Heidenheimer v. Bauman

19 S.W. 382, 84 Tex. 174, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 914
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1892
DocketNo. 3347.
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 382 (Heidenheimer v. Bauman) 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
Heidenheimer v. Bauman, 19 S.W. 382, 84 Tex. 174, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 914 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

STAYTOE", Chief Justice.

— The discussion of this case depends on the effect to be given to a clause in the will of Samson Heidenheimer. The entire will is as follows:

“1. I direct that all my just debts shall be paid.
*178 ‘ ‘ 2 Besides the property which I heretofore donated and gave to my wife Anna Heidenheimer, and which consists of two notes executed by Abe Heidenheimer, and indorsed by M. Lasker, aggregating $28,000, also a note executed by ¡Nelson Davis & Co. for $1200, certain bank stock held by me in a bank at Austin for $2500, a note of one Bosenberg for $1500, and my life insurance, amounting to $15,000, I hereby give and bequeath to my said wife the further sum of $28,300, to be paid to her out of my estate by my executors.
“3. All other property, both real and personal, which I may own or may be entitled to at the date of my death, after paying the aforesaid legacy to my wife, I give, devise, and bequeath to my brother Abe Heidenheimer, in trust, to be disposed of by him as I have heretofore or may hereafter direct him to do.
“4. My executors are authorized and empowered to sell and dispose of any and all property of my estate; to pay any and all just debts which I may owe and the legacy herein made to my wife; and the said Abe Heidenheimer shall have full power to sell and dispose of any of the property herein devised and bequeathed to him, as trustee, for the purpose of carrying out my directions to him in regard thereto.
“5. I hereby nominate and appoint Meyer Bauman, of St. Louis, and Abe Heidenheimer, of Galveston, to be executors of this will and of my estate, and direct that no security shall be required of them as such executors; and it is my will that'no other action shall be had in the County Court in relation to the settlement of my estate than to probate and record this will and to return an inventory, appraisement, and list of claims of my estate.
“In testimony whereof, I have hereunto signed my name this 4th day of February, A. D. 1891.
[Signed] “Samson Heidenheimer.!’

This was probated; and the debts having been paid, the widow asserts claim to the entire estate not disposed of in due course of administration, on the ground that the third clause of the will is inoperative, because it does not designate the beneficiaries for whom the trust was intended.

It is conceded that plaintiff is entitled to recover as sole heir if the clause is inoperative. The attorney who wrote the will was permitted to testily, over objection, to some matters that were unimportant in the view we take of the case; for we would, in the particular matter referred to, give the same. construction to the language of the will as written which would be given to it if the word supposed to have been unintentionally omitted had been inserted. He was, however, permitted to testify as follows:

“Samson Heidenheimer told me before I wrote his will that he had instructed his brother Abe Heidenheimer as to the disposition he (Abe) *179 should make of the property which he (Samson) left to him in trust by the will. What these instructions were he did not tell me.”

“Interrogatory 7.- — Why did you cause to be written in said last sentence of said third clause, ‘or may hereafter direct him to do,’ after having written, ‘as I have heretofore’ ? State fully. Answer. — I was of the opinion that the sentence, ‘or may hereafter direct him to do,’ merely showed that the testator by reason of the instructions which he had already given to his trustee, and which did not appear on the face of the will, had not thereby abandoned or surrendered control of his property or his legal right to change his will in such manner as the law permitted him to do; and as the instructions he had given to the trustee were known to said trustee alone, this clause should show that they were intended to be permanent and final, unless changed by codicil or new will.

“Int. 8. — Are you familiar with the fourth clause of said will as written for Samson Heidenheimer and as executed and probated? If yea, please state why you provided therein, as was done, that ‘said Abe Heidenheimer shall have full power and authority to sell and dispose of any of the property herein devised and bequeathed to him as trustee, for the purpose of carrying out my directions to him in regard thereto.’ What directions were referred to by you, those already given to Abe Heidenheimer, or some that had not been given? A.— I am familiar with the fourth clause of said will. The provision inquired of was put in the will to enable the said trustee fully to carry out the instructions which the testator had theretofore given him, the testator thinking that such a power in the trustee might be necessary for the purpose of executing his (the testator’s) directions. The directions referred to by this clause of the will were those the testator had already given to said Abe Heidenheimer, and none others, as the language used plainly expresses.

“Int. 10. — What was the condition of the health of Samson Heidenheimer at the time of the execution of said will? How soon afterward did he die? A. — Samson Heidenheimer’s health was not good; he suffered with some ailment the nature of which I do not know, but for which he was about to submit to a surgical operation. He left my office to undergo the operation, and died within some seventeen or eighteen days after the operation had been performed.”

One of the executors conceded the right of the widow, but the nature of the defense set up by the other will appear from the will and the evidence of that executor, whose testimony, so far as it need be stated, was as follows:

“Samson Heidenheimer came to me on the morning of the day he made the will, and he sat down in the office and told me of his intention to make the will, and he also stated that he wanted to put $75,000 in my trust, for which I should distribute it according to the way he *180 instructed me; and I told him as I could not keep everything in my memory I would write that down, and I sat down at the desk and wrote that down on a piece of paper and read it off to him, and asked him if this was what he wanted, and I told him I wrote it down as he called ' it off to me.”

The witness, in response to an interrogatory by his counsel, offered the written memorandum. The plaintiff objected to the question and answer and to the testimony above given, because the witness undertook now to add to the will, and there was no averment that any such matter testified to has been offered along with the will for probate, and it is incompetent now to be urged as part of the will, or in connection with it. The court overruled the objection and admitted the evidence, to which ruling the plaintiff excepted.

It was admitted that nothing was ever offered for probate except what is in the will itself, and that the only matter that has been probated is the matter that is before the court as the will.

The paper introduced in evidence by the witness Abe Heidenheimer, over plaintiff’s objection, is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 382, 84 Tex. 174, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heidenheimer-v-bauman-tex-1892.