Gumm v. Chalmers

127 S.W.2d 942, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 633
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1939
DocketNo. 10754.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 127 S.W.2d 942 (Gumm v. Chalmers) 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
Gumm v. Chalmers, 127 S.W.2d 942, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 633 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal, by writ of error, is from a judgment of the 11th District Court of Harris County, entered non obstante vere-dicto, on motion of defendants in error therefor, dismissing the contest of plaintiff in error to the will of Fred Erichson, deceased (who, as contestant, was joined by certain non-appealing intervenors in the trial court) ; such contest had theretofore been sustained in the County Court of Harris County, and had been appealed to the District Court by defendants in error, who were the proponents of the will.

In the District Court the issues of fact raised between the parties to the contest were submitted in this single special-issue to the jury, which it answered, “he did not,” to-wit: “Did or did not Fred Erichson have testamentary capacity on July 16th, 1934, at the time he executed the will in .controversy? You will answer this special Issue ‘He did’ or ‘He did not’, as you find the facts to be.”

The learned trial court recited that it was of the opinion — in the light of the motion of the defendants in error for such *943 decree — that a directed verdict in their favor would have been proper; a reference to the motion itself shows that it was grounded upon two counts only, as follows: (1) That the verdict was unsupported by the evidence; (2) that the contestants had failed t.o show any interest in the estate.

The effect of this order of dismissal was to permit the probate of the will, thereby nullifying the prior order of. the county court denying its probate, as well as this verdict of the jury on the appeal to the District Court, finding that Fred Erichson had not had testamentary capacity when he executed the will in question on July 16th of, 1934.

In this court plaintiff in error, carrying alone the burden of the appeal, contends the trial court’s action in so dismissing his •contest, notwithstanding the jury’s verdict, was fundamental error, for the principal reasons that:

(1) His pleading and evidence was not •only sufficient to raise the issue of a lack •of testamentary capacity upon Erichson’s part at the time of executing the will, but also to support the jury’s verdict that he did not have that indispensable requisite to the making,of a valid will.

(2) The finding of the jury determining that he did not have such capacity at the time, under the circumstances, required the sustaining of the contest, even if the proof failed to show — as defendants in error contend — that the contestant and intervenors’ helow were parties interested in Erichson’s estate;

,(3) That there was both pleading and evidence sufficient to support an issue of such interest on the part of the contestants below, it having been undisputedly shown by them that the testator left neither surviving wife, nor children, but did leave nieces and •nephews, to which class of relationships the •plaintiff in error along with one or more of ±he intervenors belonged.

(4) That' the defendants in error were in •no position upon the trial to raise any ques-, ■tíon as to whether or not plaintiff in error .and such intervenors were so interested in the estate of the deceased, because they ■neither by sworn affidavit, plea in abatement, exception, nor otherwise, in due order of pleading, and in limine, upon the trial helow, in any way properly raised any question as to the right of their opponents to iso contest the probate of the will.

This court concludes that, • regardless of the procedural questions discussed in the briefs, the showing made below under neither premise for the challenged judgment was sufficient; that is, the pleadings and evidence were at least sufficient to raise the issues both of mental competency as submitted to and determined by the jury, and of interests in contestants in Erichson’s estate, within the meaning of R.S. Article 3433.

(1) Under R.S. Article 2211, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 2211, pursuant to which the action under review was taken, providing that the court may render judg-, ment. non obstante veredicto if a directed verdict would have been proper, if there is any pleading and any testimony supporting an issue, no authority for such directed verdict exists, as is thus declared by this court through Justice Cody, in Johnson v. Moody, Tex.Civ.App., 104 S.W.2d 583, at page 586: “When judgment notwithstanding the verdict is rendered, it should be made to appear,, «of that the evidence is insufficient to support the findings of the jury, hut that the evidence was insufficient to raise the issue, or warrant their submission to the jury.”

When the evidence on that feature in this record is appraised accordingly, it seems'' plain that an issue of fact over whether or-not the deceased Erichson had the necessary capacity at the date of the will, July 16th of 1934, was raised; he died October 21st thereafter, and there were many witnesses familiar with his condition immediately before, at the time of, and after the execution of the will, up-until the time of his death, who testified to facts and circumstances from which it was a justifiable inference that the jury’s verdict reflect-, ed the true condition of his mind when he attempted to make the will; it would serve’ no needful purpose to here catalogue, or even make, ⅜ resume, of. the testimony, as it seems to this court to have clearly made a. question of fact for the jury in the first instance, if indeed it did not also support, the finding that he did not then have the capacity required; these witnesses were shown to be those who knew most about Mr. Erichson at the critical time, who were nearest to him, sustaining the most intimate relations with and having the best opportunity to know and observe him and his condition of mind. Among them, were Mr. and Mrs. Measam, who lived in the same house with him, Mrs. Mildred Burkhart, *944 who treated him for thirty days before his death, M. L. McAshan, H. B. Finn, O. D. Shuptine, and Dr. J. A. Sauls, all of whom gave testimony in support of the verdict.

The opposing witnesses were not shown to have had such association and observation of him as enabled them either to observe or to know him near so closely as those for the contestants; a number of them, with the exception of Mrs. Riley, Eugene L. Meyer, and Dr. Ledbetter, were either associated or related in some way with some beneficiary or relative of such an one, which circumstance itself was properly in evidence before the jury.

In a word, the ultimate purport of the contestants’ testimony upon this question might be epitomized in this quotation from that of Mrs. Burkhart, the attending practical nurse for Mr. Erichson for thirty days before his death, as recited supra, to-wit: “ * * * When I went out there Dr. Led-better told me he was a very dangerous patient in this way, that he was a very strong man and I may not be able to handle him physically. 1 He said ‘You are going to have to be careful and give him hypodermics wherever you can stick them, under his shoulder blades and in the middle of his back.’ He was mentally out the whole time I was there. He was a person of unsound mind at that time, I should judge. I had difficulty with him on account of his condition; a good many nights I had to call for assistance from Mr. Measam and it would take both of us to put him to bed. * * * »

(!■) R.S.

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127 S.W.2d 942, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gumm-v-chalmers-texapp-1939.