Gwen Stribling Henderson, Raven A. Pitre and Christine S. Willie v. John Richard Shanks and Carbett Joseph Duhon, III

449 S.W.3d 834, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 11958, 2014 WL 5486811
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 2014
Docket14-12-01026-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 449 S.W.3d 834 (Gwen Stribling Henderson, Raven A. Pitre and Christine S. Willie v. John Richard Shanks and Carbett Joseph Duhon, III) 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
Gwen Stribling Henderson, Raven A. Pitre and Christine S. Willie v. John Richard Shanks and Carbett Joseph Duhon, III, 449 S.W.3d 834, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 11958, 2014 WL 5486811 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

KEM THOMPSON FROST, Chief Justice.

This appeal arises from an ancillary case relating to a core probate matter involving a will contest. Three plaintiffs— a relative of the testatrix, a beneficiary under the first two wills in dispute, and the attorney who drafted these two wills— filed suit asserting tort claims against two defendants — the testatrix’s husband and the attorney who drafted a third will. The husband moved the trial court to strike the plaintiffs’ petition and to grant a no-evidence and traditional summary judgment dismissing the claims against him. On the same day, the trial court signed two orders, one striking the plaintiffs’ petition and one granting .the summary-judgment motion. We construe the two orders as a single, final judgment in which the trial court struck the petition as to both defendants and, in the alternative, granted summary judgment in favor of the husband. Concluding that the trial court erred in granting the motion to strike but did not err in granting a traditional summary judgment, we affirm the trial court’s summary judgment as to the husband, reverse the trial court’s striking of the petition, and remand to the trial court for further proceedings regarding the plaintiffs’ claims against the attorney.

I. Factual and PRocedural Background

Dr. Cecelia Gibbons was diagnosed with brain cancer. She realized that she might have only a few months to live. Gibbons decided that she wanted to update her estate planning and execute a new will. Therefore, on the day of her diagnosis, May 13, 2010, Gibbons contacted her friend, appellant/plaintiff Christine Willie, an estate-planning attorney, and talked to her about estate planning. Willie prepared a will, and the next day Gibbons executed it (hereinafter the “May Will”). Two days after executing this will, Gibbons married appellee/defendant John Richard Shanks, with whom she had been romantically involved since 2001. 1 Four days later, Gibbons had surgery to remove a brain tumor.

Two weeks later, on June 3, 2010, Gibbons executed another will that had been prepared by Willie (hereinafter the “June Will”). Shortly thereafter, Willie sent Gibbons an email explaining the gifts under the June Will and the beneficiary designations on Gibbons’s life-insurance policies. Gibbons realized that Willie was going to receive $300,000 as a beneficiary under one *837 of Gibbons’s life-insurance policies and $185,000 as a beneficiary under another of Gibbons’s life-insurance policies. Gibbons was furious. Gibbons told Shanks several times that Gibbons never meant to give Willie that much money. Gibbons felt betrayed, and said that Willie had taken advantage of her. 2

Gibbons and Shanks went to Willie’s office on June 21, 2010, to pick up Gibbons’s file. Shanks contacted appellee/de-fendant Carbett J. Duhon, III, and within a few days Gibbons met with Duhon. Two months later, on August 26, 2010, Gibbons executed a third will that had been prepared by Duhon (hereinafter the “August Will”).

Gibbons passed away on December 9, 2010. Six days later, Willie filed an application to probate the June Will, in which Gibbons named Willie as the independent executrix of her estate. This application was assigned cause number 401,492 in Harris County Probate Court Number One (the “Core Case”). Two weeks later, Shanks filed an application in the same case to probate the August Will, in which Gibbons named Shanks as the independent executor of her estate. Six months later, Willie amended her application so that she sought to probate the May Will rather than the June Will. Willie alleged that Gibbons lacked testamentary capacity after May 20, 2010, and therefore lacked testamentary capacity when she executed the June Will and the August Will.

The probate court signed a docket control order in July 2011, setting December 16, 2011 as the deadline for amending or supplementing pleadings (the “Pleadings Deadline”). Shanks timely amended his application, adding a number of new parties on whom citation would be served but from whom Shanks did not seek any affirmative relief. Among these parties was appellanVplaintiff Raven Pitre, Gibbons’s daughter, and appellant/plaintiff Gwen Stribling Henderson, a beneficiary under the May Will and the June Will but not under the August Will. Before the Pleadings Deadline, Pitre and Henderson each filed an opposition to the probate of the August Will, alleging lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence by Shanks.

Six days after the Pleadings Deadline in the Core Case, Willie, Pitre, and Henderson (hereinafter collectively the “Plaintiffs”) filed an original petition in cause number 401,492-401 in Harris County Probate Court Number One (the “Ancillary Case”). In this pleading, th.e Plaintiffs sought actual and exemplary damages against Shanks and Duhon based on tort claims for breach of fiduciary duty and tortious interference with inheritance rights.

Shanks and Duhon answered in the Ancillary Case. Three weeks after answering, Shanks filed a motion to strike the Plaintiffs’ Original Petition in the Ancillary Case, and, on the same day, Shanks moved for a traditional and a no-evidence summary judgment. The Plaintiffs opposed these motions and also objected to Shanks’s motion for a no-evidence summary judgment and requested a continuance because the Plaintiffs alleged that there had not yet been an adequate time for discovery.

The probate court signed an order in which it granted Shanks’s summary-judgment motion and dismissed with prejudice the Plaintiffs’ claims against Shanks. On the same day, the probate court signed another order in which it granted Shanks’s motion to strike the Plaintiffs’ Original Petition with prejudice.

*838 II. Issues and Analysis

On appeal the Plaintiffs assert in four issues: (1) that leave of court is not required to file ancillary claims in Harris County probate courts and that the trial court erred in striking the Plaintiffs’ pleadings, (2) that Shanks’s no-evidence motion for summary judgment was totally premature, (3) that genuine issues of material fact precluded rendition of a traditional summary judgment in favor of Shanks, and (4) that there are no pleadings to support the striking of the Plaintiffs’ pleadings with prejudice as to Duhon. In response, Shanks asserts a number of arguments in support of the proposition that this court lacks jurisdiction over this appeal. 3

Before addressing the merits of this appeal, we first resolve the threshold issues of determining what judgment the trial court rendered and whether this court has jurisdiction over the Plaintiffs’ appeal from that judgment.

A. What judgment did the trial court render?

The trial court signed two separate orders on the same day that were filed in the trial court’s file at the same time. In one order, the trial court granted Shanks’s summary-judgment motion and dismissed with prejudice the Plaintiffs’ claims against Shanks. In the other order, the trial court granted Shanks’s motion to strike and then struck the Plaintiffs’ Original Petition with prejudice.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
449 S.W.3d 834, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 11958, 2014 WL 5486811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gwen-stribling-henderson-raven-a-pitre-and-christine-s-willie-v-john-texapp-2014.