Green v. Goans

458 S.W.2d 705, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2510
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 7, 1970
Docket6115
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 458 S.W.2d 705 (Green v. Goans) 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
Green v. Goans, 458 S.W.2d 705, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2510 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

OPINION

FRASER, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court of El Paso County, Texas, which judgment upheld a will made by testator in July, 1966, in favor of appellee, and denied probate to a will made by the same testator in favor of appellants in 1964. In other words, the cause of action is a contest regarding two wills made by Walter Haliday White, testator.

It is in the record that testator stated that he didn’t know of a relative he had had in fifty years; so we have here two wills, both made out to friends only, as the testator apparently had no relatives.

The pertinent part of the trial court’s charge and the jury’s answer thereto is as follows:

“You are instructed that to make a valid Will, the person making the same must have testamentary capacity and he must not at the time of the execution of the Will, be' laboring under an insane delusion, which influenced the person executing the Will to dispose of his property in a way which he would not have disposed of it but for the insane delusion.
“In connection with the term ‘testamentary capacity’, I instruct you that a person, to have testamentary capacity, as that term is used in this Charge, is meant that such person at the time of the execution of the Will, must have had sufficient mental ability to understand the business in which he was engaged, *706 the effect of his act in making the Will and the nature and extent of his property. He must have been able to know his next of kin, if any, and the natural objects of his bounty and their claims upon him; he must have had memory sufficient to collect in his mind the elements of the business about to be transacted and to hold them long enough to preserve at least their obvious relation to each other and to be able to form a reasonable judgment as to them.
“You are instructed further, that by ‘insane delusion’ is meant the belief of a state of supposed facts which no rational person would believe.
“Now, bearing in mind the foregoing and any other instructions that may be given you by the Court or under its direction, in connection with the Issue hereinafter submitted, please make a finding on the following Special Issue:
“QUESTION NO. 1
“From a preponderance of the evidence, do you find that WALTER H. WHITE had testamentary capacity when he executed the Will of July 15, 1966 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1) ? Answer ‘He did’ or Tie did net1, as you may find.
“We answer He did.”
(NOTE: The line drawn through “He did not”, in the above Question No. 1, is as shown in the Transcript.)

The facts appear to be that in 1963 the testator, who was a machinist and had been appellant’s friend for years, moved in to live with them in a room which they added to their home for him. There is testimony in the record that at this time, and up until late 1964, testator had been an alert, interested and helpful man. He made out a will in favor of appellants in September, 1964. In November of the same year he began to have back trouble, and it appears from the record that he began to have delusions about the same time, because in late 1964 he called a friend, a Mr. M. Lane Johnson, to appellants’ home while they were away and told said Johnson that appellants were trying to kill him, and pointed out to Mr. Johnson that the burners on the electric stove were on as proof of his belief. In December of 1964 he told the same witness that appellant Mr. Green had tried to electrocute him while they were doing some electrical work. Relations between appellants and testator worsened, and appellant Mrs. Green became afraid of testator because, during the Christmas season of 1964, he had tried to slip up on her. After this incident, appellants put a lock on testator’s' door so that he could not enter appellants’ home unless they wished him to. Testator was hospitalized in January and May of 1965. After leaving the hospital the second time, testator expressed dissatisfaction with his arrangement at appellants’ home and complained to appellee’s husband, Mr. Goans, and his friend who worked with him in a mortuary, that the Greens were rifling his effects. It is also in the record that testator again told the witness Johnson that appellants were trying to kill him, and that they had stolen pajamas and shirts which they had given him. This conversation occurred on the street on or about June 17, 1966.

In 1965, testator had changed his life insurance to appellee and her husband, some five months after he had moved away from the Greens’ home and moved in with the Goans. The record shows, also, that testator began to make accusations to a witness named Ohlenforst, that appellee and her husband were trying to poison him, and had said witness secretly advertise for another apartment for testator. According to the record, a Mrs. Myrtle Doty, who lived with appellee and the testator, was apparently afraid of testator. Shortly after June 17, 1966 and the conversation between testator and the witness Johnson, appellee’s husband died. On July 15, 1966, testator made and executed a will in favor of appellee, which is the will that the court here allowed to go to probate. Several months after executing this will, testator was back in the hospital, at *707 which time he suffered a grand mal seizure, and shortly thereafter he suffered another grand mal seizure. He was hospitalized once more before his death. The hospital records indicate that the testator was suffering from arteriosclerosis as early as May, 1965, and the records of the hospitalization of November 1966, according to testimony, indicated that he was suffering from organic brain disease, a possible tumor, and senile paranoia. On March 29, 1968, the testator walked around the corner of appellee’s house, shot and wounded appellee and Mrs. Myrtle Doty, and then fatally shot himself. He was 82 years of age at the time of this occurrence.

The record is replete with testimony, pro and con, as to the testator being afflicted with, an insane delusion. One doctor testified that he treated the testator as one would treat a child, and, although he believed that testator was sane, he described him as “mean as hell”. Another doctor, who qualified as a psychiatrist, testified that testator had a fixed delusion from which he was never relieved and which probably existed to the time of his death. The doctor further testified that this delusion went back to the time he was living with the appellants and never got better, but got progressively worse. The doctor stated that he believed that the testator’s persecution and paranoid thinking started during the winter of 1964. There is other testimony in the record from lay witnesses, both pro and con, as to the testator’s behavior.

Now, bearing in mind the conflicting testimony of both laymen and doctors, and the voluminous testimony in the record as to the existence or non-existence of an insane delusion suffered by the testator, it it readily apparent that there was a hotly contested point as to whether such delusion did exist and, if so, whether it influenced him in making the will which the court admitted to probate.

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Related

Mircovich v. Mircovich
703 S.W.2d 325 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1985)
Bauer v. Estate of Bauer
687 S.W.2d 410 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1985)
Wilson v. Estate of Wilson
593 S.W.2d 789 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1979)
Goans v. Green
464 S.W.2d 104 (Texas Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
458 S.W.2d 705, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-goans-texapp-1970.