Houston v. Schuhmann

92 S.W.2d 1086, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 9, 1936
DocketNo. 4544.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 92 S.W.2d 1086 (Houston v. Schuhmann) 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
Houston v. Schuhmann, 92 S.W.2d 1086, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 255 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinions

Appellant and appellees are the grandchildren of Mrs. Victorine Houston, who died testate in 1923. Appellant, son of Tom Houston, was born long after the death of testatrix, and the payment of all the debts against her estate. Appellees contended below, and the trial court held, that appellant had no interest in the estate of testatrix under the following will and codicils:

"At home, in view of the uncertainty of life and the certainty of death, I, Victorine Houston, wife of T. J. Houston, deceased, now make my last will and testament: To Beulah P Dewitt I give them anything in my house they need or such things as belonged to their mother. To my son Tom, I give all my personal property, all my money, I may have in Bank or any where else, except $300. to fix up our burying ground if the money is not on hand it is to be saved up out of the Estate. To be paid out on the graves as soon as made or collected, if the graves fence tombstones are not put there in my lifetime, not less than $400. but more if needed If I am in debt at the time of my death, I want my son Tom Houston to take all the land I own not heretofore deeded or given away and have it well worked until I am entirely out of debt, and then divide it or the income out of it into 8 shares himself, Tom, Lawrence, Nellie V., Charles H., Bessie, Hazel, his children also Dewitt T. and Beulah P., Houston, children of my son Andrew deceased. This land my 2 farms here joining on the Navarro Grant is the land. I give it all to my son Tom, and he is to give the income to these 8 heirs without bond, and the land is not to be sold to any one under 99 years and if one of the heirs die, it is to go to the other 7 and on and if they all die, it is to go to the next of kin. It is never to be worked, or controlled or owned by a negro, I mean the next of kin to the heirs that I leave it to, if any of these 8 heirs are dissatisfied with this will of mine, and go to law, then they are not have anything at all. They are to be shut out. Hope they will be satisfied as it will give them something to live on every year, after all my debts are paid, if I buy any more land it is to be managed the same way by my son Tom without bond. If my son Tom is not living it is to be managed by Dewitt T. Houston if he is not living it is to be managed by Charlie H. Houston, and if he is not living Laurence V. Houston, these my grand sons to give bond, but my son Tom not to give bond. Everything else I may have at the time of my death, not named here, tax titles or any land or money or anything else, Real or Personal is to go to my son Tom without any restriction whatever. Hoping this will please all I say Good Bye, Live in Peace with one another, and Love Serve God. Meet me in a Better World, This is without, In ______ Witness. My own handwriting.

"[SGD] Victorine Houston.

"Codicil to this will I have abandoned the Select Knights Nellie will not get that money and have also sold the Bastrop land to Dewitt Houston so I will mark both out. This March 25th, 1911.

"This will is written wholly by myself, not dictated by anyone, and alone and no one has ever seen it. After 99 yrs. expires the land that the graves are on is never to be sold as long as time lasts. This is a *Page 1088 Codicil to this will, written the same day of the other Codicil. March 25th, 1911.

"Codicil. I bought the Petes Prairie Land back from Dewitt T. Houston and the land is to go back to my Estate, the same as my other lands. And Beulah Dewitt are to have anything in my house that they want, nothing is to be burned. This December 4th 1916.

"Victorine Houston.

"Each child separately.

"If my son Tom has any more children born in wedlock they are to come in according to their ages, if they are considered of sound mind. By next of kin I mean next of kin to these my heirs not next of kin to me. This is a codicil to my will.

"[Sgd] Victorine Houston."

Said will, with its codicils, was duly probated and Tom Houston was appointed and duly qualified and acted as executor of said estate. On the date of the last codicil Tom Houston was a married man. His wife was then forty-five years old. He was divorced from her in 1917. There were seven grandchildren living on the date of the death of testatrix, all named in said will. These, with Tom Houston, were given the entire estate by the trial court. Tom Houston married in 1931 and appellant was lawfully born of this marriage, and was of sound mind. He claims here an equal undivided interest with testatrix' other grandchildren in the, real estate owned by Victorine Houston at her death. His claim was denied in toto by the trial court. We are of the opinion that the trial court erred in denying his claim, and that he is not precluded by the terms of said will from participation therein.

Before passing to a consideration of the controlling question in this case, we advert briefly to preliminary questions, which will probably occur to the ordinary student of this opinion.

All parties agree, and same is not here in issue, to the following three legal propositions concerning said will:

(1) That the quoted instrument is sufficient as a will.

(2) That its provisions in restraint of alienation of the real estate, and its attempt to create a perpetual trust for the time indicated, violate the rule against perpetuities and are therefore void.

(3) That a sufficiently valid portion thereof remains to show an intent to perpetually vest in the named beneficiaries and their heirs the entire rents from the real estate in question which in itself is equivalent to a gift of the land. Gidley v. Lovenberg, 35 Tex. Civ. App. 203, 79 S.W. 831,835 (writ ref.); 28 R.C.L. p. 239; 69 C.J. p. 782.

Appellees contend that testatrix fixed the time of vesting of the estate in her named grandchildren as of the time of her death and in no event later than the payment of her debts, and that a child born to Tom after such dates is excluded as a beneficiary thereunder. As has been many times stated, fact cases are of little value in passing on such a question. This because they differ widely in their facts, and after all the cardinal rule which controls all others is the ascertainment of the intention of the testator. When ascertained, it must be given effect if not in contravention to public policy or some rule of law. 69 C.J. p. 52.

What was the situation of testatrix when the last codicil, providing for after-born children of her son Tom, was written? Tom, apparently, was her only living child. She loved and trusted him implicitly as is abundantly shown by the terms of the will. He had a wife, then forty-five, with whom he did not get along, as is shown by the fact that almost immediately thereafter he was divorced from her. From 1917 to 1923, he lived single, yet testatrix died in 1923, permitting her last words concerning the estate to stand unaltered, viz.: "If my son Tom has any more children born in wedlock they are to come in according to their ages, if they are considered of sound mind." Tom did not marry again until 1931. Could it be seriously doubted that Tom's mother, the testatrix, thought when she wrote said codicil and thought when she died that Tom might marry again, and have other children? His wife in 1916 was then forty-five years of age, already at the time of life when children are not to be expected. Undoubtedly she had something in mind, when as an afterthought she finally added the last codicil quoted above, and which has furnished the basis for this controversy. Did she then know of Tom's domestic troubles? Undoubtedly, as they were practically contemporaneous with said codicil.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 S.W.2d 1086, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-v-schuhmann-texapp-1936.