In Re the Estate of Steed

152 S.W.3d 797, 2004 WL 2912929
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 2005
Docket06-03-00115-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 152 S.W.3d 797 (In Re the Estate of Steed) 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 the Estate of Steed, 152 S.W.3d 797, 2004 WL 2912929 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice CARTER.

Gene E. Steed, a lawyer, prepared his own will several times. At his death, competing applications were filed to probate three different wills. His sons originally filed in Ochiltree County to probate a will dated in 1980. After finding another will on his computer dated in 2001, they filed the 2001 will. Gene’s widow, Shirley Steed, filed in Morris County an application to probate a 1998 holographic will Gene sent her. After venue was set in Morris County, a jury determined that Gene’s holographic will was executed without testamentary intent and as a result of undue influence, and that the 2001 will was never executed. The trial court found the parties had waived the probate of the 1980 will and ordered the property distributed by the laws of intestacy. Both the sons and the widow appeal. The issues are:

1. Was Morris County the proper venue?

2. Is there legally and factually sufficient evidence to support the jury finding that the 1998 holographic will was executed because of undue influence?

3. Is there legally and factually sufficient evidence to support the jury finding that the 1998 holographic will was executed without testamentary intent?

4. Is there legally and factually sufficient evidence to support the jury finding that the 2001 will found on the computer was not executed?

5. Did the Steed sons waive the probate of the 1980 will?

We hold that Morris County was the proper venue. We hold that factually insufficient evidence was presented to support the jury findings (1) that the holographic will was executed as a result of undue influence; (2) that the holographic will was executed without testamentary intent; and (3) that the 2001 will was not executed. We further find the 1980 will was not waived.

The Steed sons’ case was first filed in Ochiltree County, where Gene lived and had practiced law. Shirley filed the next day in Morris County. The district court in Ochiltree County heard the motion to transfer venue. The court ordered venue transferred to Morris County.

*803 We first address the Steed sons’ venue issue, because if venue was improperly transferred from Ochiltree County to Morris County, the case must be reversed and remanded. See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem.Code Ann. § 15.064(b) (Vernon 2002). Section 6(a) of the Texas Probate Code provides that wills should be admitted to probate in the county where the deceased resided, if he had a domicile or fixed place of residence in this State. Tex. PROB.Code Ann. § 6(a) (Vernon 2003). We must determine whether the statute establishes venue based on “domicile” or “residence.”

A person may establish only one domicile, whereas he or she may have several residences. Snyder v. Pitts, 150 Tex. 407, 241 S.W.2d 136, 139 (1951). If residence is the test, venue would be proper in Ochiltree County, where the case was first filed, because it was a residence of Gene. However, if domicile is the requirement, venue may be established in only one county. In Snyder, the Texas Supreme Court reasoned that, in analyzing the general venue statute, the two terms (residence and domicile) were not synonymous and that it was entirely possible for a person to have two residences although only one domicile, and provided definitions for each. Id. at 139-40. The court reasoned that a person had made himself amenable to suit in a particular venue if he had a residence there, even if his formal domicile was not at that location. That opinion, however, did not purport to apply that reasoning to the other venue provisions found throughout the statutes, such as the Texas Probate Code provision that is now before us. An opinion from this Court has explicitly addressed the question.

In a venue decision involving the Probate Code, this Court, in Halverson v. Livengood, 4 S.W.2d 588 (Tex.Civ.App.-Texarkana 1928, no writ), acknowledged the presence of the two terms in the venue provision, but held the Probate Code required venue in the county of the deceased’s domicile. Id. at 591. In construing the probate statute, this Court recognized that statutes establishing venue against living persons were designed to provide for the convenience of the parties involved and that, when a person spent so large a portion of his time in a county as to make it a place of residence, he could not claim that the location was an inconvenient venue for suit. This Court then discussed the venue statute in probate proceedings, recognizing explicitly that other factors became more important after the person’s death, such as the location of his property and where he had established a home, which was also typically where most creditors would reside. Based on this reasoning, the Court concluded there was little reason to give the word “domicile” a meaning different from its legal significance — “that is, the home or place of permanent residence of the deceased.” Id. This Court interpreted the language in the statute referring to “fixed place of residence” following the word “domicile” to explain the sense in which the word “domicile” was used in the statute and to signify a permanent residence, as distinguished from one which is only temporary. Id 1

The Halverson case, on its facts, is similar to this case. In Halverson, the decedent lived for many years in Grayson County, but during his latter years, he purchased a home in Dallas County and *804 lived there with his sister. He also kept a room of a building he owned in Grayson County for his use. The evidence was conflicting as to his domicile at the time of his death. This Court remanded the case for a jury determination of the domicile issue.

We see no direct conflict between the analysis of the meaning of the two terms made in Snyder and in Halverson. Indeed, the Snyder opinion cited, with approval, the portion of the Halverson opinion that discussed the policy reasons for fixing venue in cases involving living persons and agreed that those policies were not injured by allowing a person to be sued in a county where he spent “so large a portion of his time as to make that county a place of residence.” Snyder, 241 S.W.2d at 142 (quoting Halverson, 4 S.W.2d at 590).

We conclude that the precedent of this Court in Halverson should be followed. As set out in that opinion, because of the different policy considerations involved in probate, as opposed to general venue issues, we hold that venue is established based on the domicile of the decedent and that the multiple residence authorization for venue as in Snyder does not apply to the probate venue statute. 2 We now turn to the merits of the domicile determination.

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W.3d 797, 2004 WL 2912929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-steed-texapp-2005.