Hill v. Thrasher

196 S.W.2d 461, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 24, 1946
DocketNo. 9573.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 S.W.2d 461 (Hill v. Thrasher) 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
Hill v. Thrasher, 196 S.W.2d 461, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 532 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

BAUGH, Justice.

Appeal is from a declaratory judgment construing the joint will of Frank W. Hill and May B. Hill, both deceased. The only issue presented is whether the 100-acre tract of land in Travis County, devised'to appellant in said will, passed to him subject to certain debts against it, secured by liens thereon; or was, under said will, exonerated from such indebtedness.

Appellant makes two contentions: 1. That the testators intended that the property pass to appellant, one of the devisees, free froin all debts and liens against it. And 2. That such debts and liens were personal obligations of the testators which should have been paid off, as other personal debts, out of the assets of the estate. These contentions were made in a trial to the court without a jury and overruled, the declaratory judgment holding that appellant took subject to such debts; hence this appeal.

The cardinal rules of construction of wills are now well settled and there is no controversy as to such rules between the parties to this suit. Suffice it to say that the intent of the testator is controlling and *462 when ascertained it should be effectuated. It should be ascertained, if possible, from the provisions of the will itself. But if not clearly disclosed by such provisions, and any uncertainty exists as to the testator’s intent, then resort to extraneous proof may be had to show the relationship of the parties, the nature and character of the subject matter devised, the facts and circumstances surrounding the execution of such will, etc. See 44 Tex.Jur., § 135, p. 684 et seq.

In 1918 Frank W. Hill and wife, May B. Hill, owned as community property, along with much other property, two places near the city of Austin, each consisting of approximately 100 acres, one known as the “Dairy Place”; and the other known as the “Grove Place.” They resided on the Grove Place and operated a dairy on the other. They had two children, James E., appellant herein, and Dorothy, now the wife of Robert B. Thrasher. On March 8, 1918, these parents conveyed to James E. Hill the Dairy Place in consideration of the execution by him of one vendor’s lien note for $7,300, due 60 days after date; and 10 additional notes for $792.50 each, due one each year from 1928 to 1937. The $7,300 note was transferred to the Federal Land Bank of Houston, Texas, and made a first lien on said land. The other notes were subsequently transferred to the Austin National Bank.

James E. Hill moved on the Dairy Place in 1918 and operated it until he married in 1921. Due to disagreements with his father, Frank W. Hill, he then moved away from, and apparently completely abandoned said property. Who paid the interest on the Federal Land Bank note during those' three years is not clear. In October 1921 Frank W. Hill took possession of said property and continued in complete control, use and occupation of it as his own, paying all taxes and the semi-annual payments due the Federal Land Bank up to the time of his death in July 1941. While the trial court found that the conveyance of 1918 was rescinded in October 1921, the land was never reconveyed to F. W. Hill by James E. Hill; F. W. Hill declined to accept a recon-veyance thereof from his son; and in June 1937, James E. Hill and wife renewed and extended said indebtedness to said land bank, joined therein by F. W. Hill, with the recital that his joinder was for the purpose of recognizing the superiority of said land bank’s lien on said land.

Meantime James E. Hill had moved to San Antonio in 1931, leaving his family in Austin. And for several years prior to the execution in May 1938 by F. W. and May B. Hill of their joint will, they had contributed substantially to the support and maintenance of James E. Hill’s family, then • consisting of his wife and three daughters, whom he had in large measure abandoned. Such were the circumstances under which said will was executed.

The will recited that all the property therein disposed of was community property. It was devised to the survivor with power in such survivor to control, manage, mortgage or sell; but on the death of the survivor, all property which had not been disposed of was to pass as therein provided. The Dairy Place was devised to James E. Hill. The Grove Place was devised to Dorothy Hill Thrasher. Devise of other lands in Freestone and Liberty Counties was made in equal shares to James E. Hill, Dorothy Hill Thrasher, Annie Webb Blan-ton (sister of May B. Hill), and Mary Belle Hill (wife of James E. Hill). Said will also specifically directed that the indebtedness to the Austin National Bank (being the notes executed in 1918 by James E. Hill, transferred to said bank by F. W. Hill and secured by a second lien on the Dairy Place) be paid by the executor out of said estate.- Further that the indebtedness against the home in Austin of Annie Webb Blanton, and that owed by James E. Hill on his hotne in Austin, then occupied by his family, be likewise paid by such executor. The residue of said estate was made a trust fund, with Robert B. Thrasher as trustee thereof, for maintenance, support and education of the wife and children of James E. Hill; provided that the trust terminate when the youngest child should reach the age of 21 years; and that such residue then pass, subject to named contingencies not material here, one-half to Mary Belle Hill, wife of James E., and the other half to her children, granddaughters of the testators. The will discloses a particular concern of the testators for the welfare of their grand *463 daughters, the children of James E. Hill, and for his wife whom appellant, at the time the will was executed, had in large measure abandoned.

The indebtedness to the Austin National Bank was established by judgment against Robert B. Thrasher, as administrator and independent executor, in the sum of $8,-583.24, and paid off by him. The other debts specifically provided for in said will were also paid. That of James E. Hill on the Austin property was compromised and settled by the executor for $6,000. At the time of Frank W. Hill’s death in 1941, there was evidence to show the following: That the Grove Place, devised to the daughter, was valued at $20,000, and the other property devised to her valued at $5,000, thus aggregating her share in the estate in the sum of $25,000. The Dairy Place had a value of $15,000 against which there existed an indebtedness, secured by liens thereon, in the aggregate as of June 15, 1945, of $5,-462.03, of which no mention was made in said will, and no provision for payment thereof made. In addition to the devise of said property to James E. Hill, the testators provided for payment of indebtedness against him which was settled for $6,000; and set up a trust estate for the benefit of his family, valued, after payment of all debts provided for in said will, at between $19,000 and $20,000; the residue of which, after the execution of the trust, passed to his wife and children. The total value of the portion of testators’ estate, not including the $6,000 debt of James E. Hill paid out of said estate, and after deducting from such devises the indebtedness against the Dairy Place, which either went directly to James E. Hill or to or for the benefit of his wife and children, aggregated approximately $29,000 as against a value of approximately $25,000 devised to the daughter.

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196 S.W.2d 461, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-thrasher-texapp-1946.