In Re McLaren's Estate

221 S.W. 1045, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 539
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 17, 1920
DocketNo. 8401.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 1045 (In Re McLaren's Estate) 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
In Re McLaren's Estate, 221 S.W. 1045, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 539 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

*1046 TAXjBOT, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Dallas county denying to appellant, Carrie B. McLaren, letters of guardianship upon the estates of Jesse Calvin McLaren and Lucy McLaren, minor children of appellant. The application for guardianship was heard on an appeal from the county court of Dallas county, in which court the guardianship was likewise denied. The district court heard the case without the intervention of a jury and rendered judgment refusing the appellant’s application for the guardianship of said estates on the ground, as shown hy the judgment, “that applicant has failed to show herself a fit and proper person for the guardianship of the estate of her two children * * * by legal and competent proof of sufficient probative force to warrant the court in granting such application.” There was no contest of the application, and the minors, aged about 19 and 17 years, respectively, each, in writing, requested that the appellant be appointed as guardian of their estates. The daughter, Lucy McLaren, also appeared in person and in open court requesting such appointment.

The evidence showed that the appellant is the surviving parent of the minors named, and that she, as plaintiff in a suit for that purpose, secured a decree of divorce against her husband, R. F. McLaren, the .father of said minors, in the district court of Williamson county, Tex., in 1910, in which decree the custody of the daughter, Lucy, was awarded to appellant, and the custody of the son, Jesse, was awarded to his father. Upon the hearing of the appellant’s application to be appointed guardian of the estates of her said children in the district court of Dallas county, which occurred in October, 1919, it was shown that she was the mother of said mi-noré and that she was then and for some time prior to the filing of her application and ever since such filing had been a resident of Dallas county, Tex. It was further shown by the testimony of Walter B. Cunningham, assistant secretary, T. IT. Lindley, building superintendent and chief engineer, respectively, of the Young Men’s Christian Association in the city of Dallas, who had known appellant intimately for about a year or a year and a half, and Mrs. Rebecca Hecke'r, an old friend and acquaintance, that appellant was a woman of good business ability, frugal and economical in her habits, as well as a woman of good character, who associated with none but the.best people. It seems that the trial court was under the impression that the appellant was in some way a party to the murder of her husband, R. F. McLaren, and had been indicted therefor, and, for the laudable purpose of securing testimony to that effect, if it could be done, to be considered in determining whether or not the appellant was á fit and proper person to be appointed guardian of the estates of her minor children, upon his own motion adjourned the hearing of her application to October 20, 1919, stating to the court stenographer, all of which appears from the record, as follows:

“Put it down that the court is going to instruct the district clerk of Dallas county to communicate with the district clerk of Williamson county, requesting him to send a certified copy of the indictment filed against Mrs. Carrie B. McLaren in November or December, 1916, also to send a certified copy of the motion of the district attorney filed in open court stating his reasons for the dismissal of that case, and also the judgment of the court thereon, before I finally settle this case.”

The appellant testified, in answer to a question propounded to- her by the court, that no indictment had ever been presented against her charging her with any character of offense relating to the death of her husband, and a letter of date October 14, 1919, shown by the statement of facts to have been received from the clerk of the district court of Williamson county, stated that appellant was never indicted by the grand jury of Williamson county for any offense growing out of the death of her husband, R. F. McLaren. However, the court, in the judgment rendered denying appellant’s application, made, among others, the following declaration:

“The court is of the opinion from the testimony of applicant in this case and from all the facts and circumstances, and from the manner, conduct, and tone of voice of applicant and her feeling of bitterness as exhibited toward her deceased husband and all who were connected with him or with his estate, that the applicant was either directly or indirectly the instigator of the death of her husband for the purpose of securing the possession and control of the estate, which she says with feeling and bitterness she was defrauded out of by a ‘frame-up’ between the court, her lawyer, her husband, and his lawyer.”

The record discloses that Harry McBride and J. O. McLaren, son of the appellant and her deceased husband, R. F. McLaren, were indicted charged with the murder of R. F. McLaren and that both were subsequently convicted of the charge and sent to the penitentiary, McBride for life, and J. O. McLaren for 30 years. It further appears that the conviction of these men was obtained largely upon their written confession of the commission of the crime, which confessions were by the court caused to be introduced in evidence over the objections of appellant. In these confessions both parties set out in detail what purports to be the circumstances of the death of R. F. McLaren, stating, among other things, that McBride killed the deceased by striking him on the head with a gun barrel, while riding along the public road in an automobile, in pursuance of an agreement between the said McBride and J. C. McLaren. The original instruments setting forth the confessions of Harry McBride and J. G. Mc-Laren were not introduced in evidence on *1047 the trial of this case, but only what purports to be a copy of a copy of their confessions. In J. O. .McLaren’s confession, as shown by the instrument put in evidence, he said, among other tilings:

“My mother, Carrie McLaren, asked me and Harry (McBride) to poison my father and tried to get ns to do it, and I-Iarry knew of a poison but could not get it. We resolved to work it out the way we did. My mother wanted us to poison my father because he had not provided a home for her and me and my sister. * * * mothe]. asked me and Harry to poison my father when the carnival was here in town about a week before we agreed to same.”

In the purported confession of Harry McBride he stated:

“A day or so after I killed Frank (meaning R. F. McLaren) I went back to sanitarium and saw my aunt (the appellant) and she gave me $1.50 and she told me I had better leave as quickly as I could. I went back to Frank Mc-Laren’s home and came back to see my aunt and she gave me check to Calvin McLaren (J. C. McLaren) for $50. It was on First State Bank'& Trust Company of Taylor. She said she would give more but didn’-t want to create suspicion. She told Calvin to cash check and give all to me that he didn’t need. Calvin cashed check and gave me $40 of it. * * * Mrs. McLaren, the divorced wife of Frank Mc-Laren, told me she had poisoned him (Frank McLaren) in sweet milk but it didn’t seem to have any effect. I intended to leave here today and was arranging to leave when I was arrested.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 1045, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mclarens-estate-texapp-1920.