Graser v. Graser

215 S.W.2d 867, 147 Tex. 404
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1948
DocketNo. A-1866
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 215 S.W.2d 867 (Graser v. Graser) 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
Graser v. Graser, 215 S.W.2d 867, 147 Tex. 404 (Tex. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Garwood

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The dispute in this case is between two groups, together comprising all the children of A. Wm. Graser and Frances Augusta Graser, both now deceased, and involves the title to seven tracts of land which constituted the bulk of their community and only estate. The principal question is what effect, if any, on Mrs. Graser’s community half interest is to be given to a document, which was apparently intended to dispose of the property in question as the joint and mutual will of Mr. and Mrs. Graser. The instrument is entirely in the handwriting of and signed by Mr. Graser. It also bears a signature, which we will assume to be that of Mrs. Graser, and the signature of a third party unaccompanied by anything in the nature of an attestation clause. The instrument was evidently signed on September 30, 1930, and the body of it, copied line for line, reads as follows:

“9/10/30 Waco Tex
“This is our last Will & Testament that we agree the last living from us both shall keep part lot 6-7, 94 ft 100 and all the Notes & Cash money on hand. The other propperty shall be Devidet as follows Henry shall have the Bread and Cake mixer Value $500. Ernest shall have 1/2 lot of lot 3 block 10 in Barnes & Mitchell Sup Dev. City block #854, Dallas Tex so long he is living an if he Dies single then the propperty go backto the other halve lot. Otto shall have 1/2 lot fronting Merlin St. Hous #2421. Dallas Tex August shall have Lot 10 block 8 Conachio Add Herman shall have 1/2 lot #5 — block 9 Conachio Add Fronting Grim St. Waco Tex Willie shall have 1/2 lot of #5 block 9 Conachio Add Waco Tex so long as he livest er his [407]*407Wife after the last is Death then the propperty shall be sold an equalty Divedet between August Herman Albert Otto Ernest. Albert shall have were the last one is living of the parents, but so long one of tem living He & she shall have the benefit of all the propperty concerned”

Mr. Graser died in 1932, and Mrs. Graser promptly proceeded to probate the document as his will, procured appointment of herself as administratrix with the will annexed, qualify as such and file an inventory and appraisement, which was duly approved, including in it the seven tracts here in controversy. She took the latter into her possession, along with the notes and cash money on hand at her husband’s death, and proceeded thereafter to exercise control over the property, collecting the full amount of the rents and using it all for her own benefit until she in turn died in 1939.

On her death, Albert Graser, one of the plaintiffs and respondents here, sought to probate the document in question as her will, but probate was denied because it was not holographic or properly witnesses as to her; no appeal being taken from that judgment. Administration was had on her estate, but both it and the proceedings incident to her prior deceased husband’s estate were closed before the present litigation.

In the latter Albert Graser and four of the other children sought to establish and define as against their brothers Henry and Ernest, petitioners here, plaintiffs ownership of the lands described in the “will” as if that document were in fact the will of Mrs. Graser as well as of her husband, passing accordingly to the devisee named therein the interests described in the will with respect to both community halves of the property concerned. The defendant brothers took the position that, while the document was the will of their father, it was not that of their mother, who accordingly, and in fact as adjudged by the probate court, died intestate; so that the defendants were each entitled to one seventh of the mother’s community one half as her heirs at law. This, of course, is more than they would get if her half passed like her husband’s by the terms of the “will”. They also prayed for partition in the event their claims should prevail.

At the close of the evidence, which evidently involved no disputed matters of fact, unless as to the intentions of the deceased [408]*408parents deducible from their undisputed acts, the defendants moved that the jury be discharged and judgment rendered in their favor, while the plaintiffs moved for an instructed verdict. The court thereupon discharged the jury and forthwith rendered judgment for the defendants. It also decreed partition, but found the premises not partitionable in kind and accordingly ordered a sale, appointed a receiver to conduct it, and made extensive provisions regarding division of the proceeds and costs, retaining jurisdiction for the purpose of carrying out these dispositions. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the trial court and rendered judgment for the plaintiffs under the “will” as prayed for. 212 S. W. (2d) 859.

There is no dispute that the instrument in question, which was entirely in the handwriting of A. Wm. Graser and signed by him, was his will. In any case the question is foreclosed in this collateral proceeding by the final judgment of the County Court probating the document as his will. Aniol v. Aniol, 127 Texas 576, 94 S. W. (2d) 425. See also Nye v. Bradford, 144 Texas 618, 193 S. W. (2d) 165, 169 A. L. R. 1; Winston v. Griffith, 133 Texas 348, 128 S. W. (2d) 25. The same authorities compel the further conclusion that the subsequent final judgment of the County Court denying the instrument probate as the will of Mrs. Graser, establishes for all purposes here that it was not her will, even if we otherwise were inclined to different view, which we are not.

Neither is there any actual or possible assertion by the plaintiff-respondents that the instrument operated as a conveyance by Mrs. Graser of her community half to the devisees named in the instrument. The purely testamentary terms of the document, and its lack of the formalities required for a conveyance by' a married woman plainly repel any such theory.

Nor do we think the case is or could be seriously urged as one within the familiar rule of equity prevailing in this state, that where a testator disposes by will of property not his own, and the will also provides benefits for the real owner which the latter would not otherwise enjoy, such owner may express or implied election to take under the will, cause his own property in question to be treated as if it had passed by the will. A fundamental prerequisite. for the application of this rule is that the will shall purport to dispose of the property which the testator does not own. If it does not do so, there is plainly no basis for an election, and a beneficiary under the will may accordingly take whatever the will affords without any equities arising [409]*409against his own property. It is also prerequisite that as to the testaor’s intent to dispose of property he does not own, the will shall “be open to no other construction”, because “the law presumes that no man will attempt a testamentary disposition of the property of others.” Avery v. Johnson, 108 Texas 294, 192 S. W. 542. The will in the instant case not only does not purport to dispose of Mrs. Graser’s community half in the unequivocal fashion described in Avery v. Johnson but plainly does not purport to do so at all. If the instrument were the will of both Mr. and Mrs. Graser, then it would, as the joint and several act of both, dispose of the entire community estate, but, once we admit — as we must — that it is only the will of Mr. Graser, then it takes a different aspect. The intentions of Mrs. Graser cannot be considered, and Mr.

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