Glover v. Coit

81 S.W. 136, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 104, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 171
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 14, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 81 S.W. 136 (Glover v. Coit) 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
Glover v. Coit, 81 S.W. 136, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 104, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 171 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

TALBOT, Associate Justice.

James T. Coit died in Harrison County, Texas, January 5, 1902, leaving the lands in controversy, which are designated as tracts Hos. 1 arid 2, as a part of his estate. He left a will devising all his property to his wife, Mrs. Estella T. Coit, and on the 20th day of January, 1902, she filed an application in the County Court of Harrison County to probate said will, and due notice thereof was given. There was a contest of the probate of the will, but after hearing the same was admitted to probate as the last will and testament of the said Coit, deceased, from which action of the court no appeal was taken. On the 20th day of January, 1902, and before the probate of said will, Mrs. Estella Coit conveyed the tract designated as tract Ho. 1 to Mrs. M. E. Hevlin, by warranty deed; and on April 18, 1902, the said Mrs. Coit, as the sole devisee under the will, joined by Mrs. Hevlin and her husband, J. H. Hevlin, conveyed to S. T. Scott and S. P. J ones an undivided one-third interest in both of said tracts of land, as a consideration for legal services rendered Mrs. Coit in the probate of the will.

On September 3, 1902, while the judgment probating the will was in full force, Mrs. M. E. Hevlin and her husband, J. H. Hevlin, and Mrs. Coit conveyed to Mrs. M. E. Horwood, for $3000 of her own separate funds, an undivided two-thirds interest in the tract of land designated and known as tract Ho. 1. September 5, 1902, Mrs. Coit sold and conveyed to Mrs. M. E. Horwood by warranty deed an undivided two-thirds interest in the tract known as tract Ho. 2, for a consideration of $1500. Afterwards Mrs. M. E. Horwood conveyed this same two-thirds interest in tract Ho: 2 to appellees S. T. Scott and S. P. Jones.

On January 10, 1903, S. T. Scott, S. P. Jones, M. E. Horwood and her husband, L. H. Horwood, filed suit against appellants James G. Dudley and his wife, Mrs. Dudley, in the District Court of Harrison County, Texas, to remove cloud from their title to the two tracts of land mentioned. After this suit was filed and on February 9, 1903, appellants William Lauriston Glover and others applied for a writ of certiorari to remove the cause and proceedings for the probate of said Coit’s will from the County Court of Harrison County to the District Court of said county. This application was granted, and a transcript of the proceedings had in the County Court in the probate of said will was filed in said District Court on the 10th day of August, 1903.

The application for certiorari alleged in substance that the applicants therein were the only heirs at law of James T. Coit, deceased; that the will probated in the County Court was void, should be annulled, and the probate thereof refused, because the same was executed by the deceased while he was insane; and because it was procured from said *106 Coit by the fraud and artifice of the legatee and devisee therein, Mrs. Estella Coit, in that she fraudulently and falsely represented to the deceased, James Coit, as an inducement to their marriage and with the view of securing his property, that she was a .single woman named Estella T. Spaveling, and upon a proposal of marriage from said Coit to her, she represented and pretended that she was free to marry and would make him a good and faithful wife; that the said Coit, believing her statements to be true and believing she was a single woman, did on the 3d day of July, 1900, marry the said Estella; that at the time said representations were made and at the time of said marriage said Estella was a married woman, and had at said dates the following husbands, from neither of whom she had been divorced, to wit: Freeman H. Spaulding, whom she married in Delaware County Indiana, December 22, 1880; August Nash, commonly called Gus Nash, whom she had married on the 24th day of March, 1898, in Fort Worth, Texas, under the name of Tillie Lay. That by said fraudulent marriage the said Estella induced the said James T. Coit to execute to her said will, the said Coit believing her to be his true and lawful wife. In the application for certiorari, S. T. Scott, S. P. Jones, M. E. Norwood, L. H. Nor-wood, M. M. McPhail, J. G. Allen, Jr., and Mrs. iSstella Coit were named as being the parties adversely interested, and each was duly cited and made a party defendant.

In the suit of Norwood et al. to remove cloud from their title appellants Dudley and wife answered, alleging among other things that the will of James T. Coit was void on account of the insanity of the said Coit and the fraud practiced upon him by the said Mrs. Estella Coit substantially as set forth in the petition for certiorari; that S. T. Scott and S. P. Jones comprised the law firm of Scott & Jones, and were the attorneys of Mrs. Coit in the probate of the will, and obtained their interest in the property in controversy for legal services rendered in the probate thereof; that they took notice of the fact that said will was void for fraud, etc., by reason of being the attorneys for Mrs. Coit, and therefore could not claim to be innocent purchasers.

They further alleged that L. H. and M. E. Norwood had actual notice that said will was void for fraud, etc., and hence were not innocent purchasers.

Appellees L. H. Norwood and M. E. Norwood, S. T. Scott and S. P. Jones, answered appellants’ application for certiorari, and pleaded that they were purchasers of the land from Mrs. Coit, the devisee under the will of James T. Coit, in good faith for a valuable consideration and without notice that said will was void by reason of the insanity of the said James Coit or of the marriage of the said Estella to another. In the answer they averred facts substantially the same as set out in their petition to remove cloud from their title.

On the 11th day of August, 1903, the case of Norwood et al. v. James G. Dudley et al., No. 10,878, suit to remove cloud from title, was on motion of defendants therein, by order of the court, consolidated with *107 cause No. 10,910, Wm. Lauriston Glover et al. v. Mrs. Estella Coit et al., application for certiorari to revise the probate of James T. Coit’s will. Appellants then pleaded that the will was not an independent will, and that appellees had actual and constructive notice.that it was void for the reasons set forth in the application for certiorari.

The consolidated causes were submitted to a jury on special issues, and upon their findings the court rendered judgment establishing the will of James T. Coit as a valid will, and awarded the lands in controversy to appellees. Appellants excepted to the action of the court and prosecute this appeal.

The first error assigned is that "the court erred in failing and refusing to record and incorporate in its judgment the last will of James T. Coit for identification.” This is the specific and only purpose for which it is claimed the will should have been incorporated in the judgment. The will is set out in full, attached to appellant’s petition as an exhibit and made a part thereof. Appellees’ answer refers to this will and prays that it be probated. That portion of the judgment admitting the will to probate reads as follows: “It is therefore decided, adjudged and decreed by the court that the will of James T. Coit, deceased, offered for probate herein, be and the same is hereby admitted to probate and established as the last will and testament of the said James T. Coit, deceased.”

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W. 136, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 104, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glover-v-coit-texapp-1904.