by the belief that the petition did not aver such facts as would entitle those interested in the estate to contest the validity of the paper as a will, we are of the opinion the court erred.

In the former case referred to it was in effect held that the county court was the proper court in which to institute a proceeding to contest the validity of a paper admitted to probate as the will of a deceased person, and we see no reason to doubt the conclusion there arrived at.

A proceeding to contest the validity, as a will, of a paper which has been admitted to probateas such, is no less a probate proceeding than is one instituted to have a paper probated as a will. The inquiry in each case is the same; the subject matter is the same; and the jurisdictional power exercised in declaring a paper already pro[580]*580bated to be invalid as a will is co-extensive with that exercised in refusing to declare by'the act of probate that the paper offered is the valid will of the deceased. The actors in the one case assume the burden of establishing a proposition negative in its character, while in the other they assume the burden of an affirmative. This is practically all the difference in the two procedures. They alike involve the exercise of general jurisdiction of a probate court in one of its most common and essential applications. This is conferred alone on the county courts, and the legislature has no power to confer it by implication or by express terms on any other court. Timmins v. Bonner, 58 Tex., 557.

There is nothing in the legislation had under the present constitution which evidences an intention to confer on the district courts an original probate jurisdiction, save in the one instance in which the constitution expressly gives it; and the fact that proceedings to revise the proceedings of the county courts in probate matters are required to be prosecuted in the district courts of the county in which the probate proceeding is had does not evidence such intention ; it simply fixes the venue for such revisory proceedings as the constitution and laws permit the district courts to entertain. R. S., art. 1198, sec. 16.

It is a general rule that the judgments of courts of general jurisdiction are final and conclusive of the questions therein decided, jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the persons to be bound having been acquired, unless the same be set aside through some revisory proceeding permitted by law. But while this is true, it does not follow that such revisory proceeding must be prosecuted in some tribunal exercising strictly an appellate jurisdiction over the proceedings of the court in which the judgment is rendered.

In the absence of some constitutional prohibition, the legislature has the power to provide, at least as to all future cases, that a court may revise and set aside its own judgments for proper cause, and on a mode of procedure not in conflict with well settled constitutional restrictions; as may it provide for the revision of judgments by appellate tribunals by prescribing the mode in which such revisory power may be brought into exercise.

The statutes of this state provide that Any person interested in any will which shall have been probated under the laws of this state may institute a suit in the proper court to contest the validity thereof, within four years after such will may have been admitted to probate, and not afterward.” R. S., 3212.

“Any heir at law of the testator, or any other person interested [581]*581in his estate, may institute suit in the proper court to cancel a will for forgery or other fraud, within four years after the discovery of such forgery or fraud, and not afterward.”

As said in Franks et al. v. Chapman et al., these statutes do not provide the mode of procedure in express terms, nor do they declare in what court the suit may be instituted, but they do give the right to institute the suit for the purposes named, as well as prescribe the time within which such suits must be brought.

There can be but little doubt what was meant by the words “ may institute suit in the proper court.” To “ institute a suit,” as here used, evidently means “t,o begin; to commence; to set in operation.” Webster.

If the remedy intended were by certiorari or appeal, it would not be the institution of a suit, but would be the continued prosecution, of one already commenced.

The time prescri bed within which the suit must be instituted is four years, and, in this respect, it is unimportant that its mover may not have been laboring under any disability; whereas such a person’s remedy by certiorari would be barred in two years from the time the original judgment was rendered (R S.,) 290; and such person’s rights of appeal would be lost unless the appeal was perfected within fifteen days after the decision, order, judgment or decree was rendered. R. S., 2200, 2201.

Ordinarily, the words “may institute a suit” would not be understood to mean that a party might prosecute, by appellate procedure, an action or suit before commenced and decided.

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Bluebook (online)
61 Tex. 576, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franks-v-chapman-tex-1884.